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Don’t fret though, the full transcription is located on our Patreon page, so click the link below to get your hands on it today! Instead of looking very closely at a lick or piece of vocabulary, we will be talking about some of the larger issues and concepts that make Gary’s playing so amazing. This one is a bit different from our usual lick of the month series. Gary plays an amazing version of Clifford Brown’s Joy Spring on his Instagram page and we are using that as the basis for this episode. He then began to shift his emphasis toward smaller groups on albums such as Light On (2007), Prana Dance (2009), and Infinity (2019).This week features one of my favorite Trumpet/Flugelhorn players from Bristol, UK, Gary Alesbrook. Over the next few years, Harrell’s recordings-such as The Art of Rhythm (1998) and Paradise (2001)-tended to focus on large ensembles. The collection included works with standard chord changes, as well as “Cheetah,” a free jazz experiment with a spontaneous harmonic structure and shifting tempi, and “Darn That Dream,” a one-man duet, with Harrell’s flügelhorn solo accompanied by himself on piano. The 1996 album Labyrinth, his first for a major label (RCA Victor), featured his compositions for quintet and nonet. Harrell was ranked as top trumpet player in the 1996 Down Beat magazine critics poll, an honour that not only acknowledged his artistic accomplishment but ultimately vindicated his decision to lead his own groups and play his own compositions.
While fronting various groups in the 1990s, he also toured the United States and Europe as a freelance sideman, most notably with Charlie Haden’s Liberation Music Orchestra. All the while, Harrell was composing prolifically, and by the time he left Woods’s combo in 1989, he was recording with his own combo. It was as a trumpet soloist in the hard-bop (an extension of bebop) combos led by Horace Silver (1973–77) and Phil Woods (1983–89), however, that he attracted the most attention. His highly varied résumé included tours with a number of big bands, including those of Stan Kenton (1969) and Woody Herman (1970–71) work with pianist Bill Evans (1979) and performance in Konitz’s latter-day cool-jazz nonet (1979–81). He graduated from Stanford University in 1969 with a major in music composition, and he also studied with alto saxophonist Lee Konitz. Harrell spent most of his youth in the San Francisco Bay area, where he began playing in jazz groups when he was 13. Tom Harrell, (born June 16, 1946, Urbana, Illinois, U.S.), American jazz trumpet player and composer who was recognized for his lyrical, vibratoless improvisations and for his facility in both traditional and experimental styles of jazz.