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Jim Hall (musician)

James Stanley Hall (December 4, 1930 – December 10, 2013) was an American jazz guitarist, composer and arranger.[1]

Jim Hall
Jim Hall in 2010
Background information
Birth nameJames Stanley Hall
Born(1930-12-04)December 4, 1930
Buffalo, New York, U.S.
OriginCleveland, Ohio
DiedDecember 10, 2013(2013-12-10) (aged 83)
New York City, U.S.
GenresJazz, cool jazz, post-bop
Occupation(s)Musician, composer, arranger
Instrument(s)Guitar
Years active1955–2013
LabelsCTI, Concord, Telarc, ArtistShare, Pacific Jazz
Websitewww.jimhallmusic.com
www.jimhalljazz.com

Biography

Early life and education

Born in Buffalo, New York, Hall moved with his family to Cleveland, Ohio, during his childhood. Hall's mother played the piano, his grandfather violin, and his uncle guitar.[2] He began playing the guitar at the age of 10, when his mother gave him an instrument as a Christmas present. At 13 he heard Charlie Christian play on a Benny Goodman record, which he calls his "spiritual awakening".[3] As a teenager in Cleveland, he performed professionally, and also took up the double bass. Hall's major influences since childhood were tenor saxophonists Coleman Hawkins, Lester Young, Paul Gonsalves, and Lucky Thompson.[4] While he copied out solos by Charlie Christian, and later Barney Kessel, it was horn players from whom he took the lead. In 1955, Hall attended the Cleveland Institute of Music, where he majored in composition, studying piano and bass in addition to theory.

Early professional career

In 1956, Hall moved to Los Angeles, where he studied classical guitar with Vicente Gómez. In 1955 and 1956, Hall played in Chico Hamilton's quintet, a group associated with the cool jazz movement, and Hall's playing began to gain attention from critics and fellow musicians.[5]

Hall left Hamilton's group to join another cool jazz ensemble, the Jimmy Giuffre Three, and he worked on and off with Giuffre from 1957 to 1960. Hall recorded his first solo album for Pacific Jazz in 1957, though the album made only a modest impact, and Hall did not get to record a follow-up until 1969.

During the late 1950s and early 1960s, Hall developed a preference for "challenging arrangements and interactive improvisation in duos and trios."[6] He taught at the Lenox School of Jazz in Massachusetts in the summer of 1959. Hall toured during the late 1950s with Jazz at the Philharmonic and worked around this time in Los Angeles with Ben Webster, appearing on Ben Webster at the Renaissance (recorded in 1960). During 1959, he recorded the first of six albums as a featured soloist with Paul Desmond. In 1960, Hall also toured and recorded with Ella Fitzgerald in Europe.

Hall moved to New York City around 1960 and began performing with band leaders including Lee Konitz (1960–61), Sonny Rollins (1961–62, 1964), and Art Farmer (1962–64). He formed a studio partnership with Bill Evans during this time, appearing on four albums with Evans from 1962 to 1966.[6] Hall also worked as a studio guitarist for commercial recording dates during the early and mid-1960s. As a freelance studio musician, he appeared on albums by singers Big Joe Turner, Johnny Hartman, June Christy, Big Miller, and Freda Payne, as well as on commercially-oriented orchestral pop and jazz albums by Quincy Jones, Lalo Schifrin, Oliver Nelson, and Gary McFarland. His freelance jazz work in the 1960s covered a range of styles. He participated in cool jazz, bossa nova, and third stream albums led by John Lewis, Gerry Mulligan, Bob Brookmeyer, and Paul Desmond. Hall recorded bebop and hard bop sessions with Sonny Stitt, Nat Adderley, and Sonny Rollins. He recorded a soul jazz session with Hammond organist Paul Bryant.

In 1962, he led a trio with pianist Tommy Flanagan and bassist Ron Carter (who was replaced by Red Mitchell in 1965). Starting in 1963, Hall played in the studio orchestra at The Merv Griffin Show, working with Bill Berry, Bob Brookmeyer, Benny Powell, Art Davis and Jake Hanna.[6]

 
Jim Hall at Keystone Korner, San Francisco, October 29, 1980.

