HUMAN FEEL
Eclectic Fusion / Avant-Garde Jazz / 21st Century Modern • United States
Jazz music community with review and forums
The members of Human Feel attended music schools in Boston and recorded the album Scatter on Gunther Schuller's GM Recordings label. Losing bassist Joe Fitzgerald, the Beantown quintet continued on as a New York-based foursome, reaching a peak of activity during the mid-'90s as the musicians all became mainstays in the city's so-called downtown jazz scene. Saxophonists Chris Speed and Andrew D'Angelo, drummer Jim Black, and guitarist Kurt Rosenwinkel recorded two more Human Feel albums as a collaborative quartet, Welcome to Malpesta on New World (1994) and Speak to It on Songlines (1996). Around the same time, their visibility was increasing through involvement in other bands, including many led by other downtowners. During the '90s and into the new century, Speed and Black both joined Tim Berne's Bloodcount and separate Dave Douglas groups; they also performed together in Pachora, Speed's yeah NO quartet, and Black's quartet heard on AlasNoAxis. Black
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Human Use
Avant-Garde Jazz
1989
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Scatter
Eclectic Fusion
1991
4.00 |
3 ratings
Galore
Eclectic Fusion
2007
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0 ratings
Gold
21st Century Modern
2019
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