Wayne
Shorter
(Newark, New Jersey 25.8.1933)
Footprints Live! (Verve)
1 + 1 (Verve)
High Life (Verve)
Phantom Navigator (Columbia)
Native Dancer (Columbia)
Moto Grosso Feio One Way
The All Seeing Eye (Blue Note)
Super Nova (Blue Note)
Best Of Wayne Shorter (Blue Note)
Speak No Evil (Blue Note)
Schizophrenia (Blue Note)
Night Dreamer (Blue Note)
The Soothsayer (Blue Note)
Wayning Moments (VeeJay)
Wayne Shorter (GNP/Crescendo)
A Tribute To Miles (Qwest/Reprise)
Weather Report (Columbia)
I Sing The Body Electric (Columbia)
Mysterious Traveller (Columbia)
Mr. Gone (Columbia)
The Complete Live At The Plugged Nickel 1965 (Mosaic)
Filles De Kilimanjaro (Columbia)
Sorcerer (Columbia)
Nefertiti (Columbia)
E.S.P. (Columbia)
Bitches Brew (Columbia)
The Complete Blue Note Recordings Of Art Blakey's 1960 Jazz Messengers
(Mosaic)
Art Blakey And The Jazz Messengers (Impulse!)
Mosaic (Blue Note)
Free For All (Blue Note)
Three Blind Mice Vols. 1 & 2 (Blue Note)
Caravan (OJC)
Night In Tunisia (Blue Note)
The Big Beat Blue Note with various others
The Individualism Of Gil Evans (Verve)
The Gigolo Blue Note (Lee Morgan)
Search For The New Land Blue Note (Lee Morgan)
Expansions Blue Note (McCoy Tyner)
The Sun Don't Die PRA (Marcus Miller)
Angelus Warner Brothers (Milton Nascimento)
Turbulent Indigo Reprise (Joni Mitchell)
Shorter went to Arts High School and later graduated from New York University.
He served in the US Army from 1956 to 1958; after which, he joined bands
led by Horace Silver and Maynard Ferguson. Next, he joined Art
Blakey's Jazz Messengers. His five years as one of Blakey's Messengers
clearly established him as a newcomer to watch due to winning the number
one ''New Star Saxophonist'' Downbeat poll for 1962. He came in second
place for best composer while Duke Ellington came in first. He began
recording solo LPs in the early sixties, eventually cutting nine classic
albums for Blue Note. In 1964 Miles Davis invited
Wayne to go on the road with his band, which included Herbie Hancock
and Tony Williams. He stayed with Davis for six years, recording over
a dozen albums with him, creating a sound with a band leader that changed
the face of music during that tumultuous decade. The group stayed together
until 1970, when Shorter formed Weather
Report with Joe Zawinul and Miroslav Vitous.
Through his solo career and his work with Weather Report, Shorter helped
to redefine the new hybrid of music that borrowed from a variety of
forms, from jazz and rock to classical and electronic. He won the Downbeat
poll on soprano sax after 1969 for 15 to 17 years consecutively and
he continues to have many fans who will listen to him in any musical
context. Wayne Shorter had reached the pinnacle with Weather Report,
but took his time branching out on his own again. In 1974 Shorter recorded
a landmark solo album entitled Native Dancer on Columbia, which reached
the top 200. The session included an impressive array of musicians like
the Brazilian vocalist Milton Nascimento, Airto and Herbie
Hancock on various recorded tracks. Shorter's talents were even
in demand outside the jazz world around this time, as he found himself
recording with top pop artists like Joni Mitchell and Steely Dan. Phantom
Navigator, his third solo LP for the label, follows closely on the heels
of Shorter's much heralded Grammy-nominated Atlantis, his first solo
LP since Native Dancer in 1974. With the 1985 release of Atlantis, Wayne
Shorter reasserted himself as one of the world's premier composers and
performers of progressive music. The New York Times, during his triumphant
1985 debut solo tour called him ''one of the most significant composers
and individual saxophonists in jazz since he joined Art Blakey in 1959.''
Wayne has won three Grammies; one during his Weather Report years, another
for work done in the motion picture Round Midnight, and recently for
his latest solo album entitled High Life. He has received credit for
feature saxophone performances in the motion pictures Glengarry Glen
Ross and The Fugitive. Wayne also recently joined forces with quintessential
jazz artist Herbie Hancock to release their 1 + 1 to great critical
acclaim. For many years, Wayne Shorter has succeeded in intermingling
the popular and the progressive, proving him one of most remarkable
minds in jazz history. The quality of that juxtaposition has resulted
in his reputation as both daring band leader and consummate modernist.
Wayne Shorter has earned these accolades through his incredible ability
to improvise for more that four decades, and there is no doubt that
he will continue to cultivate it in the future.