In the late 1960s, Hall decided to leave his T.V. job and pursue a solo career more actively. He recorded and performed in Germany and Japan, appearing on the Berlin Festival Guitar Workshop LP (1968) alongside Barney Kessel and Baden Powell, and on the Guitar Genius In Japan LP (1970) alongside Kenny Burrell and Attila Zoller. The German MPS label recorded Hall's second solo album, It's Nice to Be With You in 1969. In 1971, he began recording for Milestone Records, whose co-founder Orrin Keepnews had produced several records with Hall when running his previous label, Riverside Records. While on Milestone, Hall recorded the first of three duet albums with Ron Carter. Moving to CTI Records, Hall made the 1975 Concierto album, which featured Paul Desmond and Chet Baker, and became a critical and financial success.[7]

Hall was an arranger and composer as much as a performer, known for developing motifs and using blues inflections. These characteristics are showcased in his 1975 album Jim Hall Live!, with Don Thompson and Terry Clarke. During the late 1970s and early 1980s, Hall recorded with pianist George Shearing, classical violinist Itzhak Perlman, and had a studio reunion with Art Farmer. He also continued recording in duos with Red Mitchell and Ron Carter until 1985.[6]

Later life and career

Hall recorded steadily from the 1970s until 2010, releasing albums on the Horizon, Concord, MusicMasters, and Telarc record labels.

Hall continued to tour all over the world during these years as well. His band members included drummers Bill Stewart, Joey Baron and Andy Watson, bass players Scott Colley and Steve LaSpina, and keyboardists Gil Goldstein and Larry Goldings. At times, saxophonists Chris Potter and Greg Osby played in Hall’s groups as well. Some of these musicians are featured in Hall's video Master Sessions with Jim Hall from 1993. Hall appeared as a guest soloist in Michel Petrucciani's trio with Wayne Shorter in 1986 and performed at the Village Vanguard with Bill Frisell. In 1990, he hosted the JVC Jazz Festival New York, which also featured fellow guitarists Pat Metheny and John Scofield. After this, he played a number of duo concerts with Metheny. In 1994, Hall recorded a solo guitar album. Furthermore, in 1996, he returned to Europe to lead a quartet with saxophonist Joe Lovano.[6]

In 1995, Hall was awarded an Honorary Doctorate of Music from Berklee College of Music.[8] In 1997, Hall received the New York Jazz Critics Award for Best Jazz Composer/Arranger. His pieces for string, brass, and vocal ensembles can be heard on his Textures and By Arrangement albums. His original composition, "Quartet Plus Four", a piece for jazz quartet and string quartet featuring the Zapolski string quartet, was debuted in Denmark, where he was awarded the Jazzpar Prize.[2]

His last orchestral composition was a concerto for guitar and orchestra, commissioned by Towson University in Maryland for The First World Guitar Congress, which debuted in June of 2004 with the Baltimore Symphony. He was awarded an NEA Jazz Masters Fellowship award in January of 2004. Hall was one of the first artists to join the fan-funded label ArtistShare and released Magic Meeting in 2005. In 2006, on behalf of the French Minister of Culture, Kareen Rispal, Cultural Counselor of the Embassy of France, bestowed Hall with the honor of Chevalier dans l'ordre des Arts et des Lettres, saying, in part, "We honor you, Jim Hall, for expanding the musical universe, for your innovations and contributions to musical expression. We salute your ongoing experimentation which has been known countless times to bring people around the world together."[9] In November 2008 the double album Hemispheres was released through ArtistShare, featuring fellow guitarist and former student Bill Frisell[10] with Scott Colley (bass), Joey Baron (drums) and produced by Brian Camelio.

Hall performed in a project titled “The Live Project”, where he shared his music making process through ArtistShare as well as interviews with other musicians about his lasting influence. In 2010, Hall and Baron recorded a duo album entitled Conversations.[11] In 2012 at the age of 81, Hall had gigs at the Blue Note in New York City and at a number of jazz festivals in the US as well as in Europe.

Personal life

Hall married Jane Hall (née Jane Herbert) on September 9, 1965. Jane, a psychoanalyst by profession, was also an occasional composer and singer. Hall recorded several of her compositions, including "O Gato", "It's Nice to Be with You", "Where Would I Be?", "Goodbye, My Love", "The Answer Is Yes", and "Something Tells Me".

