John Scofield Explained

John Scofield
Landscape:yes
Background:non_vocal_instrumentalist
Birth Date:December 26, 1951
Birth Place:Dayton, Ohio, U.S.
Genre:Jazz, jazz fusion, acid jazz
Occupation:Musician, composer
Instrument:Guitar
Years Active:1970s–present
Label:Enja, Gramavision, Blue Note, Verve, EmArcy ECM
Associated Acts:Miles Davis, Billy Cobham, Pat Metheny, Steve Swallow, Marc Johnson, Joe Henderson, Joe Lovano, Medeski Martin & Wood, Trio Beyond

John Scofield (born December 26, 1951)[1] is an American guitarist and composer. His music over a long career has blended jazz, jazz fusion, funk, blues, soul and rock.[2] He first came to mainstream attention as part of the band of Miles Davis; he has toured and recorded with many prominent jazz artists including saxophonists Eddie Harris, Dave Liebman, Joe Henderson, and Joe Lovano; keyboardists George Duke, Joey DeFrancesco, Herbie Hancock, Larry Goldings, and Robert Glasper; fellow guitarists Pat Metheny, John Abercrombie, Pat Martino, and Bill Frisell; bassists Marc Johnson and Jaco Pastorius; and drummers Billy Cobham and Dennis Chambers. Outside the world of jazz, he has collaborated with Phil Lesh, Mavis Staples, John Mayer, Medeski Martin & Wood, and Gov't Mule.[3]

Biography

John Scofield was born in Dayton, Ohio; his family moved to Wilton, Connecticut where he discovered his interest in music.[4] Educated at the Berklee College of Music, Scofield left school to record with Chet Baker and Gerry Mulligan. He joined the Billy Cobham/George Duke Band soon afterwards and played, recorded, and toured with them for two years. He recorded with Charles Mingus in 1976 and replaced Pat Metheny in Gary Burton's quartet.[5]

In 1976, Scofield signed with Enja, which released his first album, John Scofield, in 1977. He recorded with pianist Hal Galper on Rough House in 1978 and then on Galper's album Ivory Forest (1980), where he played a solo rendition of "Monk's Mood" by Thelonious Monk.[6] In 1979 he formed a trio with his mentor Steve Swallow and Adam Nussbaum which, with drummer Bill Stewart replacing Nussbaum, became the signature group of Scofield's career.[7]

In 1982, he joined Miles Davis, with whom he remained for three and a half years. He contributed tunes and guitar to three of Davis's albums, Star People, Decoy, and You're Under Arrest.[8] After he left Davis, he released Electric Outlet (1984) and Still Warm (1985)

He began what is referred to as his Blue Matter Band, with Dennis Chambers on drums, Gary Grainger on bass, and Mitchel Forman, Robert Aries, or Jim Beard on keyboards. The band released the albums Blue Matter, Loud Jazz and Pick Hits Live. Marc Johnson formed Bass Desires with Peter Erskine, Bill Frisell, and Scofield. This "most auspicious [pairing] since John McLaughlin and Carlos Santana" recorded two albums, Bass Desires (1986) and Second Sight (1987).

At the beginning of the 1990s, Scofield formed a quartet which included Joe Lovano with whom he recorded several albums for Blue Note.[9] Time on My Hands (1990), with Joe Lovano, Charlie Haden, and Jack DeJohnette, showcased Scofield's guitar and Mingus-influenced (Charles Mingus) writing. Bill Stewart became the group's drummer and played on Meant to Be (1991) and What We Do (1993). In 1992, Scofield released Grace Under Pressure, featuring guitarist Bill Frisell, with Charlie Haden on bass and Joey Baron on drums. Stewart rejoined Scofield and Steve Swallow for I Can See Your House from Here, a collaboration with Pat Metheny.

Near the end of the time he played with Blue Note, Scofield returned to a sound which included more funk and soul jazz. In 1994 and 1995, he formed a group with organist/pianist Larry Goldings, bassist Dennis Irwin, and alternating drummers, Bill Stewart and Idris Muhammad. The group toured extensively, and the albums Hand Jive and Groove Elation feature this funk/groove/soul-jazz dimension in Scofield's music with tenor saxophonist Eddie Harris, percussionist Don Alias, and trumpeter Randy Brecker. He recorded the 1997 album A Go Go with avant-garde jazz trio Medeski, Martin & Wood.

