Online Encyclopedia Search Tool

Your Online Encyclopedia

 

Online Encylopedia and Dictionary Research Site

Online Encyclopedia Free Search Online Encyclopedia Search    Online Encyclopedia Browse    welcome to our free dictionary for your research of every kind

Online Encyclopedia



John Zorn

John Zorn (born September 2, 1953 in New York City) is a American composer and clarinet/saxophone player. He owns the Tzadik record label and has worked with a large number of experimental musicians, particularly in improvised music, modern classical music and jazz, though he has produced music in most styles.

As a child, he played piano, guitar and flute. He went to college in St. Louis where he discovered free jazz, before dropping out and moving to Manhattan. There he gave concerts in his small apartment, playing a variety of reeds, duck calls, tapes, etc; almost anything. In the mid 1980s he signed to the Elektra-Nonesuch label. Since then, he has released a very large number of records, usually putting out several each year. His breakthrough recording was perhaps 1985's The Big Gundown: John Zorn Plays the Music of Ennio Morricone, wherein Zorn offered a number of often radical arrangements of Morricone's famed songs from various movies. The Big Gundown was endorsed by Morricone, and incorporated elements of traditional japanese music, soul jazz, and other diverse musical genres.

Zorn's recorded output includes records by three bands of his own, Masada (a klezmer band playing music that is often described as Jewish jazz), Painkiller (A mix of grindcore and jazz in which he is joined by Mick Harris of Napalm Death)and Naked City (an often aggressive mix of jazz, rock and thrash metal). He has also worked with musicians like Bill Frisell, Wayne Horvitz, Derek Bailey, Fred Frith, Keiji Haino and Bill Laswell. He has written music for television and film, which has been collected in the ongoing Filmworks series of records on his Tzadik label. Some of these are jazz-based, others are classical.

He has also written several "game pieces", in which performers are allowed to improvise while following certain structural rules. These works are in the main named after sports, and include Pool, Archery and Lacrosse, as well as Cobra. He is also often noted for his postmodern, sometimes extreme, use of formal of blocks, units which he combines and contrasts in various ways.

External links

  • Tzadik.com http://www.tzadik.com
  • Extensive Discography http://www.wnur.org/jazz/artists/zorn.john/discog.html
  • Mailing List http://www.browbeat.com/zornlist.html




Last updated: 02-08-2005 08:30:51
Last updated: 02-25-2005 20:55:10