Hall died in his sleep of heart failure in his Manhattan, New York apartment on December 10, 2013, six days after his 83rd birthday.[12][13]

Musical style

"With each new concert tour and recording Jim reveals yet another facet of himself."[2]

"Hall's musical style develops with every new album and collaboration he engages in. His approach to music is unique - he views music as a way to break all barriers, not limited to music, as well as to share his discoveries with others."[2] "Music is a vehicle of peace for Hall and he therefore makes it a goal to reach out to others and communicate his music, teaching seminars all over the world. He is innovative and always interested in new modes of musical expression to further his ability."[2]

Jim Hall insisted a lot on the aural aspect of improvising music, stating that "Players should force themselves to hear something and then play it, rather than just do whatever comes under their fingers. I try to make my playing as fresh as possible by not relying on set patterns."[14]

Hall's tone has been described as mellow, warm, gentle, subtle, rich, and lightly amplified.[2] Unlike other musicians, Hall's work is not necessarily recognized by a signature riff but rather his expressive capabilities.[2] As an arranger, his solos are aptly constructed, taking into account harmonic, melodic and rhythmic elements.[2] They are composed with both feeling and technique with clarity as the ultimate goal.[2]

Hall was a part of several groups that had unusual instrumentation in the context of jazz. In his first high-profile professional group, led by Chico Hamilton, Hall played alongside cellist Fred Katz in a group that did not feature a piano. Hall's next group, the Jimmy Giuffre 3, was even more radical, having no drummer or piano, and in one incarnation, no bass player. Hall later played on two André Previn records with classical violinist Itzhak Perlman.[2] Similar to Duke Ellington, the other artists on the record influence the composition and he creates music to showcase their talents as well.[15] Furthermore, he is always open to what is new and what others are playing, including the guitar synthesizer.[16]

I'm not sure I have what's called a style, but I have an approach to music, an attitude to consciously allow myself to grow. I don't like to be boxed in or labeled as having to do with any certain period of jazz music or music in general.[17]

Silence is as much a part of Hall's music as is sound. Intimate settings, such as smaller clubs, showcase this strength.[18] Hall "carefully [chooses] a few notes instead, one after another, and placed them with the care of someone setting an elegant table."[19] Although Hall is generally a leader, his excellent listening skills allow him to aid other musicians harmonically when required and staying silent when needed.[18] Everyone is equal in Hall's groups, he explains, "each one of these guys is a creative, growing musician, and I treat them that way."[18]

Exemplifying Hall's musical style is his collaboration with guitarist Pat Metheny (1999). The duo had met 30 years previously, when guitarist Attila Zoller brought 15-year-old Metheny to The Guitar, a club where Hall and bassist Carter had a standing position.[20]

"Jim is father of modern jazz guitar to me, he's the guy who invented a conception that has allowed guitar to function in a lot of musical situations that just weren't thought of as a possibility prior to his emergence as a player. He reinvented what the guitar could be as a jazz instrument... Jim transcends the instrument... the meaning behind the notes is what speaks to people." - Pat Metheny[17]

Because of his desire for spontaneity and emphasis on communication with other musicians and others, Hall preferred live venues.[17] However, Metheny is the opposite, so the album contains pieces recorded live and in the studio. Reflecting Hall's broad musical tendencies, this album contains originals by him, Metheny, mutual friends Steve Swallow and Zoller, and two standards.[17] Hall and Metheny's expertise and virtuosity allowed for much improvisation, usually spurred by mood, which led to different compositions,"at times acoustic, soft, reverential, melodic, cacophonous, outlandish, humorous, and upbeat."[17] Apart from Metheny, he influenced other then contemporary guitarists such as Bill Frisell, Mick Goodrick, John Scofield, and John Abercrombie.[17]

Awards and honors

For many years Jim Hall was named “Best Jazz Guitarist” by both the Critics and the Readers in annual Downbeat Magazine Polls. His lengthy career has garnered him many laudatory endorsements from around the world including:

  • Danish Jazzpar Prize (1998), an award of international, cultural significance sometimes referred to as The Oscar or The Nobel Prize of Jazz.
  • National Endowment for the Arts Jazz Master Fellowship (2004)
  • Choc de l'année Award (Jazzman - France) 2005 - Magic Meeting[21]
  • Choc de l'année Award (Jazzman - France) 2006 - Free Association [22]
  • Chevalier dans l’Ordre des Arts et des Lettres (Knight in the Order of Arts and Letters) granted by the French Minister of Culture and Communication (January 2006).
  • Downbeat Hall of Fame (2014) (Downbeat) 2014 [23]

