Artist's albums
Kickin' It
2001 · album
Midnight
1998 · album
State Of Grace
1996 · album
West Side Stories
1994 · album
Worth Waiting For
1993 · album
Private Passion
1986 · album
Step By Step (Expanded Edition)
1985 · album
In the Heat of the Night
1984 · album
It's A Fact
1982 · album
Kiss The Sky
2022 · single
If I didn't have love
2022 · single
Night Riders (The Jeff Lorber Remix)
2021 · single
BOP - to Help Fund the Cure for PKD
2015 · album
Heard That
2008 · album
Rehab
2008 · single
Anthem For A New America
2007 · single
Deep Night
2007 · single
He Had A Hat
2007 · album
Flipside
2005 · album
Ooh La La
2005 · single
Philly Style
2003 · album
The Very Best Of Jeff Lorber
2002 · compilation
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Biography
Known for his smooth style of weaving together elements of funk, R&B, rock, and electric jazz, Grammy Award-winning keyboardist, composer, and producer Jeff Lorber helped pioneer the post-fusion sound of contemporary jazz. He crossed over to the mainstream charts with seven Top 200 titles, in addition to more than a dozen with genre-specific albums including Contemporary Jazz, Dance Albums, and Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums. Emerging on the scene in the late '70s, Lorber quickly established himself as a leader at the forefront of the electric jazz movement, issuing albums like 1978's Soft Space (featuring Chick Corea) and 1977's Water Sign with his group the Jeff Lorber Fusion. He scored a Grammy nomination for his 1985 song "Pacific Coast Highway," an accolade that marked his rise into more commercial crossover jazz, culminating in 1986's Private Passion. Following an extended period as a producer, Lorber returned to regular recording in the '90s, and has since balanced his time between solo albums like 2007's He Had a Hat and productions with his fusion trio like 2017's Prototype. After collaborating with guitarist Mike Stern on 2019's Eleven, the Jeff Lorber Fusion returned to jazz-funk with Space-Time in 2021. Born in Philadelphia on November 4, 1952, he began playing the piano at the age of four, and as a teen performed with a variety of local R&B bands. Lorber's infatuation with jazz began during his stay at the Berklee College of Music, and after forming the Jeff Lorber Fusion he issued the group's self-titled debut in 1977. During the first half of the following decade, the band became one of the most popular jazz acts of the period, touring nonstop and even scoring a Best R&B Instrumental Grammy nomination for the radio hit "Pacific Coast Highway." Released in 1986, Private Passion was Lorber's most successful outing yet, but at this commercial peak he stopped recording, instead turning to production and session work. He did not issue his first proper solo LP until 1991's Worth Waiting For, remaining both a prolific performer and producer for the rest of the decade. He recorded for Verve and Zebra during the '90s then moved over to Narada in the 2000s, releasing successful smooth jazz albums like 2003's Philly Style and 2005's Flipside. He released He Had a Hat on Blue Note in 2007. In 2010, Lorber released the '70s funk- and soul-inflected Heard That. In 2010, Lorber reactivated the Jeff Lorber Fusion and released Now Is the Time on Heads Up International. The album received generally positive reviews, placed high on the contemporary jazz chart, and was nominated for a Grammy. Lorber continued to explore with the revitalized JLF, but he went even deeper for 2012's Galaxy (Heads Up/Concord), revisiting in depth the sound he helped pioneer. Lorber, founding Yellowjackets' bassist Jimmy Haslip, and saxophonist Eric Marienthal were accompanied by drummer Vinnie Colaiuta. The album also featured guest spots by trumpeter Randy Brecker, percussionist Lenny Castro, guitarists Paul Jackson, Jr., Michael Thompson, Andrée Theander, and Larry Koonse, and drummer Dave Weckl. In August of 2013, the JLF released Hacienda. It was nominated for Best Pop Instrumental Album at the 2014 Grammy Awards. After a supporting tour, Lorber and Haslip wasted no time cutting another record. They re-enlisted Colaiuta and recruited Yellowjackets saxophonist Bob Mintzer and guitarist Robben Ford, as well as a host of studio aces including percussionist Lenny Castro and guitarist Jackson, Jr. David Mann was hired to provide horn charts. Step It Up was released by Heads Up in the fall of 2015. Two years later, the keyboardist was back with JLF, this time with saxophonist Andy Snitzer and drummer Gary Novak for Prototype. The album took home the Grammy for Best Contemporary Instrumental Album. Snitzer and Novak were also on board for 2018's Impact. A year later, Lorber teamed with veteran jazz and fusion guitarist Mike Stern for the album Eleven (titled for the mythical above-the-maximum volume setting on amplifiers), for Concord Jazz. The pair were brought together by bassist and producer Jimmy Haslip, who had worked with both men extensively. Eleven was issued in September, preceded by the single "Ha Ha." In June 2021, the Jeff Lorber Fusion released Space-Time on Shanachie. In addition to the Novak and Haslip rhythm section, arranger/saxophonist David Mann, and guitarist Paul Jackson, Jr., Lorber also enlisted guest spots from old friends including saxophonist Bob Mintzer, flutist Hubert Laws, bassist Gerald Albright, and guitarists Robben Ford and Michael Landau. ~ Jason Ankeny, Rovi