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Orrin Keepnews

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Years active
  
1952–2015

Name
  
Orrin Keepnews


Role
  
Writer

Genres
  
Jazz


Born
  
March 2, 1923 The Bronx, New York, U.S. (
1923-03-02
)

Occupation(s)
  
Record producer, writer

Labels
  
Riverside, Milestone, Fantasy, Landmark Records

Associated acts
  
Thelonious Monk, Bill Evans, Cannonball, Nat Adderley, Wes Montgomery, Johnny Griffin, Jimmy Heath, McCoy Tyner, Joe Henderson, Lee Konitz, Gary Bartz

Died
  
March 1, 2015, El Cerrito, California, United States

Education
  
Columbia University (1943)

Books
  
The View from Within: Jazz Writings

Awards
  
Grammy Award for Best Historical Album, Grammy Award for Best Album Notes, Grammy Trustees Award

Similar People
  
Scott LaFaro, Bill Evans, Nat Adderley, Thelonious Monk, Cannonball Adderley

Portrait of bill evans orrin keepnews


Orrin Keepnews (March 2, 1923 – March 1, 2015) was an American jazz writer and record producer known for his work for Riverside Records and other labels.

Contents

Orrin Keepnews Jazz musician Orrin Keepnews dies at 94 The Indian Express

Orrin keepnews meets the saxophone colossus


Early life

Orrin Keepnews Orrin Keepnews Jazz Producer Dead at 91 News Pitchfork

Keepnews was born in the Bronx on March 2, 1923. He graduated from Columbia University with a degree in English in 1943. Subsequently, he was involved in bombing raids over Japan in the final months of World War II, before returning for graduate studies at Columbia in 1946.

Orrin Keepnews assetsrollingstonecomassets1979articleorrin

While working as an editor for the book publishers Simon & Schuster, Keepnews moonlighted as editor of The Record Changer, a small jazz magazine, after fellow Columbia graduate Bill Grauer became its owner in 1948. Keepnews wrote one of the earliest profiles of Thelonious Monk, then little known, for the publication.

Orrin Keepnews Orrin Keepnews Record Executive and Producer of Jazz

In 1952 Grauer and Keepnews produced a series of reissues on RCA Victor's Label "X".

Riverside Records

Orrin Keepnews Orrin Keepnews

The following year, in 1953, Grauer and Keepnews founded Riverside Records, which was initially devoted to reissue projects in the traditional and swing jazz idioms. "It was an act of more than moderate lunacy, to start a business on nothing but enthusiasm", he once said years later. "We had the arrogance of ignorance."

Orrin Keepnews Columbia College Today

Pianist Randy Weston was the first modern jazz artist signed by the label as a conscious move into the jazz scene of the day. According to Keepnews, Grauer heard him at the Music Inn in the Berkshires, Massachusetts, in 1953, and persuaded his partner to sign him after Keepnews had heard Weston for himself; he had learnt not to trust Grauer's musical taste.

Orrin Keepnews Jazz Articles Orrin Keepnews Orrinology By Jesse

Their most significant early move came in 1955, when they were made aware of the availability of Thelonious Monk, who was able to terminate his contract with Prestige Records and sign with Riverside. Monk was not easy for Keepnews to work with: "He was as demanding of other people as he was of himself, but he was self-contained and also impatient. He knew what he wanted, but I didn’t, so I had to catch on to this express train as it went roaring by,"

Orrin Keepnews Letter Orrin Keepnews obituary Music The Guardian

With Keepnews as producer, and adding such significant young artists as Bill Evans, Cannonball and Nat Adderley, Wes Montgomery, Johnny Griffin and Jimmy Heath, the label soon rivalled Prestige and Blue Note Records as a leading New York-based independent jazz label. In 1961, Keepnews produced the highly regarded live jazz recordings of the first Bill Evans Trio, Sunday at the Village Vanguard and Waltz for Debby. Evans's composition "Re: Person I Knew" dates from 1962 and is a tribute to Keepnews: the title is an anagram of his name.

During this period, Grauer concentrated on business affairs, which ultimately proved to be marred by "creative accounting". In mid-December 1963, Grauer died following a sudden heart attack, and Keepnews was unable to save the company from the bankruptcy that followed in mid-1964.

Milestone and Fantasy Records

After a period of freelance activity, Keepnews started Milestone Records in 1966 with a new business partner, pianist Dick Katz. Among their most notable artists over the next few years were McCoy Tyner, Joe Henderson, Lee Konitz, and Gary Bartz.

Late in 1972 Keepnews relocated to San Francisco as director of jazz A&R at Fantasy Records, which had just acquired the Riverside masters. Milestone was bought by Fantasy in the same year, and signed Sonny Rollins, whom Keepnews had worked with at Riverside. At Fantasy Keepnews oversaw the repackaging of the company's holdings in the idiom as "twofer"s, including many albums he had produced at Riverside. Bill Evans joined Fantasy at this time, reuniting their previous partnership; however his manager, Helen Keane, later a successful producer in her own right, took charge of Evans's recording. After resigning as Vice-President of Fantasy in 1980 because, as he said, "even under the best of circumstances, I can't be happy working for someone else," Keepnews returned to freelancing.

Later career

In 1985 Keepnews founded Landmark Records, whose catalog included albums recorded by the Kronos Quartet of music by Bill Evans and Monk, as well as straight jazz albums. For Landmark, Bobby Hutcherson recorded his most extensive sequence of latter-day albums. Landmark passed to Muse Records in 1993.

Orrin Keepnews won several Recording Academy Grammy Awards in the 1980s: Best Album Notes for The "Interplay" Sessions performed by Bill Evans in 1984 and Best Historical Album and Best Album Notes for Thelonious Monk: The Complete Riverside Recordings in 1988. A collection of his writings, The View from Within, was published in 1988.

In the CD era Keepnews continued to be responsible for extensive reissue compilations, including the Duke Ellington 24-CD RCA Centennial set in 1999 and Riverside's Keepnews Editions series.

In 2004 Keepnews was given a Trustees Award for Lifetime Achievement by the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences. In June 2010, Keepnews received a 2011 NEA Jazz Masters lifetime achievement award from the National Endowment for the Arts in the field of jazz, including a stipend of $25,000.

Personal life

Keepnews died at the age of 91 on March 1, 2015, a day before his 92nd birtdhay. He was married to the former Lucile Kaufman from 1948 until her death in 1989. His second wife, a clothing designer, Martha Egan, survived him. He is also survived by his two sons are Peter Keepnews, an editor at The New York Times and a writer on jazz subjects, and David Keepnews, a nurse, attorney and policy analyst who is Dean of the Harriet Rothkopf Heilbrunn School of Nursing at Long Island University, Brooklyn, as well as a daughter-in-law, Irene Trudel, a son-in-law, Peter Tung, a niece, Marya Kraus Wintroub and a nephew, John Kraus.

References

Orrin Keepnews Wikipedia


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