Also during that time he began to work with British composer Mark-Anthony Turnage. He appeared as a soloist on Turnage's Blood on the Floor: Elegy for Andy. They collaborated on Scorched, an album of Turnage's orchestrations of Scofield's compositions, largely from the Blue Matter period. John Patitucci and Peter Erskine performed at the live premiere of Scorched at the Alte Oper in Frankfurt in September 2002 with the Radio-Symphony-Orchestra Frankfurt and the hr-Bigband. The performance was recorded and released by Deutsche Grammophon.[10]

Scofield released Überjam in 2002 and Up All Night in 2003, two albums on which he experimented with drum and bass. He recorded in Europe with the Bugge Wesseltoft New Conception of Jazz in 2001–2002 and 2006. In 2004 was released with Steve Swallow on bass and Bill Stewart on drums. It was recorded live at the Blue Note Jazz Club in New York City in December 2003. That was followed the next year by which led to performances with Mavis Staples, Gary Versace on organ, John Benitez on bass, and Steve Hass on drums. After sitting in for two engagements in December 2005 with Phil Lesh and Friends, Scofield has played numerous shows with the band.

On September 26, 2006, he released Out Louder, his second collaboration with Medeski, Martin & Wood.[11] The group, known collectively as MSMW, toured worldwide in 2006 and 2007. Scofield performed in a duo with John Medeski named The Johns and in a trio with Medeski and drummer Adam Deitch (Deitch is also a producer). He recorded music inspired by gospel on the 2009 album Piety Street with Jon Cleary and George Porter Jr.

On September 18, 2007, EmArcy released This Meets That, an album recorded with Steve Swallow, Bill Stewart, and a horn trio. In 2011 EmArcy released A Moment's Peace, recorded with pianist Larry Goldings, bassist Scott Colley, and drummer Brian Blade. Scofield's 2010 album 54 had its origin in the 1990s when Vince Mendoza asked him to play on Mendoza's first album. As director of the Metropole Orchestra, Mendoza collaborated with Scofield on arrangements of Scofield's compositions that were performed by the orchestra.

Scofield has been an adjunct faculty member in the Jazz Department in the Steinhardt School of Education at New York University.[12] Inside Scofield, a film by Joerg Steineck, a feature-length documentary about Scofield, was released in 2022.[13] [14]

Guitars

Scofield's first electric guitar was a Hagstrom; his "workhorse" is an Ibanez AS200 from 1982.[15] He endorses Ibanez and the company has a line of semi-hollow bodied guitars named for him.[16] Steve Vai uses one on the road, for one of the songs from Inviolate.[17]

