Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Butch Warren

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Name
  
Butch Warren


Albums
  
Butch's Blues

Butch Warren wwwnotreblecombuzzwpcontentuploads201310B

Died
  
October 5, 2013, Silver Spring, Maryland, United States

Similar People
  
Billy Higgins, Sonny Clark, Kenny Dorham, Charlie Rouse, Dexter Gordon

Butch warren


Edward "Butch" Warren (August 9, 1939 – October 5, 2013) was an American jazz double bassist who played in the hard bop genre. He was especially active in the late-1950s and the 1960s.

Contents

Butch Warren Jazz Departments Butch Warren To Hell amp Back By

Kontrabass lernen mit Transkriptionen: Watermelon Man, Butch Warren Kontrabass cover


Biography

Butch Warren Butch Warren Artists Blue Note Records

Warren began playing professionally at age 14 in a local Washington, D. C. band led by his father, Edward Warren. He later worked with other local groups, including Stuff Smith's as well as with altoist and bandleader Rick Henderson at the historic Howard Theatre on 7th and T Streets.

Butch Warren Butch Warren Artists Blue Note Records

In 1958, he moved to New York City to play with Kenny Dorham, appearing on his first recording, with Dorham, in January 1960 with saxophonist Charles Davis, pianist Tommy Flanagan and drummer Buddy Enlow. He stayed in New York for the rest of his musical career, mainly as house bassist for Blue Note records.

Butch Warren Butch Warren at the Black Fox Let39s Cool One

As sideman, he also recorded with Miles Davis, Hank Mobley, Donald Byrd, Sonny Clark, Dexter Gordon, Herbie Hancock, Joe Henderson, Jackie McLean, and Stanley Turrentine. He played with Thelonious Monk in 1963 and 1964 and then moved back to Washington, D.C., where he briefly worked in television before becoming seriously ill. He was hospitalized and diagnosed with paranoid schizophrenia.

Butch Warren Butch Warren 74 Prominent Jazz Bassist Dies The New

Following the onset of his illness he played professionally only occasionally, including a regular gig at the jazz club Columbia Station in Washington D.C.'s Adams Morgan neighborhood.

His solos were inventive, occasionally using the bow. His only solo effort was captured on "Butch's Blues" but he was better known as a sideman on many albums, including Dexter Gordon's Go, Jackie McLean's Vertigo (1959) and Hipnosis (1967), and many recordings with Thelonious Monk. His most memorable contribution was on Herbie Hancock's "Watermelon Man", on Hancock's debut album, Takin' Off (1962).

As sideman

  • 1959: Vertigo - Jackie McLean
  • 1960: Jazz Contemporary - Kenny Dorham
  • 1961: Leapin' and Lopin' - Sonny Clark
  • 1961: Royal Flush - Donald Byrd
  • 1961: High Hope! - Elmo Hope (Beacon)
  • 1961: Free Form - Donald Byrd
  • 1961: A Fickle Sonance - Jackie McLean
  • 1962: Takin' Off - Herbie Hancock
  • 1962: Go - Dexter Gordon
  • 1962: Preach Brother! - Don Wilkerson
  • 1962: Jubilee Shout!!! - Stanley Turrentine
  • 1962: A Swingin' Affair - Dexter Gordon
  • 1962: Feelin' the Spirit - Grant Green
  • 1962: Exodus - Slide Hampton
  • 1963: No Room for Squares - Hank Mobley
  • 1963: Happy Frame of Mind - Horace Parlan
  • 1963: Exultation! - Booker Ervin
  • 1963: A New Perspective - Donald Byrd
  • 1963: Page One - Joe Henderson
  • 1963: The Turnaround - Hank Mobley
  • 1963: Miles & Monk at Newport - Thelonious Monk
  • 1963: Monk in Tokyo - Thelonious Monk
  • 1963: Una Mas - Kenny Dorham
  • 1963: Straight No Filter - Hank Mobley
  • 1964: It's Monk's Time - Thelonious Monk
  • 1964: Holiday Soul - Bobby Timmons
  • 1965: The Walter Bishop Jr. Trio / 1965 - Walter Bishop, Jr.
  • 1967: Hipnosis - Jackie McLean
  • As Leader

  • 2011: Butch Warren French Quintet - With Pierrick Menuau (saxophone), Pierre Christophe (Piano), Mourad Benhammou (drums) and Jean Philippe Bordier (Guitar) - Amja Productions
  • References

    Butch Warren Wikipedia