Alan Shorter
Musical artist
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Alan Shorter (May 29, 1932 – April 5, 1988)[1] was an American free jazz trumpet and flugelhorn player, and the older brother of composer and saxophone player Wayne Shorter.[2]
Alan Shorter | |
|---|---|
| Also known as | Al Shorter |
| Born | May 29, 1932 Newark, New Jersey, United States |
| Died | April 5, 1988 (aged 55) Los Angeles, California, United States |
| Genres | avant-garde jazz, free jazz |
| Occupations | musician, composer |
| Instruments | trumpet, flugelhorn |
| Years active | 1960s–1970s |
| Labels | Verve, America |
Biography
Shorter was born in the Ironbound District in Newark, New Jersey. He started on alto saxophone, but switched to trumpet after graduating from high school. He attended Howard University but soon rebelled against the ultra-conservative atmosphere and dropped out. He later graduated from New York University.
He played his first professional gigs with a local bebop big band called the Jackie Bland Band (other members included his brother Wayne, trombonist Grachan Moncur III, and pianist Walter Davis, Jr.).In his early years, he focused on bebop before shifting to free jazz, a style he maintained throughout his career apart from a six-month period in a U.S. Army Band.
Shorter recorded two albums as a leader: Orgasm (1968) and Tes Esat (1971). Both were out of print for many years until re-issued by Verve Records in 2004 and 2005, respectively. He also recorded five albums with saxophonist Archie Shepp (1964–1970), including the classic Four for Trane (1964), two albums with Marion Brown (1965–1966), one album with Alan Silva (1970), and made an appearance on one of his brother's albums (The All Seeing Eye [1965]). Several of these albums feature his unusual compositions, his most famous being "Mephistopheles".
In the mid-1960s, Shorter moved to Europe, leading his own avant-garde gigs in Geneva and Paris. His style of free jazz sometimes proved to be too far-out for European audiences (his brother remembered that Shorter's gigs in Europe would often end with him responding to the crowd's boos by yelling, "You're not ready for me yet!"), but he generally found European audiences more receptive than those in the U.S. Eventually, he returned to the United States, where he taught briefly at Bennington College but otherwise faded into obscurity. He died of a ruptured aorta in Los Angeles, California in 1988, at age 55, shortly after becoming engaged to Ruth Ann Hancock, a cousin of Herbie Hancock.
Shorter's playing is comparable to that of Don Cherry, but with a more aggressive, anarchic bent. His own albums feature his groups functioning as a unit, rather than focusing on his own singular virtuosity. Reportedly, Shorter's musical style was akin to his personality: deep and intellectual, thought sometimes intentionally strange (his childhood nickname was "Doc Strange").
Discography
As leader
- 1968: Orgasm (Verve Records) - with Charlie Haden, Gato Barbieri, Reggie Johnson, Muhammad Ali, Rashied Ali
- 1971: Tes Esat (America Records) - with Gary Windo, Johnny Dyani, Rene Augustus
As sideman
With Marion Brown
- Marion Brown Quartet (1965)
- Juba-Lee (1966)
With The New York Art Quartet
- Call It Art (Triple Point, 2013)
With Archie Shepp
- Four for Trane (1964)
- Archie Shepp and the Full Moon Ensemble (1970)
- Pitchin Can (1970)
- Doodlin' (1970)
- Coral Rock (1973)
With Wayne Shorter
- The All Seeing Eye (1965)
With Alan Silva
- Seasons (1971)
With François Tusques
- Intercommunal Music (1971)