Lynne Arriale

Lynne Arriale (* May 29, 1957 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin) is an American jazz pianist and university teacher.

Life

Lynne Arriale studied at the Music Conservatory in Wisconsin and had a classical education; under the impression of the music of Keith Jarrett and Herbie Hancock they eventually found to jazz. In 1991, she was on tour in Japan; In 1993 she won the International Great American Jazz Piano Competition, which earned her a record deal with the label DMP. She became famous in the early 1990s through her ​​trio with bassist Jay Anderson and drummer Steve Davis. Starting with The Eyes Have It (1993 ) she took with her ​​trio, a number of albums for DMP initially, and later for the label TCB and In & Out on. In 1999, she appeared with her ​​trio at the Montreux Jazz Festival, 2000, she played with the duo album Wolfgang Lackerschmid You are Here one. In 2002, she played the opening concert of the Tübingen Jazz & Classical days. In 2005 she had with her ​​trio made ​​an appearance at the Festival Jazz Open in Stuttgart. In 2009 she took with Nuance an album in which they differed from their previous trio concept and with George Mraz, drummer Anthony Pinciott and Randy Brecker own compositions and interpretations of songs written by Sting, Thelonious Monk ( I Mean You), Dizzy Gillespie (A Night In Tunisia ) and Tommy Wolf ( Ballad Of The Sad Young Men) grossed. Totally hear unaccompanied she is on the 2013 released album solo. Lynne is a professor of jazz piano at the University of North Florida in Jacksonville (Florida ).

Discography

  • With Words Unspoken (DMP, 1996)
  • A Long Road Home (TCB, 1998)
  • Inspiration ( TCB, 2000)
  • Arise (MTM, 2002)
  • Come Together ( In & Out, 2004)
  • Nuance ( In & Out, 2009)
  • Convergence ( In & Out, 2011)
  • Solo ( In & Out, 2013)

Literature / Sources

  • Bielefeld catalog 1988 & 2002
  • Richard Cook & Brian Morton: The Penguin Guide to Jazz Recordings, 8th Edition, London, Penguin, 2006 ISBN 0-141-02327-9
79416
de