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John Carter (jazz musician)

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Birth name
  
John Wallace Carter

Education
  
Role
  
Jazz musician


Name
  
John Carter

Occupation(s)
  
Musician, educator

Genres
  
Jazz

John Carter (jazz musician) bellsfreejazznetfiles200705johncarteroncouc

Born
  
September 24, 1929Fort Worth, Texas, U.S. (
1929-09-24
)

Instruments
  
Died
  
March 31, 1991, Los Angeles, California, United States

Albums
  
Self Determination Music, Flight For Four, Dauwhe

Similar People
  
Bobby Bradford, Horace Tapscott, James Newton, Alvin Batiste, Jimmy Hamilton

John carter and bobby bradford the new music


John Wallace Carter (September 24, 1929 – March 31, 1991) was an American jazz clarinet, saxophone, and flute player.

Contents

John carter capture


Biography

Born in Fort Worth, Texas, Carter attended I.M. Terrell High School, and played music with schoolmates Ornette Coleman and Charles Moffett in the 1940s. From 1961, Carter was based mainly on the West Coast. There he met Bobby Bradford in 1965, with whom he subsequently worked on a number of projects, notably the New Jazz Art Ensemble. He also played with Hampton Hawes and Harold Land. In the 1970s Carter became well known on the basis of his extraordinary solo concerts. At New Jazz Festival Moers 1979 he and the German clarinet player Theo Jörgensmann performed on three days. Afterwards Carter received complimentary reviews and wide recognition from around the world. He and Jörgensmann met again in 1984. The program of the Berlin JazzFest was built around the clarinet. After Carter's solo performance, he and Jörgensmann also played together.

Between 1982 and 1990 Carter composed and recorded Roots and Folklore: Episodes in the Development of American Folk Music, five albums focused on African Americans and their history. The complete set was acclaimed by jazz critics as containing some of the best releases of the 1980s.

A clarinet quartet with Perry Robinson, Jörgensmann and Eckard Koltermann was planned for 1991, but Carter did not recover from a nonmalignant tumor. Later that year he was inducted into the Down Beat Jazz Hall of Fame.

As leader

  • 1969: Seeking (Revelation/Hatology)
  • 1969: Flight for Four (Flying Dutchman)
  • 1970: Self-Determination Music (Flying Dutchman)
  • 1972: Secrets (Revelation)
  • 1975: No U-Turn – Live in Pasadena, 1975 (Dark Tree)
  • 1979: Variations on Selected Themes for Jazz (Moers)
  • 1980: Suite of Early American Folk Pieces for Solo Clarinet (Moers)
  • 1980: Night Fire (Black Saint)
  • 1982: Tandem 1 (Emanem)
  • 1996: Tandem 2 (Emanem)
  • 1982: Dauwhe (Black Saint)
  • 1985: Castles of Ghana (Gramavision)
  • 1987: Dance of the Love Ghosts (Gramavision)
  • 1988: Fields (Gramavision)
  • 1989: Shadows on a Wall (Gramavision)
  • As sideman

    With Horace Tapscott

  • The Dark Tree (Hat ART, 1991 [1989])
  • With Clarinet Summit

  • You Better Fly Away (MPS, 1979)
  • Clarinet Summit (India Navigation, 1983)
  • Clarinet Summit, Vol. 2 (India Navigation, 1983)
  • Southern Bells (Black Saint, 1987)
  • With Vinny Golia

  • Spirits in Fellowship (1977)
  • References

    John Carter (jazz musician) Wikipedia