Jackie McLean

Real Name:

John Lenwood McLean

Profile:

American jazz alto saxophonist
Born May 17, 1931 in New York City, New York, USA
Died March 31, 2006 in Hartford, Connecticut, USA (aged 74)
Father John McLean (died 1939) was a guitarist with Tiny Bradshaw. Initially a bop orientated musician in the 1950s, Jackie McLean developed a freer approach in the 1960s influenced by Ornette Coleman. With Freddie Redd, he appeared in the Jack Gelber play "The Connection" at the Living Theatre, an off-Broadway venue, and in the 1961 film version directed by Shirley Clarke. After his Blue Note contract was terminated, McLean spent much of the 1970s and 1980s as a music educator, before reviving his performing career in the 1990s.

Sites:

theguardian.com , nytimes.com , allaboutjazz.com , jazztimes.com , newyorker.com , jazzwise.com , bluenote.com , Wikipedia

Aliases:

Ferris Bender

In Groups:

Art Blakey & The Jazz Messengers, Art Farmer / Jackie McLean Quintet, Charles Mingus Jazz Workshop, Freddie Redd Quartet, Freddie Redd Quintet, George Wallington Quintet, Jackie McLean & The Cosmic Brotherhood, Jackie McLean & The MacBand, Jackie McLean Quartet, Jackie McLean Quintet, Jackie McLean Septet, Jackie McLean Sextet, Miles Davis And His Band, Miles Davis And His Cool Wailers, Sonny Clark Quintet, The Kenny Dorham Quintet, The Miles Davis Sextet, Tina Brooks Quintet

Variations:

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