Hideo Shiraki

Hideo Shiraki (白木秀雄; 1 January 1933, in Tokyo – 31 August 1972) was a Japanese jazz drummer and bandleader, best known for his work in the 1950s and 1960s. Famed earlier on for hard bop, he later explored world music and became a pioneer of fusing traditional music forms with jazz structuring.

He emerged in the new Japanese jazz scene of the 1950s that grew out of the influence of the US occupying forces.[1] He studied percussion at the Tokyo School of Fine Arts and, during this period, played with Masashi Nagao's Blue Coats.

In the late 1950s and early 1960s, his quintet was popular in Japan and was associated with the "funky boom" craze for hard bop. Hidehiko "Sleepy" Matsumoto, Terumasa Hino and Yuzuru Sera all passed through his quintet.

Notable albums include 1961's In Fiesta (Teichiku Japan), which included a version of Benny Golson's "Five Spot After Dark". Performers on the album included Hidehiko Matsumoto on tenor and flute and Yuzuru Sera on piano.

1965's Sakura Sakura united the quintet (including Terumasa Hino on trumpet) with three female koto players as Shiraki moved into a world jazz approach. An invited November 1965 performance at the Berlin Jazz Festival, organised by Joachim-Ernst Berendt, saw the quintet work with a koto quartet and was feted for mixing jazz with traditional Japanese music.[2]

He also played with Toshiko Akiyoshi, including two tracks on her 1961 album Toshiko Meets Her Old Pals.

On July 22, 1966, he played with the John Coltrane quintet in Tokyo while the group was touring Japan.[3]

Sources

gollark: There was in fact more than one hour left, ish.
gollark: ++remind -10m apioforms
gollark: ++remind 14m laugh at lyricly guess success, unless he does well, in which case send data back to parent process and `exit(2)`
gollark: <@319753218592866315> You are now mocked.
gollark: ++remind 15m laugh at *results* of own guesses

References

  1. Mitsui T, "Interactions of Imported and Indigenous Music in Japan: A Historical Overview of the Music Industry", in Ewbank AJ, Papageorgiou FT, Whose Master's Voice?
  2. The return of jazz: Joachim-Ernst Berendt and West German cultural change by Andrew Wright Hurley
  3. Porter, Lewis; DeVito, Chris; Fujioka, Yasuhiro; Wild, David; Schmaler, Wolf (2008). The John Coltrane Reference. Routledge. p. 350.
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