CLARKE STANLEY, COLLECTION BASS. Bass folk song -christmas in rio -dayride -east river drive -i wanna play for you -life is just a game -lopsy lu -the magician -rock 'n' roll jelly -school days -silly putty -song to john (part ll) -stories to tell -time exposure -vulcan worlds -what if i forget the champagne. TABLATURE
16 MASTERPIECES
Bass Recorded Versions
Series: Bass Recorded Versions TAB
Artist: Stanley Clarke
Features authentic, note-for-note transcriptions with tab for 16 super tunes from this eclectic bass master, 96 pages.
Stanlev Clarke
Performer, Bandleader, Arranger,
Producer and Composer
Stanley Clarke is one of the most celebrated bassists in the world today. During his career, he has received virtually every honor that can be bestowed upon a musician, including Rolling Stone's "Jazzman of the Year," Playboy magazine, "Jazz Bassist of the Year" for ten consecutive years, and Guitar Player magazine's "Gallery of Greats." A seven-time Grammy nominee, Clarke received a Grammy for his critically-acclaimed album No Mystery in 1975 and his score for Boyz N The Hood received an Oscar nomination. In 1989, he returned to his native Philadelphia where his name was placed in cement on the "Walk of Fame," and where Mayor Wilson Goode presented him with a Philadelphia Music Foundation Hall of Fame award.
His albums continue to top a variety of charts; not only Jazz, but the R&B, New Adult Contemporary and Top Pop charts. Born in 1951, Clarke was encouraged from an early age to study music by his mother, who sang opera. Though he initially studied violin and cello, he literally outgrew both instruments. With his long, lean frame, he was a natural to play the acoustic bass. Equally interested in jazz, classical, and rock music, Clarke started playing in bands in junior high. By the time he'd reached the twelfth grade he became a serious student of the bass, practicing and playing for eight hours a day. At 16, he bought an electric bass for $29.00, a Kent hollow body, so he could get after-school jobs playing bass. His jobs ranged from a blues combo, a country group and a Top-40 band that rolled into the Holiday Inn circuit. He then enrolled in the prestigious Philadelphia Musical Academy, studying string bass and composition, but continuing to be influenced by Jimi Hendrix, Jack Bruce and Charles Mingus, as well as Bach, Beethoven and Wagner. In 1970, Clarke moved to New York City where he played with such jazz greats as Horace Silver, Stan Getz, Dexter Gordon, Art Blakey, and Gil Evans. He came into international prominence as a founding member of the groundbreaking jazz rock fusion band, Return to Forever. Though initially a jazz purist devoted exclusively to the acoustic bass, Clarke went electric and electrified the music world during his eight-album collaboration with members Chick Corea, Lenny White and AI Di Meola. In 1975, Return to Forever's No Mystery album won the Grammy for Best Jazz Performance by a Group. His slap and pop playing with this group had a powerful influence on the jazz-funk styles to come.
Clarke remembers those times: "The Return to Forever years were important for me... RTF was really one of the only times in my playing career that I got to use some of the skills I'd worked on in college-through composition, writing for orchestra and things like that. Because before we did an album, we'd always take off for a month or so to compose music."
During his tenure with Return to Forever, Clarke launched his highly-successful solo career. On his 1972 solo album, Children of Forever, he played acoustic exclusively. The 1975 release of Stanley Clarke with Tony Williams and Jan Hammer put him into the fusion scene. His 1976 album School Days became a crossover hit. His crossover R&B/pop Clarke/Duke Project in collaboration with keyboardist George Duke resulted in three best-selling albums and a Top 20 single, "Sweet Baby." Their 1990 album 3 garnered the duo an NAACP Image Award nomination for Best Jazz Artists. His solo East River Drive featured an all-star ensemble including Duke, Hubert Laws, Jean-Luc Ponty, Poncho Sanchez and Gerald Albright, plus big names in bass: Abe Laboriel, Armand Sabal-Lecco, Alphonso Johnson and Jimmy Earl. Clarke's independent label, Slamm Dunk Records, has released a variety of recordings including his own Live at the Greek, and the soundtrack album for Passenger 57. Live at the Greek features Clarke with Larry Carlton, Billy Cobham and Najee. Clarke's rock projects included working with Jeff Beck, Stewart Copeland, and Deborah Holland with the group Animal Logic, the New Barbarians (which featured The Rolling Stones' Ron Wood and Keith Richards) and scoring the opening sequence of Michael Jackson's video Remember the Time, which was directed by John Singleton. He has co-written with Paul McCartney, recorded with Quincy Jones, Carlos Santana and Aretha Franklin, and produced records for Brenda Russell, Ramsey Lewis, Shalamar, and Natalie Cole. In the television arena Clarke has received three Emmy nominations for television scoring. He started out by sending tapes to everyone in the field, and got his first break doing Pee- Wee's Playhouse. That's when he bought his first Mac and MIDI keyboard, and got his first Emmy nomination. It was while scoring an episode of Tales from the Crypt that his desire to score was fueled, when he became aware of how powerful music can be in a scene. With this turn in composing, Clarke has been in constant demand to score films and television since the mid '80s. His films include John Singleton's Boyz N The Hood, Panther, Passenger 57, Book of Love, Poetic Justice, Higher Learning, Little Big League, Tap, Dangerous Ground, Cherokee Kidd, and the acclaimed score for What's Love Got To Do With It, the drama based on the life of Tina Turner. He loves the challenge of composition and orchestration, the exposure to rapidly changing music technology, and the new sense of freedom, noting that "Underscoring, in particular, takes away all the constraints of producing music that must have commercial potential." Clarke claims that film composing has influenced his solo writing-"When you do as much film composing as I've done lately, you just kind of get oiled as far as writing melodically is concerned."
TITLES:
Bass Folk Song - STANLEY CLARKE - 1973
Christmas In Rio - STANLEY CLARKE - 1993
Dayride - STANLEY CLARKE - 1977
East River Drive - STANLEY CLARKE - 1993
I Wanna Play For You - STANLEY CLARKE - 1979
Life Is Just A Game - STANLEY CLARKE - 1976
Lopsy Lu - STANLEY CLARKE - 1977
The Magician - STANLEY CLARKE - 1976
Rock 'N' Roll Jelly - STANLEY CLARKE - 1978
School Days - STANLEY CLARKE - 1980
Silly Putty - STANLEY CLARKE - 1977
Song To John - STANLEY CLARKE - 1975
Stories To Tell - STANLEY CLARKE - 1988
Time Exposure - STANLEY CLARKE - 1983
Vulcan Worlds - STANLEY CLARKE - 1974
What If I Forget The Champagne - STANLEY CLARKE - 1993