Equipment

Hall always used an extremely simple approach regarding his instruments. In the very beginning of his tenure with Chico Hamilton, he used a Gibson Les Paul Custom. He soon switched to the hollow-body electric Gibson ES-175 guitar. This guitar, which Hall used for many years with its original P-90 pickup, was used with a Gibson GA50 amplifier. By the early 1970s, Hall was using a Guild-band humbucker pickup in his guitar. In the mid-to-late 1970s, luthier Jimmy D'Aquisto supplied Hall with a pair of archtop guitars, one of which was all-acoustic, and the other of which had an electric pickup, and Hall began to use these instruments professionally. Also in the 1970s, Hall started using solid-state amplifiers, including those made by Polytone, Walter Woods, and Roland. Hall started working with luthier Roger Sadowsky in 1982, initially using Sadowsky for repair and maintenance work. Eventually the two collaborated on Sadowsky's Jim Hall Model guitar, a commercially available guitar based on Hall's original D'Aquisto.[24][25]

Hall used flatwound strings gauges 11, 15, 20 (unwound), 30, 40, 50 (from high E to low E) and picks of varying thickness whose usage depended on what part he was playing. He would usually use medium picks for playing melodies, a thin pick if he would play a calypso, or "some kind of zany rhythmic thing" and heavy picks for ballads.[26]

 
Jim's picks Heavy (white), Medium (tortoise shell), Light (black)

Hall sometimes used a Boss Chorus pedal and a Digitech whammy pedal.

When asked if he ever tried playing solid-body guitars again, he said: "solid bodies are strange to me, I need to feel the body resonating".[27]

Compositions

Discography

References

  1. ^ Yanow, Scott (December 4, 1930). "Jim Hall". AllMusic. Retrieved November 4, 2011.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Hall, Devra "Sketches from PROS Folios: Jim Hall". Copyright 1988-2004.
  3. ^ "Pat Metheny & Jim Hall - The Great Guitars". YouTube. Archived from the original on December 21, 2021. Retrieved June 26, 2016.
  4. ^ Pete Watrous (June 1990). "How Music Has Followed Jim Hall Through Life". The New York Times. Retrieved September 29, 2014.
  5. ^ Ferguson, Jim; Kernfeld, Barry (April 19, 2012). Kernfeld, Barry (ed.). The New Grove Dictionary of Jazz (Second ed.). Grove Music Online.
  6. ^ a b c d e Grove Music Online
  7. ^ Tognazzini, Anthony. "Concierto". AllMusic. Retrieved January 11, 2020.
  8. ^ "Bill Frisell Receives Honorary Degree and Is Subject of Film". Jazztimes.com.
  9. ^ "Chevalier dans l'ordre des Arts et des Lettres | Jim Hall: 1930–2013". Jimhalljazz.com.
  10. ^ DeLuke, R J (March 16, 2009). "Jim Hall: The Elegant Guitarist". Allaboutjazz.com. Retrieved September 12, 2010.
  11. ^ "Jim Hall". Jimhallmusic.com. Retrieved September 29, 2014.
  12. ^ Gans, Charles J. (December 10, 2013). . WBOC-TV. Associated Press. Archived from the original on December 26, 2013. Retrieved December 10, 2013.
  13. ^ Tamarkin, Jeff. . Jazztimes.com. Archived from the original on April 23, 2016. Retrieved September 29, 2014.
  14. ^ "Jim Hall: Biography, Style, Licks and Transcriptions". JazzGuitarLessons.net. Retrieved May 5, 2017.
  15. ^ Pete Watrous (September 1995). "A Guitarist Who Can Build Jazz on Silence". The New York Times. Retrieved September 29, 2014.
  16. ^ Bill Milkowski. "New Notes from a Guitar Master". Downbeat, Vol. 53, issue 10 (October 1986): 23–25.
  17. ^ a b c d e f Jim Hall and Pat Metheny.
  18. ^ a b c The New York Times.
  19. ^ John Wilson (July 1991). "Pop in Review". The New York Times. Retrieved September 29, 2014.
  20. ^ Jim Hall and Pat Metheny. Jim Hall and Pat Metheny. A&M Records. 1999.
  21. ^ "Jim Hall". Jimhallmusic.com. Retrieved July 27, 2021.
  22. ^ "Jim Hall". Jimhallmusic.com. Retrieved July 27, 2021.
  23. ^ "DownBeat Archives". Downbeat.com. Retrieved July 27, 2021.
  24. ^ "Guitar Equipment | Jim Hall Guitars, Amps & Effects". Jazzguitar.be. Retrieved November 18, 2015.
  25. ^ "Jim Hall's Gear – Modern Guitarist". Modernguitarist.com. Retrieved November 18, 2015.
  26. ^ Fox, Darrin. "Jim Hall". GuitarPlayer.com.
  27. ^ "Jim Hall & Pat Metheny – Jim Hall & Pat Metheny (1998; remastered 2011)". Taisawards.com.

