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Larry Coryell

 
Artist: Larry Coryell
  • Born: April 02, 1943, Galveston, TX
  • Active: '60s, '70s, '80s, '90s, 2000s
  • Genres: Jazz
  • Instrument: Guitar (Electric), Guitar (Acoustic)
  • Representative Albums: "Together," "Monk, 'Trane, Miles & Me," "Improvisations: Best of the Vanguard Years"
  • Representative Songs: "Spaces (Infinite)," "The Jam With Albert," "Yin"

Biography

As one of the pioneers of jazz-rock -- perhaps the pioneer in the ears of some -- Larry Coryell deserves a special place in the history books. He brought what amounted to a nearly alien sensibility to jazz electric guitar playing in the 1960s, a hard-edged, cutting tone, phrasing and note-bending that owed as much to blues, rock and even country as it did to earlier, smoother bop influences. Yet as a true eclectic, armed with a brilliant technique, he is comfortable in almost every style, covering almost every base from the most decibel-heavy, distortion-laden electric work to the most delicate, soothing, intricate lines on acoustic guitar. Unfortunately, a lot of his most crucial electric work from the '60s and '70s is missing on CD, tied up by the erratic reissue schemes of Vanguard, RCA and other labels, and by jazz-rock's myopically low level of status in the CD era (although that mindset is slowly changing).

According to Coryell, his interest in jazz took hold at the age of four, and after his family moved from Galveston to the state of Washington three years later, he began to learn the guitar, studying records by Tal Farlow, Barney Kessel and Johnny Smith. As a teenager, he played in a band led by pianist Mike Mandel, and by 1965, he gave up his journalism studies at the University of Washington in order to try his luck in New York as a musician. Before the year was out, he attracted much attention jamming in Greenwich Village and replaced Gabor Szabo in Chico Hamilton's band. In 1966, he made a startling recorded debut on Hamilton's The Dealer album, where his blues and rock ideas came to the fore, and that year, he also played with a proto-jazz-rock band, the Free Spirits. Coryell's name spread even further in 1967-68 when he played with Gary Burton's combo, and he was one of the most prominent solo voices on Herbie Mann's popular Memphis Underground album (recorded in 1968). He, Mandel and Steve Marcus formed a group called Foreplay in 1969 (no relation to today's Fourplay), and by 1973, this became the core of the jazz-rock band Eleventh House, which after a promising start ran aground with a string of albums of variable quality.

In 1975, Coryell pulled the plug, concentrating on acoustic guitar and turning in a prolific series of duo and trio sessions with the likes of Philip Catherine, Emily Remler, John Scofield, Joe Beck, Steve Khan and John McLaughlin. In the mid-'80s, Coryell toured with McLaughlin and Paco DeLucia, and in 1986 participated in a five-way guitar session with his old idol Farlow, Scofield, Larry Carlton and John Abercrombie for the Jazzvisions series. Coryell has also recorded with Stephane Grappelli, Charles Mingus, Sonny Rollins and Kenny Barron, and has taped Brazilian music with Dori Caymmi for CTI, mainstream jazz for Muse, solo guitar for Shanachie and Acoustic Music, and (for Nippon Phonogram in Japan) an album of classical transcriptions of music by Stravinsky and Rimsky-Korsakov. In other words, Coryell will probably remain as eclectic as ever throughout his career, which will no doubt make life difficult for musicologists with a yen for pigeonholing. Coryell's career in the 21st century has been just as active. 2004 saw the release of Tricycles, an excellent trio date with drummer Paul Wertico and bassist Mark Egan. Electric from 2005 found Coryell playing jazz standards and rock anthems with Lenny White on drums and Victor Bailey on electric bass. In 2006, he released the performance album Laid Back & Blues: Live at the Sky Church in Seattle. ~ Richard S. Ginell, All Music Guide
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Discography: Larry Coryell
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New York Blues

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Traffic

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Cedars of Avalon

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Joy Spring: The Swingin' Side of Larry Coryell

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Improvisations: Best of the Vanguard Years

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Shining Hour

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Shining Hour

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Three Guitars: Paris Concert

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Live from Bahia [2002]

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Jazz Guitar for Art Lovers

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Birdfingers

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Quiet Day in Spring

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Retrospective

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Coolidge Returns

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Tributaries [Bonus Tracks]

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Earthquake at the Avalon

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Tricycles

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Vanguard Visionaries

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Power Trio: Live in Chicago

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At Montreux (1974)

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Monk, 'Trane, Miles & Me

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Coryells

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Coryells

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Inner Urge

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Equipoise

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Comin' Home

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I'll Be Over You

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Scheherazade & Bolero

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Cause and Effect

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Electric

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Laid Back & Blues: Live at the Sky Church in Seattle

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Guitarmaster

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Private Concert

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Impressions: The New York Sessions

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New High

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Count's Jam Band Reunion

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Timeless

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Major Jazz Minor Blues

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Major Jazz Minor Blues

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Larry Coryell, Victor Bailey & Lenny White

