3/9/2009
9:59:02 AM - Jim Hall, born in Buffalo, and educated at the Cleveland
Institute of Music, moved to Los Angeles where he began to attract
national, and then international, attention in the late 1950s. By 1960
Jim had arrived in New York to work with Sonny Rollins and Art Farmer,
among others. His live and recorded collaborations with Bill Evans, Paul
Desmond, and Ron Carter, are legendary.
Not only is Jim Hall one of the jazz world's favorite guitarists, but he
has also earned critical acclaim for his skills as a composer and
arranger. The first formal recognition came in 1997, when Jim won the
New York Jazz Critics Circle Award for Best Jazz Composer/Arranger. His
pieces for string, brass, and vocal ensembles can be heard on his
"Textures" and "By Arrangement" recordings. His original composition,
"Quartet Plus Four," a piece for jazz quartet augmented by the Zapolski
string quartet, was debuted in Denmark during the concert and ceremony
where he was Awarded the coveted Jazzpar Prize, and later released on
CD.
His most recent large-scale composition was a concerto for guitar and
orchestra, commissioned by Towson University in Maryland for The First
World Guitar Congress®, which was debuted in June 2004 with the
Baltimore Symphony. The title of the work, “Peace Movement,” is
indicative of Jim’s desire to contribute to world peace through his
music. He views music as a way of bonding people together and crossing
barriers, be they barriers of geography, ideology, religion, or other
discriminations. In accepting the NEA Jazz Masters Fellowship Award in
January 2004, he said, “The women and men who have received this Award
in the past have spread peace and love throughout the world, something
that governments might emulate. I am pleased to be one of the
peacemakers.”
In addition to the recent focus on orchestral and choral composition,
Jim remains active as a player, working and recording with a variety of
ensembles all around the world. In addition to working with his trio,
Jim likes to spice up the mix with various guests. From time to time you
might hear Joe Lovano, Greg Osby, the New York Voices, Kenny Barron, Pat
Metheny, Slide Hampton, and others, working for a night or two with
Jim's groups. In fact, several of these guests can be heard on a live
recording titled "Panorama.” On occasion, these alliances lead to more
intensive collaborative projects such as the “Jim Hall & Basses”
recording featuring Scott Colley, Charlie Haden, Dave Holland, George
Mraz, and Christian McBride, and the "duets" project with Pat Metheny.
Jim’s latest project, “Magic Meeting,” a CD featuring the Jim Hall Trio
with Scott Colley and Lewis Nash, was recorded live at the Village
Vanguard in New York City at the end of April 2004. Jim’s new website
(www.jimhallmusic.com) enables him to share with his audience a personal
view of his creative process, in addition to the finished product. Via
the web, audiences can participate, not just by purchasing the new CD,
but by ‘being there,’ behind the scenes, so to speak, witnessing Jim
prepare for a project, meeting the players, hearing the outtakes, and
more.
Some years ago, Guitar Player magazine quoted Jim as saying "I do feel
good about my playing. The instrument keeps me humble. Sometimes I pick
it up and it seems to say `No, you can't play today.' I keep at it
anyway though." Jim and his wife, Jane, who is both a psychoanalyst and
a songwriter, live in New York City’s Greenwich Village with their dog,
Django.
This bio was excerpted from “Sketches from PROS Folios: Jim Hall” by
Devra Hall, and permission is granted for its use in program books and
promotional materials. Whenever possible, please include an author’s
credit.