Teruo Nakamura (musician)

Teruo Nakamura (中村 照夫, Nakamura Teruo, born 3 March 3, 1942) is a Japanese jazz bassist and record producer.

Early life

Nakamura was born in Tokyo on 3 March 1942.[1] Everyone in his immediate family were artists.[2] He studied at Nihon University before moving to New York in 1964.[1] He studied there with Reggie Workman.[1]

Later life and career

Nakamura in 1969 joined drummer Roy Haynes's ensemble; that same year he also formed a band with Steve Grossman and Lenny White, who both went on to play on his debut as a leader, 1973's Unicorn.[3] Nakamura played both acoustic and electric bass on the album, which was recorded in 1973 and released by Three Blind Mice.[3]

Nakamura formed the Rising Sun band in the mid-1970s.[1] In 1977 this contained saxophonist Bob Mintzer, guitarist Shiro Mori, with Mark Gray on synthesizer, Art Gore on drums and Nobu Urushiyama on percussion.[2] "Nakamura worked principally as a record producer in the 1980s and 1990s."[1]

Discography

As leader

  • Unicorn (Three Blind Mice, 1973)
  • Rising Sun (Polydor, 1976)
  • Manhattan Special (Polydor, 1977)
  • Songs of the Birds (Kitty, 1977)
  • Big Apple (Agharta, 1979)
  • Teruo Nakamura & Rising Sun Band at Carnegie Hall (Agharta, 1979)
  • Route 80 (Agharta, 1980)
  • Super Friends (Eastworld, 1985)
  • Wind Smile (Pony Canyon, 1990)
  • Red Shoes (Avex, 2001)

As sideman

With Roy Haynes

With Tsuyoshi Yamamoto

  • P.S. I Love You (Toshiba EMI, 1980)

Main source:[1]

gollark: Here is the actual real "good enough" layout.
gollark: Go become a monoid in the category of endofunctors, oga.
gollark: ↓ optimal layout
gollark: I did look it up.
gollark: If I actually knew 3D geometry I could probably make it isometric and not somewhat wrongly oblique, but too bad.

References

  1. Iwanami, Yozo (2003), "Nakamura, Teruo", Oxford Music Online, Grove Music Online. Oxford Music Online. Oxford University Press, doi:10.1093/gmo/9781561592630.article.J321000
  2. Wilson, John S. (31 December 1977). "Jazz: Teruo Nakamura's Sextet". The New York Times.
  3. Jurek, Thom. "Teruo Nakamura: Unicorn". AllMusic. Retrieved 2 December 2018.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.