Awards and honors

Discography

As leader and co-leader

DateAlbum titleLine-upLabelNotes
1977 John Scofield Live Quartet Live recording from Munich
1978 John Scofield Trio plus Terumasa Hino on two tracks Trio (Jp) Recorded in Tokyo; Re-released as East Meets West on Black Hawk in 1987
1978 Rough House Quartet as John Scofield Quartet Enja
1979 Who's Who? Quintet and two quartet tracks Re-released 1990 with the four originals from Bar Talk as bonus tracks
1980 Bar Talk Arista Novus
1981 Shinola Trio w/ Swallow and Nussbaum Enja Live recording from Munich
1981 Out Like a Light Trio w/ Swallow and Nussbaum Enja Live recording, third day from the same concert venue as Shinola
1984 Electric Outlet Quintet w/ David Sanborn and Ray Anderson Scofield plays also bass and DMX drum machine
1984 Solar with John Abercrombie, duos and three quartet tracks Palo Alto
1985 Still Warm Quartet Gramavision
1986 Blue Matter Quintet and sextet, first w/ Gary Grainger and Dennis Chambers Gramavision
1987 Loud Jazz Quintet Gramavision
1987 Pick Hits Live Quartet Gramavision Live recording
1989 Flat Out Quintet Gramavision
1990 Time on My Hands Acoustic jazz supergroup featuring Charlie Haden and Jack DeJohnette.
1991 Meant to Be Quartet w/ Joe Lovano, Marc Johnson, and Bill Stewart Blue Note First Scofield record to feature drummer Bill Stewart.
1992 Grace Under Pressure Quartet w/ Bill Frisell plus horn section on half of the tracks Blue Note Frisell and Scofield had previously partnered in Marc Johnson's Bass Desires.
1993 What We Do Quartet w/ Joe Lovano, Dennis Irwin, and Bill Stewart Blue Note
1994 Hand Jive Sextet Blue Note Soul jazz session featuring saxophonist Eddie Harris two years before Harris's death.
1994 I Can See Your House from Here with Pat Metheny, quartet Blue Note
1995 Groove Elation Quartet plus horn section and percussion Blue Note Soul jazz session featuring the New Orleans style drumming of Idris Muhammad and organ by Larry Goldings .
1996 Quiet Trio plus horn section,
feat. Wayne Shorter on three tracks
Verve Scofield plays exclusively acoustic guitar, focus on arrangements, some light jazz waltzing and bossa nova, appropriate title
1998 A Go Go Verve First collaboration with avant-jazz-funk organ trio
1999 Old Folks Conceptual compilation of equally dealt four leaders
2000 Bump Duo to quintet in altering constellations Verve Scofield plays acoustic guitar on some tracks and adds more sound effects, opens further up to (slightly) younger musicians like Tony Scherr, Kenny Wollesen and Mark De Gli Antoni introducing electronica
2001 Works for Me Verve Contemporary post-bop line-up and repertoire
2002 Überjam Überjam quartet up to sextet
as The John Scofield Band
Verve New band, first time with Avi Bortnick and Adam Deitch plus John Medeski, even more effects, reaching into dub reggae, jungle grooves, rap and samples
2003 Oh! Blue Note Acoustic jazz quartet
2003 Up All Night Überjam quartet plus horns
as The John Scofield Band
Verve Überjam band with Andy Hess, bass guitar.
2004 Scorched
2004 John Scofield Trio LIVE EnRoute Trio w/ Swallow and Bill Stewart Verve Live recording
2005 Verve
2006 Saudades as Trio Beyond w/ Larry Goldings and Jack DeJohnette one-time Tony Williams tribute band
2006 Out Louder First recording of Medeski, Scofield Martin & Wood partnership with co-equal contributions from Scofield and Medeski Martin & Wood
2007 This Meets That Trio w/ Swallow and Bill Stewart plus horn section
2009 Piety Street Quartet feat. vocals EmArcy
2011 A Moment's Peace Quartet EmArcy
2011 MSMW Live: In Case the World Changes Its Mind EmArcy Live recording
2013 Überjam Deux Überjam EmArcy Follow-up to Überjam from 2002 and Up All Night
2014 Juice Indirecto
2015 Past Present
2016 Country for Old Men Quartet w/ Larry Goldings, Steve Swallow and Bill Stewart Impulse! Literally old men embracing country
2017 Hudson Quartet w/ Jack DeJohnette, Larry Grenadier and John Medeski
2018 Combo 66 Quartet w/ Gerald Clayton, Bill Stewart and Vicente Archer Verve
2020 Swallow Tales ECM
2022 John Scofield Solo ECM
2023 Uncle John's Band ECM

Compilations

As a sideman

Albums listed by year of release. (Links to artists and labels on first appearance.)

