Sneha Girap (Editor)

Pekka Pöyry

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Name
  
Pekka Poyry


Role
  
Music master

Pekka Pöyry Pekka Pyry Discography at Discogs


Died
  
August 4, 1980, Pori, Finland

Albums
  
Lambertland, Tasavallan Presidentti, Magneettimiehen kuolema, Milky Way Moses

Music group
  
Tasavallan Presidentti (1970 – 1974)

Similar People
  
Mans Groundstroem, Vesa Aaltonen, Frank Robson, Jukka Tolonen, Juhani Aaltonen

Pekka poyry eduskuntaan 2015


Pekka Pöyry (10 December 1939 - 4 August 1980 in Pori) was a Finnish jazz and rock saxophonist and flutist. He was part of the Pekka Pöyry Quartet and Quintet.

Contents

Pekka Pöyry Elv arkisto Jazzia Pekka Pyry in memoriam YLE Teema ylefi

Pöyry became interested in jazz music at school and began studying the violin and clarinet playing. He was, however, more taken with playing the alto saxophone, inspired by Charlie Parker. In addition, he played the flute and soprano saxophone. After graduating with a Master of Laws in 1966, Pöyry decided to become a professional musician. In the same year he represented YLE, EBU's concert in London. The mid-1960s he had his own quartet with pianist Eero Ojanen, bassist Teppo Hauta-aho and drummer Reino Laine. They performed at the 1966 Pori Jazz Festival and were joined by the Norwegian-Finnish singer Pia Skaar to form a quintet. In May 1967 the Quintet appeared at the Tallinn Jazz Festival. In a 1969 interview, Bill Evans described the quartet's performance (although couldn't remember the name) at the 1969 Montreux Jazz Festival where they won as "marvellous" and "highly professional". He increasingly became interested in progressive rock and jazz fusion in the late 1960s and 1970s. With his later groups he attempted international breakthrough, including the Reading Festival in England in 1973. His band, Tasavallan Presidentti, however, broke up in 1974. He also played with Wigwam.

In 1975, Pöyry toured northern Europe with the North Jazz Quintet, and later he joined the orchestra of Heikki Sarmanto, later the UMO Jazz Orchestra, playing the Ljubljana Festival in what was then Yugoslavia in 1976. He also performed in Poland, Czechoslovakia, Cuba, the Soviet Union, Britain and the United States with other bands. A manic depressive, he committed suicide in 1980. The Pekka Pöyry Award is named in his honor and given to young, talented saxophonists in Finland, awarded since the early 1980s.

Pekka Pöyry Quartet - 4–3–5 (Live at Montreux, 1968)


Songs

Sisältäni portin löysinMagneettimiehen kuolema · 1970
LambertlandLambertland · 1972
Struggling for FreedomTasavallan Presidentti · 1971

References

Pekka Pöyry Wikipedia