External links

hall, musician, this, article, about, jazz, guitarist, hall, other, guitarist, retired, professor, from, university, south, carolina, school, music, james, hall, mexico, politician, jimmie, hall, james, stanley, hall, december, 1930, december, 2013, american, . This article is about the jazz guitarist Jim Hall For the other guitarist a retired professor from the University of South Carolina School of Music see James A Hall For the New Mexico politician see Jimmie C Hall James Stanley Hall December 4 1930 December 10 2013 was an American jazz guitarist composer and arranger 1 Jim HallJim Hall in 2010Background informationBirth nameJames Stanley HallBorn 1930 12 04 December 4 1930Buffalo New York U S OriginCleveland OhioDiedDecember 10 2013 2013 12 10 aged 83 New York City U S GenresJazz cool jazz post bopOccupation s Musician composer arrangerInstrument s GuitarYears active1955 2013LabelsCTI Concord Telarc ArtistShare Pacific JazzWebsitewww wbr jimhallmusic wbr com www wbr jimhalljazz wbr com Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life and education 1 2 Early professional career 1 3 Later life and career 1 4 Personal life 2 Musical style 3 Awards and honors 4 Equipment 5 Compositions 6 Discography 7 References 8 External linksBiography EditEarly life and education Edit Born in Buffalo New York Hall moved with his family to Cleveland Ohio during his childhood Hall s mother played the piano his grandfather violin and his uncle guitar 2 He began playing the guitar at the age of 10 when his mother gave him an instrument as a Christmas present At 13 he heard Charlie Christian play on a Benny Goodman record which he calls his spiritual awakening 3 As a teenager in Cleveland he performed professionally and also took up the double bass Hall s major influences since childhood were tenor saxophonists Coleman Hawkins Lester Young Paul Gonsalves and Lucky Thompson 4 While he copied out solos by Charlie Christian and later Barney Kessel it was horn players from whom he took the lead In 1955 Hall attended the Cleveland Institute of Music where he majored in composition studying piano and bass in addition to theory Early professional career Edit In 1956 Hall moved to Los Angeles where he studied classical guitar with Vicente Gomez In 1955 and 1956 Hall played in Chico Hamilton s quintet a group associated with the cool jazz movement and Hall s playing began to gain attention from critics and fellow musicians 5 Hall left Hamilton s group to join another cool jazz ensemble the Jimmy Giuffre Three and he worked on and off with Giuffre from 1957 to 1960 Hall recorded his first solo album for Pacific Jazz in 1957 though the album made only a modest impact and Hall did not get to record a follow up until 1969 During the late 1950s and early 1960s Hall developed a preference for challenging arrangements and interactive improvisation in duos and trios 6 He taught at the Lenox School of Jazz in Massachusetts in the summer of 1959 Hall toured during the late 1950s with Jazz at the Philharmonic and worked around this time in Los Angeles with Ben Webster appearing on Ben Webster at the Renaissance recorded in 1960 During 1959 he recorded the first of six albums as a featured soloist with Paul Desmond In 1960 Hall also toured and recorded with Ella Fitzgerald in Europe Hall moved to New York City around 1960 and began performing with band leaders including Lee Konitz 1960 61 Sonny Rollins 1961 62 1964 and Art Farmer 1962 64 He formed a studio partnership with Bill Evans during this time appearing on four albums with Evans from 1962 to 1966 6 Hall also worked as a studio guitarist for commercial recording dates during the early and mid 1960s As a freelance studio musician he appeared on albums by singers Big Joe Turner Johnny Hartman June Christy Big Miller and Freda Payne as well as on commercially oriented orchestral pop and jazz albums by Quincy Jones Lalo Schifrin Oliver Nelson and Gary McFarland His freelance jazz work in the 1960s covered a range of styles He participated in cool jazz bossa nova and third stream albums led by John Lewis Gerry Mulligan Bob Brookmeyer and Paul Desmond Hall recorded bebop and hard bop sessions with Sonny Stitt Nat Adderley and Sonny Rollins He recorded a soul jazz session with Hammond organist Paul Bryant In 1962 he led a trio with pianist Tommy Flanagan and bassist Ron Carter who was replaced by Red Mitchell in 1965 Starting in 1963 Hall played in the studio orchestra at The Merv Griffin Show working with Bill Berry Bob Brookmeyer Benny Powell Art Davis and Jake Hanna 6 Jim Hall at Keystone Korner San Francisco October 29 1980 In the late 