* En anglais uniquement
A superb jazz saxophonist,
Greg Abate is known for his dynamic, hard bop-influenced style. Initially emerging in the 1980s leading groups in New England, he established himself nationally releasing a handful of highly regarded albums in the '90s, including 1993's
Straight Ahead and 1996's
Bop Lives! Influenced by longtime associate
Phil Woods, he has also worked with the jazz legend, collaborating on albums like 2012's The Greg Abate Quintet Featuring Phil Woods. Along with issuing albums like 2016's
Road to Forever and 2021's
Magic Dance: The Music of Kenny Barron,
Abate is a well-known presence in his native Rhode Island, where he was inducted into the state's Hall of Fame in 2016 and works as an adjunct professor of jazz studies at Rhode Island College.
Born in 1947 in Fall River, Massachusetts,
Abate grew up in Woonsocket, Rhode Island, where he first started playing clarinet in the fifth grade. After high school, he honed his skills studying at Boston's Berklee College of Music, where he graduated in 1972. He then spent two years touring as a member of
Ray Charles' band before settling in Rhode Island. He began gigging around New England, and in 1978 he formed the band Channel One. They released a sole album, 1980's Without Boundaries, before breaking up. Also during this period, he played with Tony Giorgianni's Sax Odyssey, appeared often with Duke Bellair's Jazz Orchestra, and found work with
the Artie Shaw Orchestra under the leadership of Dick Johnson. Along with gigs with
Jerome Richardson and
Red Rodney,
Abate also began teaching at Rhode Island College, where he continues to work as an adjunct professor of jazz studies.
As a solo artist,
Abate debuted with Bop City: Live at Birdland in 1991 on Candid. He followed up with a handful of well-regarded post-bop sessions for the label, including 1993's
Straight Ahead and 1995's
Dr. Jeckyll & Mr. Hyde. A year later, he issued
Bop Lives!, which featured contributions by trumpeter
Claudio Roditi, pianist
Kenny Barron, bassist
Rufus Reid, and drummer
Ben Riley. And he rounded out the decade with the quintet date
Happy Samba.
In 2002,
Abate joined pianist
James Williams, bassist
Harvie Swartz, and drummer
Billy Hart for
Evolution. Two years later, he paired again with trumpeter
Roditi for the
Horace Silver homage Horace Is Here, which also featured pianist
Hilton Ruiz (who died the following year), bassist
Marshall Wood, and drummer
Artie Cabral. The monster-themed Monsters in the Night appeared in 2006.
Abate paired with saxophonist
Phil Woods, a longtime mentor, for 2012's The Greg Abate Quintet Featuring Phil Woods on Posi-Tone Records. The quartet date
Motif appeared in 2014, followed by the concert album
Kindred Spirits: Live at Chan's, featuring
Phil Woods and
the Tim Ray Trio. In 2016, on the heels of his induction into the Rhode Island Hall of Fame,
Abate issued
Road to Forever with
the Tim Ray Trio.
Magic Dance: The Music of Kenny Barron arrived in 2021 and found the saxophonist paying homage to the esteemed pianist. ~ Matt Collar