Artist's albums
Our Thing
2000 · album
In Pursuit Of Blackness/Black Is The Color
1999 · album
Quiet Now: Lovesome Things
1999 · album
Ballads
1997 · album
Porgy And Bess
1997 · album
Big Band
1996 · album
Double Rainbow
1995 · album
Four!
1994 · album
Tenor Tribute - Vol.2
1993 · album
So Near, So Far (Musings For Miles)
1993 · album
Treasure Chest
1992 · album
Lush Life-The Music Of Billy Strayhorn
1992 · album
The Complete an Evening With
2023 · album
Rue Chaptal / Royal Roost
2023 · single
Nursery Rhymes (Remix)
2022 · album
49th Parallel
2020 · album
Invitation
2014 · compilation
More From An Evening With Joe Henderson
2009 · compilation
Voices
2008 · album
Warm Valley
2008 · album
In 'N Out (The Rudy Van Gelder Edition)
2004 · album
Inner Urge (The Rudy Van Gelder Edition)
2004 · album
Mode For Joe (Rudy Van Gelder Edition)
2003 · album
The Definitive Joe Henderson
2002 · album
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Biography
Joe Henderson is proof that jazz can sell without watering down the music; it just takes creative marketing. Although his sound and style were virtually unchanged from the mid-'60s, Joe Henderson's signing with Verve in 1992 was treated as a major news event by the label (even though he had already recorded many memorable sessions for other companies). His Verve recordings had easy-to-market themes (tributes to Billy Strayhorn, Miles Davis, and Antonio Carlos Jobim) and, as a result, he became a national celebrity and a constant poll winner while still sounding the same as when he was in obscurity in the 1970s. The general feeling is that it couldn't have happened to a more deserving jazz musician. After studying at Kentucky State College and Wayne State University, Joe Henderson played locally in Detroit before spending time in the military (1960-1962). He played briefly with Jack McDuff and then gained recognition for his work with Kenny Dorham (1962-1963), a veteran bop trumpeter who championed him and helped Henderson get signed to Blue Note. Henderson appeared on many Blue Note sessions both as a leader and as a sideman, spent 1964-1966 with Horace Silver's Quintet, and during 1969-1970 was in Herbie Hancock's band. From the start, he had a very distinctive sound and style which, although influenced a bit by both Sonny Rollins and John Coltrane, also contained a lot of brand new phrases and ideas. Henderson had long been able to improvise in both inside and outside settings, from hard bop to freeform. In the 1970s, he recorded frequently for Milestone and lived in San Francisco, but was somewhat taken for granted. The second half of the 1980s found him continuing his freelancing and teaching while recording for Blue Note, but it was when he hooked up with Verve that he suddenly became famous. Virtually all of his recordings are currently in print on CD, including a massive collection of his neglected (but generally rewarding) Milestone dates. On June 30, 2001, Joe Henderson passed away due to heart failure after a long battle with emphysema. ~ Scott Yanow, Rovi