1960s Hall decided to leave his T V job and pursue a solo career more actively He recorded and performed in Germany and Japan appearing on the Berlin Festival Guitar Workshop LP 1968 alongside Barney Kessel and Baden Powell and on the Guitar Genius In Japan LP 1970 alongside Kenny Burrell and Attila Zoller The German MPS label recorded Hall s second solo album It s Nice to Be With You in 1969 In 1971 he began recording for Milestone Records whose co founder Orrin Keepnews had produced several records with Hall when running his previous label Riverside Records While on Milestone Hall recorded the first of three duet albums with Ron Carter Moving to CTI Records Hall made the 1975 Concierto album which featured Paul Desmond and Chet Baker and became a critical and financial success 7 Hall was an arranger and composer as much as a performer known for developing motifs and using blues inflections These characteristics are showcased in his 1975 album Jim Hall Live with Don Thompson and Terry Clarke During the late 1970s and early 1980s Hall recorded with pianist George Shearing classical violinist Itzhak Perlman and had a studio reunion with Art Farmer He also continued recording in duos with Red Mitchell and Ron Carter until 1985 6 Later life and career Edit Hall recorded steadily from the 1970s until 2010 releasing albums on the Horizon Concord MusicMasters and Telarc record labels Hall continued to tour all over the world during these years as well His band members included drummers Bill Stewart Joey Baron and Andy Watson bass players Scott Colley and Steve LaSpina and keyboardists Gil Goldstein and Larry Goldings At times saxophonists Chris Potter and Greg Osby played in Hall s groups as well Some of these musicians are featured in Hall s video Master Sessions with Jim Hall from 1993 Hall appeared as a guest soloist in Michel Petrucciani s trio with Wayne Shorter in 1986 and performed at the Village Vanguard with Bill Frisell In 1990 he hosted the JVC Jazz Festival New York which also featured fellow guitarists Pat Metheny and John Scofield After this he played a number of duo concerts with Metheny In 1994 Hall recorded a solo guitar album Furthermore in 1996 he returned to Europe to lead a quartet with saxophonist Joe Lovano 6 In 1995 Hall was awarded an Honorary Doctorate of Music from Berklee College of Music 8 In 1997 Hall received the New York Jazz Critics Award for Best Jazz Composer Arranger His pieces for string brass and vocal ensembles can be heard on his Textures and By Arrangement albums His original composition Quartet Plus Four a piece for jazz quartet and string quartet featuring the Zapolski string quartet was debuted in Denmark where he was awarded the Jazzpar Prize 2 His last orchestral composition was a concerto for guitar and orchestra commissioned by Towson University in Maryland for The First World Guitar Congress which debuted in June of 2004 with the Baltimore Symphony He was awarded an NEA Jazz Masters Fellowship award in January of 2004 Hall was one of the first artists to join the fan funded label ArtistShare and released Magic Meeting in 2005 In 2006 on behalf of the French Minister of Culture Kareen Rispal Cultural Counselor of the Embassy of France bestowed Hall with the honor of Chevalier dans l ordre des Arts et des Lettres saying in part We honor you Jim Hall for expanding the musical universe for your innovations and contributions to musical expression We salute your ongoing experimentation which has been known countless times to bring people around the world together 9 In November 2008 the double album Hemispheres was released through ArtistShare featuring fellow guitarist and former student Bill Frisell 10 with Scott Colley bass Joey Baron drums and produced by Brian Camelio Hall performed in a project titled The Live Project where he shared his music making process through ArtistShare as well as interviews with other musicians about his lasting influence In 2010 Hall and Baron recorded a duo album entitled Conversations 11 In 2012 at the age of 81 Hall had gigs at the Blue Note in New York City and at a number of jazz festivals in the US as well as in Europe Personal life Edit Hall married Jane Hall nee Jane Herbert on September 9 1965 Jane a psychoanalyst by profession was also an occasional composer and singer Hall recorded several of her compositions including O Gato It s Nice to Be with You Where Would I Be Goodbye My Love The Answer Is Yes and Something Tells Me Hall died in his sleep of heart failure in his Manhattan New York apartment on December 10 2013 six days after his 83rd birthday 12 13 Musical style Edit With each new concert