Kazumi Watanabe was born on October 14, 1953 in Tokyo, Japan. He is a jazz fusion and instrumental rock guitarist and composer. He has been chosen Best Jazzman 24 times in a row by Swing Journal's annual poll. Similar jazz performers are Jamaaladeen Tacuma, John Scofield, Vernon Reid, Marc Bonilla, Trevor Rabin and Al Di Meola. He is known for heavy endorsement and use of guitars by Steinberger and Paul Reed Smith. --------------- Kazumi Watanabe Source: http://www.hilltop.co.jp/kazumi/E/index.html --------------- Kazumi Watanabe has for the past 20 years been one of the top guitarists in fusion, a rock-oriented player whose furious power does not mask a creative imagination. Watanabe studied guitar at Tokyo's Yamaha Music School and he was a recording artist while still a teenager. In 1979, he formed the group Kylyn and, in 1983, he put together the Mobo band. Several of his recordings have been made available by Gramavision and they show that he ranks up with Al DiMeola (when he is electrified) and Scott Henderson among the pacesetters in the idiom. Source: Scott Yanow, All Music Guide --------------- Born in 1953 in Tokyo, Kazumi Watanabe was taken up with the jazz tradition in his teens, and has studied electric guitar under Sadanori Nakamure. He made his solo debut in 1971 with the album “INFINITE”, and was acclaimed as a promising guitar prodigy. Source: http://www.allaboutjazz.com/php/musician.php?id=11187
In 1979, he joined a group of innovative musicians such as Ryuichi Sakamoto, Akiko Yano, Yukihiro Takahashi, Yasuaki Shimizu, Toshiyuki Honda and Shuichi 'Ponta' Murakami to form the legendary all-star band KYLYN, making an impact on the Japanese music scene. In autumn of the same year, he participated in the world tour of Yellow Magic Orchestra. Its huge success brought the name KAZUMI an international recognition.
Throughout the 1980s, he worked with a stellar cast of established musicians, including Tony Levin, Sly and Robbie, Wayne Shorter, Patrick Moraz, Marcus Miller, Richard Bona and Peter Erskine.
Although sporadically active since the early 1990s, his output in the prior decade is considered some of the better instrumental jazz fusion of the time, informed with a particular bite and variety in approaches. His Spice of Life releases were in a quartet format in what was essentially a reunion of drummer Bill Bruford's late 70's outfit Bruford, featuring bassist Jeff Berlin and keyboardist Dave Stewart with Kazumi replacing Allan Holdsworth. Despite this, the Spice Of Life albums cannot easily be lumped together with those by Bruford a decade earlier.
Guitarist - Composer - Producer
Born in 1953 in Tokyo, Kazumi Watanabe was taken up with the jazz tradition in his teens, and has studied electric guitar under Sadanori Nakamure.
He made his solo debut in 1971 with the album "INFINITE", and was acclaimed as a promising guitar prodigy.
In 1979, he joined a group of innovative musicians such as Ryuichi Sakamoto, Akiko Yano and Shuichi Murakami to form the legendary all-star band KYLYN, making an impact on the Japanese music scene.
In autumn of the same year, he participated in the world tour of Yellow Magic Orchestra. Its huge success brought the name KAZUMI an international recognition.
His works during the 80s have built him a reputation as the precursor of jazz-fusion in Japan, especially with "TOCHIKA", one of his record-breaking hit albums.
Playing in the US and Asian countries under his own leadership and performing with numerous top musicians of the world, he was prized Nanri Fumio Award in 1991 and Grand Prix of Jazz Disc in 1984, among others.
In the 90s, Kazumi explored new ground in the classical idiom with accoustic guitar.
He received enthusiastic welcome performing in European cities such as Barcelona and Rome in 1991, Sofia and Lisbon in 1995, and Paris in 1997.
From his "ESPRIT" released in 1996 through "DANDYZM"(1998) up to "ONE FOR ALL" recorded live at the Bottom Line in New York, his recording.
In 1979, he joined a group of innovative musicians such as Ryuichi Sakamoto, Akiko Yano and Shuichi Murakami to form the legendary all-star band KYLYN, making an impact on the Japanese music scene. In autumn of the same year, he participated in the world tour of Yellow Magic Orchestra. Its huge success brought the name KAZUMI an international recognition.
His works during the 80s have built him a reputation as the precursor of jazz-fusion in Japan, especially with “TOCHIKA”, one of his record-breaking hit albums. Playing in the US (he worked with a stellar cast of established musicians, including Tony Levin, Sly and Robbie, Wayne Shorter, Patrick Moraz, Marcus Miller, Richard Bona and Peter Erskine) and Asian countries under his own leadership and performing with numerous top musicians of the world, he was prized Nanri Fumio Award in 1991 and Grand Prix of Jazz Disc in 1984, among others. In the 90s, Kazumi explored new ground in the classical idiom with accoustic guitar. He received enthusiastic welcome performing in European cities such as Barcelona and Rome in 1991, Sofia and Lisbon in 1995, and Paris in 1997. From his “ESPRIT” released in 1996 through “DANDYZM”(1998) up to “ONE FOR ALL” recorded live at the Bottom Line in New York, his recording works are representative of his original style which places Kazumi in the forefront of the music scene. Later on, he also launched into multimedia packages through DVD releases such as “LES JEUX INTERDITS”.
Chosen Best Jazzman 24 times in a row by Swing Journal's annual poll, he has been producing musical events, and improvising, composing and arranging in a constant approach to create his own musical universe.
To celebrate his 30 years of professional career, he presented the “Suite for Guitar” in January 2001, a composition/performance in which he challenged the realms of possibility of his cherished fretboard instrument - acoustic, electric and ethnic guitars.
Kazumi's passion for challenge and willingness to break the barrier of musical genres never cease to fascinate all music-lovers. He has been teaching jazz courses as a guest professor at Senzoku Gakuen College since 1996.
Thursday, February 12, 2009
KAZUMI WATANABE
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