DateArtistAlbum titleLabelNotes
1974Gary MarksGatheringArewea
1974Gerry Mulligan and Chet BakerCarnegie Hall ConcertCTI
1975Billy CobhamA Funky Thide of SingsAtlantic
1976Billy CobhamLife & TimesAtlantic
1976Billy Cobham & George DukeLive on Tour in EuropeAtlantic
1977Chet BakerYou Can't Go Home AgainHorizon
1977Charles MingusThree or Four Shades of BluesAtlantic
1977Jeremy SteigFireflyCTI
1977Urbie GreenSeñor BluesCTI
1977Terumasa HinoMay DanceFlying Disk
1977Chet BakerThe Best Thing for YouA&M
1978Billy CobhamInner ConflictsAtlantic Scofield on two tracks
1978Jay McShannThe Last of the Blue Devils Atlantic
1978Miroslav VitousGuardian AngelsTrio (Japan)
1979Dave LiebmanDoin' It AgainTimeless
1979Jim McNeelyThe Plot ThickensMuse
1979Niels-Henning Ørsted PedersenDancing on the TablesSteepleChase
1979Jay McShannThe Big Apple BashAtlantic
1979Zbigniew SeifertPassionCapitol
1979Martial Solal, Lee Konitz, John Scofield, Niels-Henning Ørsted PedersenFour KeysMPS
1979Jack WalrathDemons in PursuitGatemouth
1979Larry CoryellTributariesArista Novus
1979Joe Beck & Larry CoryellTributariesArista Novus
1979Hal GalperIvory ForestEnja
1980Dave LiebmanIf They Only KnewTimeless
1980Dave LiebmanWhat It IsColumbia
1980Ron McClureDescendantsKen
1981Bill GoodwinSolar EnergyOmni Sound Jazz
1982Peter WarrenSolidarityJAPO
1983Miles DavisStar PeopleColumbia
1983Jim PepperComin' and Goin'Antilles
1984George AdamsMore SightingsEnja
1984Miles DavisDecoyColumbia
1984Eero KoivistoinenPicture in Three ColoursProThree further tracks of this 1983 session in New York were released by the Finnish Rytmi magazine
1984Bennie WallaceSweeping Through the CityEnja
1984
1985
Miles DavisThe Complete Miles Davis at Montreux 1973–1991Warner SwitzerlandScofield on seven of the 20 cd box set released in 2002
1985Miles DavisYou're Under ArrestColumbia
1985George Adams-Don Pullen QuartetLive at MontmartreTimeless
1985Paul BleyHotSoul Note
1985Bennie WallaceTwilight TimeBlue Note
1986Tal Farlow, John Abercrombie, Larry Carlton, Larry Coryell, John Scofield, John Patitucci & Billy HartAll Strings AttachedVervePart of the 1986 concert series Jazzvisions: Made in America in Los Angeles
1986Marc JohnsonBass DesiresECM
1986L'Orchestre National du JazzOrchestre National du Jazz '86Label Bleu
1987Franco AmbrosettiMoviesEnja
1987Ron McClureHome BaseODE
1987Bennie WallaceArt of the SaxophoneDenon
1987Bennie WallaceBorder TownBlue Note
1987Roberto GattoAskInak
1987Marc JohnsonSecond SightECM
1988Franco AmbrosettiMovies TooEnja
1988Ray AndersonBlues Bred in the BoneEnja
1988Gary BurtonTimes Like TheseGRP
1988Tommy SmithStep by StepBlue Note
1988Missing LinksGroovinMCAScofield on two tracks
1988Mike Gibbs OrchestraBig TimeVenture
1988Tom HarrellStoriesContemporary
1988Niels Lan DokyDaybreakStoryville
1989Richie BeirachSome Other TimeTriloka
1989Terri Lyne CarringtonReal Life StoryVerve Forecast
1989Jim McNeely w/the WDR Big BandEast Coast Blow OutLipstickReleased in 1991 and reissued in 2014 on Jazzline
1989Gary ThomasBy Any Means NecessaryJMT
1989McCoy TynerThings Ain't What They Used to BeBlue Note
1989Terumasa HinoBluestruckBlue Note
1990Bill Cosby & FriendsWhere You Lay Your HeadVerve
1990Joey DeFrancescoWhere Were You?Columbia
1990Manhattan Jazz QuintetManhattan BluesSweet Basil
1990Harvie SwartzIn a Different LightBlue Moon
1990Benny GolsonRhythmstickCTI
1991Lars DanielssonFresh EnoughL+R
1991Dennis ChambersGetting EvenGlass House/Pioneer (Jp)
1991Peter ErskineSweet SoulArista Novus
1991Mike Gibbs BandSymphony Hall, Birmingham 1991Dusk FireReleased in 2018
1991Eero KoivistoinenAltered ThingsTimeless
1991Steve SwallowSwallowXtraWATT
1992Gary BurtonSix PackGRP
1992Jack DeJohnetteMusic for the Fifth WorldCapitol
1992Knut Riisnæs & Jon ChristensenKnut Riisnæs – Jon Christensen Featuring John Scofield – Palle DanielssonOdin
1993Lee KonitzRhapsody IIEvidence
1993Jimmy HaslipA R CUMG
1993Joe HendersonSo Near, So Far (Musings for Miles)Verve
1994David FriesenTwo for the ShowITM Pacific
1995Ray DrummondContinuumArabesque