tour and recording Jim reveals yet another facet of himself 2 Hall s musical style develops with every new album and collaboration he engages in His approach to music is unique he views music as a way to break all barriers not limited to music as well as to share his discoveries with others 2 Music is a vehicle of peace for Hall and he therefore makes it a goal to reach out to others and communicate his music teaching seminars all over the world He is innovative and always interested in new modes of musical expression to further his ability 2 Jim Hall insisted a lot on the aural aspect of improvising music stating that Players should force themselves to hear something and then play it rather than just do whatever comes under their fingers I try to make my playing as fresh as possible by not relying on set patterns 14 Hall s tone has been described as mellow warm gentle subtle rich and lightly amplified 2 Unlike other musicians Hall s work is not necessarily recognized by a signature riff but rather his expressive capabilities 2 As an arranger his solos are aptly constructed taking into account harmonic melodic and rhythmic elements 2 They are composed with both feeling and technique with clarity as the ultimate goal 2 Hall was a part of several groups that had unusual instrumentation in the context of jazz In his first high profile professional group led by Chico Hamilton Hall played alongside cellist Fred Katz in a group that did not feature a piano Hall s next group the Jimmy Giuffre 3 was even more radical having no drummer or piano and in one incarnation no bass player Hall later played on two Andre Previn records with classical violinist Itzhak Perlman 2 Similar to Duke Ellington the other artists on the record influence the composition and he creates music to showcase their talents as well 15 Furthermore he is always open to what is new and what others are playing including the guitar synthesizer 16 I m not sure I have what s called a style but I have an approach to music an attitude to consciously allow myself to grow I don t like to be boxed in or labeled as having to do with any certain period of jazz music or music in general 17 Silence is as much a part of Hall s music as is sound Intimate settings such as smaller clubs showcase this strength 18 Hall carefully chooses a few notes instead one after another and placed them with the care of someone setting an elegant table 19 Although Hall is generally a leader his excellent listening skills allow him to aid other musicians harmonically when required and staying silent when needed 18 Everyone is equal in Hall s groups he explains each one of these guys is a creative growing musician and I treat them that way 18 Exemplifying Hall s musical style is his collaboration with guitarist Pat Metheny 1999 The duo had met 30 years previously when guitarist Attila Zoller brought 15 year old Metheny to The Guitar a club where Hall and bassist Carter had a standing position 20 Jim is father of modern jazz guitar to me he s the guy who invented a conception that has allowed guitar to function in a lot of musical situations that just weren t thought of as a possibility prior to his emergence as a player He reinvented what the guitar could be as a jazz instrument Jim transcends the instrument the meaning behind the notes is what speaks to people Pat Metheny 17 Because of his desire for spontaneity and emphasis on communication with other musicians and others Hall preferred live venues 17 However Metheny is the opposite so the album contains pieces recorded live and in the studio Reflecting Hall s broad musical tendencies this album contains originals by him Metheny mutual friends Steve Swallow and Zoller and two standards 17 Hall and Metheny s expertise and virtuosity allowed for much improvisation usually spurred by mood which led to different compositions at times acoustic soft reverential melodic cacophonous outlandish humorous and upbeat 17 Apart from Metheny he influenced other then contemporary guitarists such as Bill Frisell Mick Goodrick John Scofield and John Abercrombie 17 Awards and honors EditFor many years Jim Hall was named Best Jazz Guitarist by both the Critics and the Readers in annual Downbeat Magazine Polls His lengthy career has garnered him many laudatory endorsements from around the world including Danish Jazzpar Prize 1998 an award of international cultural significance sometimes referred to as The Oscar or The Nobel Prize of Jazz National Endowment for the Arts Jazz Master Fellowship 2004 Choc de l annee Award Jazzman France 2005 Magic Meeting 21 Choc de l annee Award Jazzman France 2006 Free Association 22 