Harrison Bankhead nous a quittés RIP
Harrison Bankhead
Harrison Bankhead[1] is an American jazz double-bassist.
Career[edit]
Bankhead became associated with the Chicago jazz scene in the early-1980s.[2] Early in his career, he performed with Fred Anderson on tour and at Anderson’s Chicago club, the Velvet Lounge.[3] Bankhead has worked with Oliver Lake, Roscoe Mitchell, Von Freeman, Malachi Thompson, 8 Bold Souls, and Hamid Drake, and is a member of the Association for the Advancement of Creative Musicians. His first album as a leader, Morning Sun/Harvest Moon, was released on Engine, a sub-label of ESP-Disk, in 2011, and featured sidemen Edward Wilkerson, Jr., Mars Williams, James Sanders, Avreeayl Ra, and Ernie Adams.[4] He followed this with Velvet Blue, with Wilkerson, Williams, and Ra, whose name and title track pay tribute to Fred Anderson and the Velvet Lounge.[5]
Discography[edit]
As leader
- Morning Sun/Harvest Moon (Engine Studios, 2011)
- Velvet Blue (Engine Studios, 2013)
With Malachi Thompson
- The Jaz Life (Delmark, 1992)
- Lift Every Voice (Delmark, 1993)
- Buddy Bolden’s Rag (Delmark, 1995)
- 47th Street (Delmark, 1997)
- Freebop Now! (Delmark, 1998)
- Rising Daystar (Delmark, 1999)
- Talking Horns (Delmark, 2001) with Hamiet Bluiett and Oliver Lake
- Blue Jazz (Delmark, 2003) with Gary Bartz and Billy Harper
With 8 Bold Souls
- Sideshow (Arabesque Jazz, 1992)
- Ant Farm (Arabesque Jazz, 1994)
- Last Option (Thrill Jockey, 2000)
With others
- Frequency (Edward Wilkerson, Nicole Mitchell, Harrison Bankhead, and Avreeayl Ra) – Frequency (Thrill Jockey, 2006)
- Fred Anderson/Harrison Bankhead – The Great Vision Concert (Ayler Records, 2007)
- Nicole Mitchell, Harrison Bankhead, Hamid Drake – Indigo Trio: Live in Montreal (2007)
- The Turbine!, Harrison Bankhead, Benjamin Duboc, Hamid Drake, Ramon Lopez – Entropy/Enthalpy (RogueArt, 2015)
- Shanta Nurullah’s Sitarsys, »Sitar Black » (Storywiz, 2016)
References[edit]
- ^ « Harrison Bankhead Biography, Songs, & Albums ». AllMusic. Retrieved 2022-08-15.
- ^ Piotr Michalowski, Bass Is The Place. Ann Arbor Observer, October 2014.
- ^ Lyn Horton, Review of Morning Sun/Harvest Moon. JazzTimes, August 9, 2011.
- ^ Peter Margasak, Three Beats: Bassist Harrison Bankhead finally releases an album of his own. Chicago Reader, July 28, 2011.
- ^ Peter Margasak, Bassist Harrison Bankhead, back in front. Chicago Reader, January 24, 2014.