Greg Osby lyrics
Artist · 2 258 listeners per month
Artist's albums
Symbols Of Light (A Solution)
2001 · album
The Invisible Hand
2000 · album
Friendly Fire
1999 · album
Banned In New York
1998 · album
Zero
1998 · album
Further Ado
1997 · album
Conversation #9: Targeted
2023 · album
Old Shaman
2023 · single
Freedom Jazz Dance
2023 · single
Reflections of the Eternal Line
2020 · album
Please Stand By
2020 · single
Choices
2019 · album
The Song Is You
2016 · single
Bobby Previte: Terminals
2014 · album
Sonic Halo
2014 · album
Pariah's Pariah
2009 · album
Nine Levels
2008 · album
Channel Three
2005 · album
Solos - The Jazz Sessions (Greg Osby)
2005 · album
Night Call
2004 · album
Public
2004 · album
Round and Round
2003 · album
St. Louis Shoes
2003 · album
Inner Circle
2002 · album
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Biography
Post-bop saxophonist Greg Osby was born April 3, 1960 in St. Louis, playing in a series of R&B, funk, and blues units throughout his teen years before attending Howard University. Upon graduating from the Berklee School of Music, he settled in New York City and went on to play behind Jack DeJohnette, Andrew Hill, Herbie Hancock, and Muhal Richard Abrams; during the mid-'80s, Osby also served alongside Steve Coleman, Geri Allen, Gary Thomas, and Cassandra Wilson as a member of the renowned M-Base Collective. Making his solo debut with 1987's Sound Theatre, Osby went on to record several sets for the JMT label, also earning notice for his impressive contributions to Hill's 1989 date, Eternal Spirit, and its follow-up But Not Farewell; with 1990's Man-Talk for Moderns, Vol. X, he cut his first headling session for Blue Note, with subsequent efforts for the company (including 1993's 3-D Lifestyles and 1995's Black Book), pioneering a distinctive fusion of jazz and hip-hop. While 1996's Art Forum captured the saxophonist in an acoustic setting, Osby continues exploring new avenues with each successive release, capturing the improvisational intensity of his live dates with 1999's Banned in New York and reuniting with Hill and fellow elder statesman Jim Hill for the following year's The Invisible Hand. 2001's Symbols of Light (A Solution) was a varied effort that witnessed him teaming with a string quartet, while the next year's Inner Circle was an older recording of sessions that featured a knockout version of Bjork's "All Neon Like." Osby teamed with pianist Marc Copland for 2003's Round and Round, while St. Louis Shoes was released that same year on Blue Note. Also released on Blue Note was 2005's Channel Three, which saw Osby working with drummer Jeff "Tain" Watts and bassist Matt Brewer. In 2008, Osby released 9 Levels, his first recording on his own Inner Circle Music label. ~ Jason Ankeny, Rovi