Marcus Miller

Marcus Miller
Jazz
Cosmopolite Scene
søndag 28. oktober 2007
Dørene åpner 19:00
Scene
Cosmopolite
Billettpris
270/220 ink. avg
Aldersgrense
18 år med gyldig ID
Seter
Unummerert

Marcus Miller

  • Marcus Miller - bass
  • Poogie Bell - trommer
  • Patches Stewart - trompet
  • Keith Anderson - saksofon
  • Bobby Sparks - keyboards
  • Gregoire Maret - munnspill

Legendariske Marcus Miller er tilbake. Siden han imponerte en hel verden med fabelaktig basspill på Miles Davis' Tutu tidlig på 80-tallet har han vært en av de mest sentrale bassistene i amerikansk musikkliv; fra samspill med storheter som Miles og Eric Clapton, men også som bandleder, alltid med formidable musikere i bandet. Han har fylt Cosmopolite til randen med ekstatiske fans før, og kommer nå tilbake med nok en instrumentoppvisning av de helt sjeldne.

Marcus Miller
Marcus Miller, the world famous bassist, soundtracker and producer of the legendary “Tutu” album for Miles Davis is planning to come back to Scandinavia.

Marcus was born to a musical family in Brooklyn and was raised in Jamaica, NY on Long Island. He took after his father, an amateur jazz pianist and church organist and at the age of ten he picked up the clarinet, later adding piano and bass to his musical arsenal. At age 15, he secured his first professional gig with the New York club band, Harlem River Drive, before discovering jazz, by the age of 16, and joining forces with flautist Bobbi Humphrey and keyboardist Lonnie Liston Smith.
Marcus spent the next few years as a studio musician in New York, making sessions with Aretha Franklin, Roberta Flack, David Sanborn and others. In 1980 he joined Miles Davis and went on to spend two years with the fabled jazzman. "He (Davis) didn't settle for anything mediocre, which helped me develop my style," Marcus says. "I learned from him that you have to be honest about who you are and what you do, If you follow that, you won't have problems."
Following his stint with Davis, Miller produced his first major album, Sanborn's "Backstreet" and issued his own debut record, "Suddenly (on Warner Bros. Records). In 1986, he produced the legendary "Tutu" for Davis, followed by his second solo album, "Marcus Miller." In 1991 Marcus won a Best R&B Song Grammy for "Power of Love/Love Power," a song he co-wrote with Teddy Vann and Luther Vandross.
In the past several years, Miller has also turned his attention to film scoring, composing for House Party, Boomerang (Eddie Murphy and Halle Berry), Siesta, Ladies' Man, and The Brothers as well as contributing to Spike Lee's School Daze soundtrack. He has also produced albums for the likes of Wayne Shorter and Chaka Khan.
Miller's latest album, The Essential Marcus Miller, is out now on Dreyfus Jazz

Official website:
www.marcusmiller.com