Jackie McLean lyrics
Artist · 104 143 listeners per month
Artist's albums
A Fickle Sonance
2000 · album
Vertigo
2000 · album
Nature Boy
1999 · album
The Jackie Mac Attack (Live)
1998 · album
ハット・トリック
1996 · album
Destination...Out!
1995 · album
Light's Out!
2021 · album
Melodies Record Club #001: Four Tet selects
2021 · single
4, 5 and 6
2020 · album
Jackie McLean, Jazz Stars
2015 · album
New Soil
2010 · album
Bluesnik (Remastered/ Expanded Edition)
2009 · album
One Step Beyond (Remastered)
2009 · album
Let Freedom Ring (Rudy Van Gelder Edition)
2007 · album
New And Old Gospel (Reissue)
2007 · album
It's Time
2006 · album
Consequence
2005 · album
You've Got to Share: Songs for Children
2004 · album
Action
2004 · album
Prestige Profiles: Jackie McLean
2004 · compilation
Right Now
2004 · album
Jackie's Bag
2003 · album
Capuchin Swing (Rudy Van Gelder Edition)
2002 · album
Jacknife
2002 · album
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Biography
Jackie McLean has long had his own sound, played slightly sharp and with great intensity; he is recognizable within two notes. McLean was one of the few bop-oriented players of the early '50s who explored free jazz in the '60s, widening his emotional range and drawing from the new music qualities that fit his musical personality. The son of guitarist John McLean (who played guitar with Tiny Bradshaw), Jackie started on alto when he was 15. As a teenager he was friends with such neighbors as Bud Powell, Thelonious Monk, and Sonny Rollins. He made his recording debut with Miles Davis in 1951 and the rest of the decade could be considered his apprenticeship. McLean worked with George Wallington, Charles Mingus, and Art Blakey's Jazz Messengers (1956-1958). He also participated on a string of jam session-flavored records for Prestige and New Jazz which, due to the abysmal pay and his developing style, he later disowned. Actually they are not bad but pale in comparison to McLean's classic series of 21 Blue Note albums (1959-1967). On sessions such as One Step Beyond and Destination Out, McLean really stretches and challenges himself; this music is quite original and intense yet logical. McLean also appeared as a sideman on some sessions for Blue Note (most notably with Tina Brooks, acted in the stage play The Connection (1959-1961), and led his own groups on a regular basis. By 1968, however, he was moving into the jazz education field and other than some SteepleChase records from 1972-1974 (including two meetings with his early idol Dexter Gordon) and an outing for RCA (1978-1979), McLean was less active as a player during the '70s. However in the '80s Jackie McLean returned to a more active playing schedule (sometimes with his son René McLean on tenor), recording for Triloka, Antilles, and most recently (with a renewed relationship) with Blue Note -- without losing the intensity and passion of his earlier days. ~ Scott Yanow, Rovi