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Never Never/Thus Spoke Z

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Spaces Revisited

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Sketches of Coryell

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Fallen Angel

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Live from Bahia

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Twelve Frets to One Octave

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Dragon Gate

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American Odyssey

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Toku Do

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Together

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Bolero

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Return

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Tributaries

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Standing Ovation

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Splendid

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Back Together Again

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Twin House

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Twin House

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Aspects

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Planet End

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Restful Mind

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Spaces

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Real Great Escape

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Offering

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Introducing the Eleventh House with Larry Coryell

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Introducing the Eleventh House with Larry Coryell [Bonus Tracks]

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Fairyland

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Barefoot Boy

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Live at the Village Gate

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Spaces [Bonus Tracks]

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Lady Coryell

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Coryell

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Essential Larry Coryell

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Basics (1968-1969)

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Wikipedia: Larry Coryell
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Larry Coryell

Larry Coryell 2009, at "Jazz im Palmengarten", Frankfurt am Main.
Background information
Birth name Larry Coryell
Born April 2, 1943 (1943-04-02) (age 66)
Galveston, Texas, U.S.
Genres Jazz, jazz fusion, post-bop, free jazz
Instruments Acoustic guitar, electric guitar
Labels Vanguard, Arista, Atlantic
Novus Records
Website larrycoryell.net

Larry Coryell (born April 2, 1943) is an American jazz fusion guitarist.[1]

Contents

Biography

Coryell was born in Galveston, Texas on April 2, 1943. After graduating from Richland High School in eastern Washington, he moved to Seattle to attend the University of Washington. In 1965, Coryell moved to New York City where he became part of Chico Hamilton's quintet, replacing Gabor Szabo. In 1967 and 1968, he recorded with Gary Burton and Jim Pepper. His music during the late-1960s and early-1970s combined the influences of rock, jazz and eastern music. He formed his own group, The Eleventh House, in 1973. Following the break-up of this band, Coryell played mainly acoustic guitar, but returned to electric guitar later in the 1980s. In 1979, Coryell formed "The Guitar Trio" with jazz fusion guitarist John McLaughlin and flamenco guitarist Paco de Lucia. The group toured Europe briefly, eventually releasing a video recorded at Royal Albert Hall in London entitled "Meeting of Spirits". In early-1980, Coryell was replaced by Al Di Meola, due to drug addiction.[citation needed]

In 2007, an autobiography was released under the title Improvising: My Life in Music. Larry's two sons, Julian Coryell and Murali Coryell are also actively involved in the music business.

Discography

As leader

  • Lady Coryell (1969)
  • Coryell (1969)
  • Spaces (1970) with John McLaughlin, Billy Cobham, Miroslav Vitous, Chick Corea
  • Barefoot Boy (1971)
  • Larry Coryell at the Village Gate (1971)
  • Offering (1972)
  • The Real Great Escape (1973)
  • Introducing Eleventh House with Larry Coryell (1974) with The Eleventh House
  • Larry Coryell and the Eleventh House at Montreux (1974) with The Eleventh House
  • Level One (1974) with the Eleventh House
  • The Restful Mind (1975) with Ralph Towner, Glen Moore, Collin Walcott
  • Planet End (1975)
  • Aspects (1976) with The Eleventh House
  • Larry Coryell/Philip Catherine - Twin House (1976)
  • Two For The Road (1977) with Steve Khan
  • Difference (1978)
  • Splendid (1978) with Philip Catherine
  • Young Django (1979) with Stephane Grappelli
  • The Enormous Radio (1984) with Simon Bard Group, Paul Wertico
  • Together (1985) with Emily Remler
  • Sketches of Coryell (1996)
  • Spaces Revisited (1997)
  • Cause and Effect (1998) with Steve Smith, Tom Coster, Victor Wooten
  • Private Concert (Live) (1999)
  • Gypsy Blood and Voodoo Crossing (2002) - Jimi Hendrix tributes with Paul Santa Maria
  • Count's Jam Band Reunion (2002) with Steve Marcus
  • Three Guitars (2003) with Badi Assad, John Abercrombie
  • Tricycles (2004)
  • Electric (2005) with Lenny White, Victor Bailey
  • Traffic (2006) with Lenny White, Victor Bailey

As sideman

Filmography

  • Meeting of the Spirits (1980) - live performance in London with Coryell, John McLaughlin, and Paco de Lucia.
  • L. Subramaniam: Violin From the Heart (1999) - directed by Jean Henri Meunier. (Includes a scene of Coryell performing with L. Subramaniam.)
  • Three Guitars: Paris Concert (2004) - live performance featuring Coryell, Badi Assad, and John Abercrombie.
  • Super Guitar Trio and Friends in Concert (2005) - live performance featuring Coryell, Al Di Meola, and Biréli Lagrène.

References

External links


 
 
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September Ballads (1987 Album by Mark Murphy)
Musaic (1979 Album by Simon & Bard Band)
Blue Montreux (Jazz Band, '70s)

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