Artist's albums
Inside Nitty = Gritty
1994 · album
La Note Bleue (2021 Remastered Version)
1987 · album
Bésame mucho (Remastered)
2022 · EP
Melancholy Baby (Remastered)
2022 · EP
Minor Swing (Remastered)
2022 · EP
Ménilmontant (Remastered)
2022 · EP
Nuages (Remastered)
2022 · EP
Swing 39 (Remastered)
2022 · EP
Swing 39 (Remastered)
2022 · EP
Zodiac
2022 · album
French Ballads (2021 Remastered Version)
2021 · album
Nuages
2021 · album
Original Jazz Movie Soundtracks, Vol. 5
2019 · album
Minor Swing (Remastered)
2018 · album
Night in Tunisia (Remastered)
2018 · album
Swing 39 (Remastered)
2018 · album
Four Brothers
2015 · album
Barney Wilen, Jazz Stars
2014 · album
Auto Jazz (Tragic Destiny of Lorenzo Bandini)
2014 · album
Essential Best
2011 · album
Moshi
1968 · album
Dear Prof. Leary
1968 · album
Jazz Sur Seine
1958 · album
Similar artists
Eddie "Lockjaw" Davis
Artist
Serge Chaloff
Artist
Harold Land
Artist
Jackie McLean
Artist
Zoot Sims
Artist
Sonny Stitt
Artist
Dexter Gordon
Artist
Booker Ervin
Artist
Tina Brooks
Artist
Art Farmer
Artist
Al Cohn
Artist
Johnny Griffin
Artist
Sonny Criss
Artist
Lucky Thompson
Artist
Phil Woods
Artist
Arnett Cobb
Artist
Benny Golson
Artist
Bobby Jaspar
Artist
Pepper Adams
Artist
Kenny Clarke
Artist
Biography
Barney Wilen's mother was French, his father a successful American dentist-turned-inventor. He grew up mostly on the French Riviera; the family left during World War II but returned upon its conclusion. According to Wilen himself, he was convinced to become a musician by his mother's friend, the poet Blaise Cendrars. As a teenager he started a youth jazz club in Nice, where he played often. He moved to Paris in the mid-'50s and worked with such American musicians as Bud Powell, Benny Golson, Miles Davis, and J.J. Johnson at the Club St. Germain. His emerging reputation received a boost in 1957 when he played with Davis on the soundtrack to the Louis Malle film Lift to the Scaffold. Two years later, he performed with Art Blakey and Thelonious Monk on the soundtrack to Roger Vadim's Les Liaisons Dangereuses (1960). Wilen began working in a rock-influenced style during the '60s, recording an album entitled Dear Prof. Leary in 1968. In the early '70s, Wilen led a failed expedition of filmmakers, musicians, and journalists to travel to Africa to document pygmy music. Later Wilen played in a punk rock band called Moko and founded a French Jazzmobile-type organization that took music to people living in outlying areas. He also worked in theater. By the mid-'90s, he was working once again in a bebop vein in a band with the pianist Laurent de Wilde. Much of Wilen's later work was documented on the Japanese Venus label. ~ Chris Kelsey, Rovi