Chevalier dans l Ordre des Arts et des Lettres Knight in the Order of Arts and Letters granted by the French Minister of Culture and Communication January 2006 Downbeat Hall of Fame 2014 Downbeat 2014 23 Equipment EditHall always used an extremely simple approach regarding his instruments In the very beginning of his tenure with Chico Hamilton he used a Gibson Les Paul Custom He soon switched to the hollow body electric Gibson ES 175 guitar This guitar which Hall used for many years with its original P 90 pickup was used with a Gibson GA50 amplifier By the early 1970s Hall was using a Guild band humbucker pickup in his guitar In the mid to late 1970s luthier Jimmy D Aquisto supplied Hall with a pair of archtop guitars one of which was all acoustic and the other of which had an electric pickup and Hall began to use these instruments professionally Also in the 1970s Hall started using solid state amplifiers including those made by Polytone Walter Woods and Roland Hall started working with luthier Roger Sadowsky in 1982 initially using Sadowsky for repair and maintenance work Eventually the two collaborated on Sadowsky s Jim Hall Model guitar a commercially available guitar based on Hall s original D Aquisto 24 25 Hall used flatwound strings gauges 11 15 20 unwound 30 40 50 from high E to low E and picks of varying thickness whose usage depended on what part he was playing He would usually use medium picks for playing melodies a thin pick if he would play a calypso or some kind of zany rhythmic thing and heavy picks for ballads 26 Jim s picks Heavy white Medium tortoise shell Light black Hall sometimes used a Boss Chorus pedal and a Digitech whammy pedal When asked if he ever tried playing solid body guitars again he said solid bodies are strange to me I need to feel the body resonating 27 Compositions EditMain article Jim Hall compositionsDiscography EditMain article Jim Hall discographyReferences Edit Yanow Scott December 4 1930 Jim Hall AllMusic Retrieved November 4 2011 a b c d e f g h i j Hall Devra Sketches from PROS Folios Jim Hall Copyright 1988 2004 Pat Metheny amp Jim Hall The Great Guitars YouTube Archived from the original on December 21 2021 Retrieved June 26 2016 Pete Watrous June 1990 How Music Has Followed Jim Hall Through Life The New York Times Retrieved September 29 2014 Ferguson Jim Kernfeld Barry April 19 2012 Kernfeld Barry ed The New Grove Dictionary of Jazz Second ed Grove Music Online a b c d e Grove Music Online Tognazzini Anthony Concierto AllMusic Retrieved January 11 2020 Bill Frisell Receives Honorary Degree and Is Subject of Film Jazztimes com Chevalier dans l ordre des Arts et des Lettres Jim Hall 1930 2013 Jimhalljazz com DeLuke R J March 16 2009 Jim Hall The Elegant Guitarist Allaboutjazz com Retrieved September 12 2010 Jim Hall Jimhallmusic com Retrieved September 29 2014 Gans Charles J December 10 2013 Jazz guitarist master Jim Hall dies at 83 WBOC TV Associated Press Archived from the original on December 26 2013 Retrieved December 10 2013 Tamarkin Jeff Guitar Great Jim Hall Dies at 83 Jazztimes com Archived from the original on April 23 2016 Retrieved September 29 2014 Jim Hall Biography Style Licks and Transcriptions JazzGuitarLessons net Retrieved May 5 2017 Pete Watrous September 1995 A Guitarist Who Can Build Jazz on Silence The New York Times Retrieved September 29 2014 Bill Milkowski New Notes from a Guitar Master Downbeat Vol 53 issue 10 October 1986 23 25 a b c d e f Jim Hall and Pat Metheny a b c The New York Times John Wilson July 1991 Pop in Review The New York Times Retrieved September 29 2014 Jim Hall and Pat Metheny Jim Hall and Pat Metheny A amp M Records 1999 Jim Hall Jimhallmusic com Retrieved July 27 2021 Jim Hall Jimhallmusic com Retrieved July 27 2021 DownBeat Archives Downbeat com Retrieved July 27 2021 Guitar Equipment Jim Hall Guitars Amps amp Effects Jazzguitar be Retrieved November 18 2015 Jim Hall s Gear Modern Guitarist Modernguitarist com Retrieved November 18 2015 Fox Darrin Jim Hall GuitarPlayer com Jim Hall amp Pat Metheny Jim Hall amp Pat Metheny 1998 remastered 2011 Taisawards com External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Jim Hall Jim Hall s official website Jim Hall at IMDb Jim Hall at AllMusic Jim Hall discography at Discogs In Conversation with Jim Hall by Patrick Spurling Jazz com Other articles in The New York Times Watrous Pete March 12 1988 Review Jazz Jim Hall Intense Guitar The New York Times Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jim Hall musician amp oldid 1122784450, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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