Graham Collier

James Graham Collier OBE (21 February 1937 – 9 September 2011)[1] was an English jazz bassist, bandleader and composer.

Graham Collier
Birth nameJames Graham Collier
Born(1937-02-21)21 February 1937
Tynemouth, Northumberland, England
Died9 September 2011(2011-09-09) (aged 74)
Crete, Greece
GenresJazz
Occupation(s)Musician
InstrumentsDouble Bass
Bandleader
Composer
Years active1960s–2011

Life and career

Born in Tynemouth, Northumberland, on leaving school Collier joined the British Army as a musician, spending three years in Hong Kong. He subsequently won a Down Beat magazine scholarship to the Berklee School of Music, Boston, studying with Herb Pomeroy and was its first British graduate in 1963. On his return to Britain he founded the first version of an ensemble devoted to his own compositions, Graham Collier Music, which included Kenny Wheeler, Harry Beckett and John Surman, and in later line-ups Karl Jenkins, Mike Gibbs, Art Themen and many other notable musicians.[2] Collier was the first recipient of an Arts Council bursary for jazz and was commissioned by festivals, groups and broadcasters across Europe, North America, Australia and the Far East. He produced 19 albums and CDs of his music and also worked in a wide range of other media: on stage plays and musicals, on documentary and fiction film, and on a variety of radio drama productions.

Collier was also an author and educator, having written seven books on jazz and given lectures and workshops around the world. As Simon Purcell noted, "Jazz education in the UK owes an enormous amount to Graham Collier (alongside Eddie Harvey and Lionel Grigson) without whom our current positions and extent of provision would have been considerably harder to achieve."[3] In 1987, Collier launched the jazz degree course at London's Royal Academy of Music and was its artistic director until he resigned in 1999 to concentrate on his own music. In 1989, he was among the group of jazz educators who formed the International Association of Schools of Jazz, whose magazine, Jazz Changes, he co-edited for seven years. He was awarded an Order of the British Empire (OBE) by Queen Elizabeth II in 1987 for his services to jazz.

Latterly, Collier lived on a small island in Greece,[4] where he composed, wrote and administered his back catalogue, travelling to present concerts and workshops around the world. His book, the jazz composer: moving music off the paper, a philosophical look at jazz and jazz composing, was published by Northway Books in 2005, and his nineteenth CD, directing 14 Jackson Pollocks, mainly recorded in 2004, was released by the jazzcontinuum label. He died from heart failure in September, 2011.[5]

Works

Discography

Books

  • Jazz – A Students' and Teachers' Guide (Hardback and Paperback, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1977) Translated into German, Norwegian and Italian.
  • Inside Jazz (Hardback and Paperback, London: Quartet Books, 1973)
  • Compositional Devices (Boston, Mass.: Berklee Press Publications, 1975)
  • Cleo and John (London: Quartet Books, 1976)
  • Jazz Workshop the Blues, (Universal Edition 1988) ISBN 0-900938-61-7
  • Interaction – opening up the jazz ensemble (Tübingen, Advance Books, 1995)
  • the jazz composer, moving music off the paper (London: Northway Publications, 2009) ISBN 978-0-9557888-0-2
gollark: Okay, rearrange the states so they're square.
gollark: A simple if slightly inaccurate way would be some kind of binary space partitioning thing, where (pretending the US is a perfect square) you just repeatedly divide it in half (alternatingly vertically/horizontally), but stop dividing a particular subregion when population goes below some target number.
gollark: The more complex the algorithm the more people might try and manipulate it. The obvious* solution is to just split up the country by latitude/longitude grid squares.
gollark: The Netherlands will just conquer all of the areas "lost" to rising sea levels.
gollark: (well, energy generally)

References

  1. "Jazz breaking news: Influential Jazz Composer And Educator Graham Collier Dies". Jazzwise.com. Retrieved 12 January 2020.
  2. Fordham, John (14 September 2011). "Graham Collier obituary". Theguardian.com. Retrieved 12 January 2020.
  3. "Jazz". Simonpurcell.com. Retrieved 12 January 2020.
  4. "Graham Collier: Jazz musician whose work explored the space between". The Independent. 19 September 2011. Retrieved 12 January 2020.
  5. Graham Collier Biography www.allmusic.com

Sources

  • Martin Kunzler, Jazz-Enzyklopädie Vol. 1., Rowohlt, Hamburg. ISBN 3-499-16512-0, p. 230f.
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