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Kenny Garrett is an American saxophonist, bandleader, and composer. He is among the most distinctive instrumentalists to emerge from Detroit's 1980s and 1990s jazz scenes. A versatile musician, he is equally at home playing classic jump-and-rhythm & blues, standards, modal music and jazz-funk. Receiving his first professional break with the
Duke Ellington Orchestra in 1978, he moved to New York and joined the
Thad Jones - Mel Lewis Orchestra.
Introducing Kenny Garrett, his Criss Cross leader debut, appeared in 1984. During a five-year stint with
Miles Davis's group, he issued the solo outings Prisoner of Love and
African Exchange Student for Atlantic in 1989 and 1990 respectively. He spent 11 years with Warner Bros. for whom he recorded acclaimed albums such as 1992's
Black Hope,
Pursuance: The Music of John Coltrane and 2002's
Happy People. After moving to Nonesuch for 2006's Grammy-nominated
Beyond the Wall, he signed with Detroit's Mack Ave. label for 2008's live
Sketches of MD. In 2012 he received two Grammy nominations for
Seeds From The Underground. 2013's
Pushing The World Away reached inside the top ten on the jazz albums charts, while 2016's
Do Your Dance offered tribute to mentor
Marcus Belgrave while exploring the many faces of rhythm. 2021
Garrett released
Sounds From the Ancestors that examined the roles West African and Latin sounds played in the creation of the musics that influenced him -- jazz, gospel, soul, and hip hop.
Garrett was born and raised in Detroit. His carpenter father also played tenor saxophone. He got his first horn as an eight-year-old and thanks to his dad's tutelage, quickly learned the G scale. While attending McKenzie High School he studied with trumpeter
Marcus Belgrave and began performing with
Mercer Ellington's band as a guest. He also had the good fortune to play with organist
Lyman Woodard locally in Detroit. He was encouraged to begin writing his own compositions by various members of Ellington's band, and began doing so a short time later. He also played gigs with Belgrave, pianist Geri Allen, and other Detroit musicians. He won a scholarship to the Berklee College of Music in Boston, but decided to turn it down when
Mercer offered him full membership in the
Duke Ellington Orchestra. He remained with them for three-and-a-half years.
In 1982, he relocated to New York City, and joined the
Thad Jones-Mel Lewis Orchestra.
Garrett made his solo recording debut with 1984's
Introducing Kenny Garrett on the Criss Cross label. During this period he also played and recorded with
Art Blakey,
Freddie Hubbard, and
Woody Shaw. In February of 1987,
Miles Davis saw a video of
Garrett playing a guest spot with
Dizzy Gillespie, called the saxophonist that night, and offered him a spot in his band.
Garrett remained with
Davis's studio and live bands through 1991.
During his tenure with the trumpeter, he signed a solo deal with Atlantic Records. He recorded two notable albums for Atlantic, Prisoner of Love and
African Exchange Student in 1989 and 1990 respectively. He moved over to Warner Bros. in 1992. His label debut was the charting, critically acclaimed
Black Hope. He followed up in 1995 with
Triology, and recorded
Pursuance: The Music of John Coltrane in 1996. He released
Songbook, his first album comprised entirely of his own compositions in 1997, and followed it with
Simply Said in 1999. The charting
Happy People followed in 2002.
Garrett concluded his tenure with the label on 2003's Standard of Language. In 2006,
Garrett signed with Nonesuch. He released the Grammy-nomination for
Beyond the Wall, which examined the East Asian musical tradition through modal jazz.
Two years later, he delivered
Sketches of MD (recorded at N.Y.C.'s Iridium club) for Detroit's Mack Avenue label. As well as leading his own touring bands,
Garrett joined the Five Peace Band's all star lineup alongside keyboardist
Chick Corea, guitarist
John McLaughlin, bassist
Christian McBride, and drummer
Vinnie Colaiuta.
Five Peace Band: Live (Concord, 2009) won the Grammy for Best Jazz Instrumental Album in January 2010.
In 2012,
Garrett released
Seeds from the Underground his second album for Mack Ave. It featured his own group with bassist
Nat Reeves, Venezuelan pianist
Benito Gonzalez, and drummer
Ronald Bruner Jr. The acclaimed album received Grammy nominations for Best Jazz Instrumental Album and Best Improvised Jazz Solo categories; an NAACP Image Award nomination for Outstanding Jazz Album; and a Soul Train award nomination for Best Traditional Jazz Artist/Group category.
Garrett received a Jazz Awards nomination for Alto Saxophonist of the Year, and won an Echo Award for Saxophonist of the Year.
Pushing the World Away followed a year later. It featured an alternating cast of musicians --including strings -- playing mostly original compositions (and a cover of
Burt Bacharach and
Hal David's "I Say a Little Prayer"). It peaked at number six on the jazz charts and was nominated for two Grammy awards including Best Jazz Instrumental Album. In 2016,
Garrett delivered his fourth Mack Ave. recording,
Do Your Dance!, a widely varied set of originals and covers that found him exploring many varieties of dance-oriented rhythms from hip-hop and funk to Latin and Brazilian sounds.
Garrett returned to Mack Ave. for 2021's
Sounds From the Ancestors. His core quintet -- pianist
Vernell Brown, Jr., bassist
Corcoran Holt, drummer
Ronald Bruner and percussionist
Rudy Bird -- was appended by a large guest list that included drummer
Lenny White, pianist/ organist Johnny Mercier, conguero
Pedrito Martinez, and singers
Dwight Trible and
Jean Baylor to name a few.
Garrett explored his musical roots in Motown soul, jazz, gospel, funk, hip hop, etc. through the cornerstones of their own foundations in West African and Afro Cuban musics. ~ Thom Jurek, Richard Skelly