Nisha Rathode (Editor)

Glenn Spearman

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Name
  
Glenn Spearman


Role
  
Music performer

Died
  
October 8, 1998, Berkeley, California, United States

Albums
  
Blues for Falasha, Free Worlds, Sirens Sweet & Slow, Suite Of Winds

Similar People
  
Lisle Ellis, Raphe Malik, Larry Ochs, William Parker, Jon Raskin

Fanfare excerpt, Don Paul. Kidd Jordan, Oliver Lake Alvin Fielder, Darrell Lavigne, & Brian Quezerg


Glenn Spearman (February 14, 1947 – October 8, 1998) was an American jazz tenor saxophonist. He was specifically associated with free jazz and experimental music.

Contents

Spearman was active in Oakland, California from the late 1960s, but moved to Paris in 1972, where he co-founded an ensemble called Emergency with the bassist Bob Reid. This group recorded two albums, performed on radio and television in France, and appeared at the festival in Avignon. He spent time as an artist-in-residence in Rotterdam and touring through Europe before returning to the United States in 1983. Following his return he worked in the Cecil Taylor Unit, working primarily out of San Francisco, though he performed on both sides of the Atlantic through the 1980s. In the 1990s, he led a Double Trio which included Larry Ochs, William Winant, and Lisle Ellis as sidemen; this ensemble played at the Monterey Jazz Festival and the Vancouver International Jazz Festival. They were also commissioned for a piece by the Move Dance Theater, which was performed at Laney College. He worked with the Rova Saxophone Quartet and with filmmaker Lynn Marie Kirby, in addition to teaching at Mills College.
He died of cancer in 1998. He is survived by his four children: Rose Stigter-Spearman, Ahmad Spearman, Jihan Spearman and Angelica Spearwoman; his two step-children Jennifer Jessica Kingeter (now deceased) and Jasper Kingeter; and his wife, Shantee.

Discography

As Leader

  • Night After Night (Musa-Physics Records, 1981 RARE)
  • Utterance (Cadence, 1990; issued 1999)
  • Mystery Project (Black Saint, 1993)
  • Smokehouse (Black Saint, 1994)
  • Free Worlds (Black Saint, 1994)
  • The Fields (Black Saint, 1996)
  • Th (CIMP, 1997)
  • Blues for Falasha (Tzadik, 1997)
  • Let it Go (Red Toucan, 1997)
  • First and Last (Eremite, 1997)
  • Surya:Stretch the Edge (1997)
  • Working with the Elements (CIMP, 1998)
  • With Emergency

  • Homage to Peace (America, 1973)
  • The Best of Emergency (Kwela, 1976)
  • As Sideman

  • With William Hooker
  • Mindfulness (Knitting Factory, 1997; also featuring DJ Olive)
  • With Raphé Malik
  • 21st Century Texts (1992; FMP)
  • Sirens Sweet & Slow (1994; Out Sounds)
  • The Short Form (1997; Eremite)
  • Companions (2002; Eremite)
  • References

    Glenn Spearman Wikipedia