1995Herbie HancockThe New StandardVerve
1995Ron HollowayStruttinMilestone
1995Lenny WhitePresent TenseHip Bop
1996Teodross AveryMy GenerationImpulse!
1997Gary BurtonDepartureConcord Jazz
1997Joe HendersonPorgy & BessVerve
1997Chris PotterUnspokenConcord Jazz
1998Mark-Anthony TurnageBlood on the FloorDecca
1998John PatitucciNowConcord Jazz
1999Shortcuts – Jazzpar Combo 1999
1999Joe HendersonQuiet Now: Lovesome ThingVerveScofield on two tracks
1999Tommy SmithBlue SmithLinn
1999Gov't Mule Featuring John ScofieldSco-MuleProvogueReleased in 2015
2000Jon GordonPossibilitiesDouble-Time
2000Bill Evans (saxophonist)Soul InsiderESCguitar on 8 & 10 (two tracks)
2001MetalwoodThe ReclineVerve
2001Project Logic with John ScofieldSharin' in the GrooveWho Is She Music?Charity tribute album for Phish and The Mockingbird Foundation. Guitar on "Cars Trucks Buses".
2002Chris PotterTraveling MerciesVerve
2003Roy HaynesLove LettersColumbia
2003Bugge WesseltoftNew Conception of Jazz LiveJazzland
2005Marc JohnsonShades of JadeECM
2005John EllisOne Foot in the SwampHyena
2006Phil Lesh and FriendsLive at the WarfieldImage
2007Keller WilliamsDreamSCI Fidelity
2009Assembly of DustSome Assembly RequiredRock Ridge MusicGuitar on "Borrowed Feet"
2010 Metropole Orkest Featuring John Scofield 54 EmArcyConducted by Vince Mendoza
2010Eddie HendersonFor All We KnowFurthermore
2021Scary GoldingsScary Goldings IVPockets Inc.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: John Scofield Music, News and Photos – AOL Music . Music.aol.com . 2013-07-05 . dead . https://archive.today/20121202112337/http://music.aol.com/artist/john-scofield/ . 2012-12-02.
  2. Web site: John Scofield: Will the Real John Scofield Please Stand Up? . Chip . Stern . March 2001 . 19 September 2016 . . 24 September 2016 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160924045654/http://jazztimes.com/articles/20357-john-scofield-will-the-real-john-scofield-please-stand-up . dead .
  3. Web site: Small . Mark . Berklee | Berklee College of Music . Berklee.edu . 2011-10-18.
  4. Web site: All About Jazz Bio . Allaboutjazz.com . 2011-10-18 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20080905083432/http://www.allaboutjazz.com/artists/scofield.htm . 2008-09-05 .
  5. Web site: Yanow . Scott . Yahoo Music artist Bio . Music.yahoo.com . 2011-10-18.
  6. Web site: Ivory Forest – Hal Galper, Hal Galper Quartet. . Scott . Yanow . 19 September 2016.
  7. Web site: John Scofield Trio featuring Steve Swallow & Bill Stewart . https://web.archive.org/web/20120928014023/http://jazzstl.org/experience/artists/john-scofield-trio-featuring-steve-swallow-bill-stewart/. dead. 28 September 2012 . Jazz St. Louis. 19 September 2016.
  8. Kelman, John (2011). Interview. AllAboutJazz. Retrieved August 10, 2013.
  9. Web site: For John Scofield, Everything Old Is New Again — Even The Hard Parts . Tom . Cole. 27 December 2015. 19 September 2016. NPR.
  10. Cf. credits on album.
  11. Web site: Out Louder – Medeski, Scofield, Martin & Wood. Jeff. Tamarkin. AllMusic. 19 September 2016.
  12. Web site: Jazz Faculty: John Scofield. Steinhardt School of Education. 19 September 2016.
  13. Web site: INSIDE SCOFIELD – A film about John Scofield. Scofield.joerg-steineck.com. 15 October 2023.
  14. Web site: 'Inside Scofield' (film by Joerg Steineck). November 25, 2022. London Jazz News.
  15. Web site: John Scofield on his workhorse Ibanez and advice to his younger self . Music Radar . November 5, 2023 . Henry . Yates . May 12, 2015.
  16. Web site: John Scofield Ibanez JSM-100 . November 5, 2023 . Jazz Guitar Today . July 1, 2020.
  17. Web site: 'It's like John Scofield took acid': Steve Vai's tech shares the story behind the virtuoso's psychedelic semi-hollow . Jonathan . Horsley . September 15, 2023 . November 5, 2023 . Guitar World.
  18. Web site: John Scofield. June 4, 2019. GRAMMY.com.
  19. Web site: The 50 GIANTS of Jazz Guitar in alphabetical order – Saban Jazz & Bossa School. Jazzandbossaguitar.com. en-US. 2019-02-20.