Yahoo France Recherche Web

Résultats de recherche

  1. Richard Edwin « Dick » Morrissey (né le 9 mai 1940 à Horley et mort le 8 novembre 2000 à Deal, dans le Kent) est un musicien de jazz et compositeur britannique. Il joue du saxophone soprano, du saxophone ténor et de la flûte.

  2. "Dick Morrissey, who has died aged 60, was among the finest European jazz musicians of his generation. His command of the tenor saxophone was masterly, but it was the unforced fluency of his playing, expressed in a characteristically broad and sweeping tone, that attracted the greatest admiration.

  3. 25 avr. 2024 · Certainly Dick Morrissey’s group is alive and kicking, with more than usual vigour. Held together by the musical ability of Harry South it produces one of the most exciting sounds to be heard in British modern jazz today. In charge of the quartet, Dick Morrissey is the personification of his group’s excitement. In the course of a ...

  4. 2 sept. 2021 · Dick Morrissey – Souliloquy - Landscape Jazz (1986) Spotify Playlists: https://spoti.fi/2FBlT7r https://spoti.fi/3bZpE2z This is a dedicated site to Team of The Landscape Channel, LandscapeHD...

  5. Real Name: Richard Edwin Morrissey. Profile: British jazz and rock tenor saxophonist, born: 9 May 1940 in Horley, Surrey, England, died: 8 November 2000 in Deal, Kent, England. An influential figure in the British jazz scene, especially during the 1960s-1970s, and among the most respected saxophonists of his time.

  6. 17 oct. 2021 · These BBC radio recordings from 1967 amply illustrate Morrissey’s first period with the standard repertoire in two sets from June and October; they reveal the wide-ranging nature of his jazz delivery. His popular 60s quartet comprised Harry South on piano, Phil Bates on bass and Bill Eyden on drums. South also led his own big band ...

  7. 29 janv. 2024 · Today we’ve added British saxophonist Dick Morrissey to the World of Sax. He was one of Britains brightest jazz stars and a man who had a key role in the early fusion between jazz and rock during the 1970s.