Keith Jarrett
Biography
One of the most significant pianists to emerge since the 1960s, Keith Jarrett maintained a career that went through several phases. He gained international fame for his solo concerts, which found him spontaneously improvising all of the music without any prior planning, but he also led a couple of dynamic quartets/quintets, performed classical music, and later played explorative versions of standards with his longtime trio. Although his tendency to "sing along" with his piano now and then is distracting, Jarrett continued to grow as a powerful improviser after decades of important accomplishments.
Jarrett started on the piano when he was three, and by the time he was seven he had already played a recital. A child prodigy, Jarrett was a professional while still in grade school. In 1962, he studied at Berklee, and then started working in the Boston area with his trio. He moved to New York in 1965, and spent four months with Art Blakey's Jazz Messengers. As a member of the very popular Charles Lloyd Quartet (1966-1969), Jarrett traveled the world and became well-known; he also began doubling occasionally on soprano (which he would utilize through the 1970s). During 1969-1971, he was with Miles Davis' fusion group, playing organ and electric keyboards; Chick Corea was also in the band for the first year.
Selected Discography

My Foolish Heart (Live At Montreux)
2007

The Carnegie Hall Concert
2006

The Out-Of-Towners (Live)
2004

Up For It (Live)
2003

Always Let Me Go (Live)
2002

Rarum, Vol. 1: Selected Recordings
2002

Inside Out
2001

Whisper Not - Live In Paris 1999
2000

Tokyo '96
1998

At The Blue Note: The Complete Recordings
1994

My Song
1977

Silence
1977

The Survivors' Suite
1976

The Koln Concert
1975

Mysteries - The Impulse Years 1975 - 1976 (Box Set)
1975

Personal Mountains
1974

Belonging
1974

The Impulse Years: 1973-1974
1973

Fort Yawuh
1973

Facing You
1971





