Scott LaFaro

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Autumn Leaves 05:59 Tools
I Hear A Rhapsody 06:17 Tools
Come Rain Or Come Shine (Take 5) 06:17 Tools
Sacre Bléu (take 1) 06:11 Tools
Someday My Prince Will Come 04:55 Tools
When I Fall In Love 04:54 Tools
Come Rain or Come Shine 05:41 Tools
Woody'n You 03:30 Tools
Spring Is Here 05:08 Tools
Blue In Green (Take 3) 05:08 Tools
Witch Craft 05:08 Tools
Peri's Scope 05:08 Tools
Memories for Scotty 06:23 Tools
Making Whoopee 05:32 Tools
In Your Own Sweet Way 05:05 Tools
What Is This Thing Called Love 04:37 Tools
Yesterdays 04:34 Tools
Onilisor 04:17 Tools
Blackeyed Peas 03:33 Tools
Blues 04:08 Tools
Come Rain Or Come Shine (Take 4) 05:32 Tools
Autumn Leaves (Take 9 - monaural) 05:32 Tools
I Could Have Danced All Night 03:33 Tools
Green Dolphin Street 06:36 Tools
Blue In Green (Take 1) 03:33 Tools
Too Close For Comfort (Live) 03:49 Tools
Blue In Green (Take 2) 03:49 Tools
Sacre Bléu (take 2) 06:18 Tools
Witchcraft 04:36 Tools
Cherry 02:48 Tools
My Foolish Heart 22:44 Tools
Rehearsal Blues 09:34 Tools
Poinciana 03:37 Tools
BeBop 02:45 Tools
Pancho 05:56 Tools
Blue In Green 06:12 Tools
Green Dolphine St. 00:30 Tools
Interview with Bill Evans by George Klabin 1966 13:38 Tools
Deep In A Dream 03:33 Tools
Nardis 07:24 Tools
Spain 02:59 Tools
There's No Greater Love 03:08 Tools
Crow's Nest 03:39 Tools
Flamingo 03:09 Tools
Sacré bleu (take 2) 06:18 Tools
Speak Low 06:48 Tools
The Man I Love 02:59 Tools
I've Never Been In Love Before (Live) 04:16 Tools
Beautiful Love / Five (Closing Theme) 05:22 Tools
Chart of My Heart 03:12 Tools
It Could Happen To You 11:10 Tools
You Are My Lucky Star 01:47 Tools
Woody 'n You 05:38 Tools
All Of You 07:00 Tools
Lover Come Back To Me 02:46 Tools
Tumbaro 03:11 Tools
My Foolish Heart (Rehearsal Tape: Bill Evans & Scott LaFaro 22:44 Tools
Green Dolphin St 06:36 Tools
Our Delight 06:36 Tools
Sacre Bleu 06:11 Tools
Liz-Anne 03:22 Tools
Woddy'n You 05:38 Tools
But Not For Me 03:42 Tools
Israël 06:12 Tools
Time Remembered (Live) 06:12 Tools
Jade Vision (Live) 04:09 Tools
Variants On A Theme Of Thelonious Monk (Criss Cross) (Live) 04:09 Tools
C. & D. (Live) 13:09 Tools
Beautiful Love 06:09 Tools
Hauntedheart 03:27 Tools
Goodbye 04:01 Tools
Green Dolphin St. 05:22 Tools
Woody'n You - Pieces of Jade with Don Friedman & Pete LaRoca 04:10 Tools
Makin' Whoopee 05:22 Tools
Too Close For Comfort - Live 03:51 Tools
Until THe Real Thing Comes Along 03:39 Tools
The Alchemy Of Scott LaFaro (Live) 03:51 Tools
Collared Greens And Black-Eyed Peas 03:30 Tools
Time Remembered 00:00 Tools
I Wish I Know 04:41 Tools
Elsa 05:10 Tools
I Wish I Knew 02:14 Tools
How Deep Is the Ocean ? 03:33 Tools
I've Never Been In Love Before - Live 04:18 Tools
I've Never Been In Love Before 15:25 Tools
Sweet and Lovely 05:55 Tools
On Green Dolphin Street 02:29 Tools
Sometimes I'm Happy 03:18 Tools
First Take (Live) 17:01 Tools
Jade Vision 04:17 Tools
Onilosor 04:10 Tools
Cherokee 18:54 Tools
Tenderly 03:34 Tools
Too Close For Comfort 04:17 Tools
Jade Vision - Live 04:11 Tools
What Is There to Say 04:54 Tools
Embraceable You 04:47 Tools
You Don't Know What Love Is 03:58 Tools
Liz Anne 15:25 Tools
01 - Making Whoopee 05:32 Tools
Variants On A Theme Of Thelonious Monk (Criss Cross) 13:39 Tools
Cuban Love Song 03:32 Tools
Bass Blues 15:17 Tools
The Legendary-FULL ALBUM HQ-1957 00:30 Tools
C. & D. 06:18 Tools
03 - Onilisor 04:17 Tools
First Take 13:39 Tools
Variants On A Theme Of Thelonious Monk (Criss Cross) - Live 15:25 Tools
I Get A Kick Out Of You 03:22 Tools
05 - Blackeyed Peas 03:33 Tools
02 - In Your Own Sweet Way 05:05 Tools
04 - Come Rain Or Come Shine 05:41 Tools
Time Remembered - Live 06:25 Tools
Sacre Bléu 06:17 Tools
06 - I Could Have Danced All Night 03:33 Tools
07 - Yesterdays 04:34 Tools
Someone To Watch Over Me 02:49 Tools
Interview With Bill Evans (By George Klabin 1966) 13:39 Tools
08 - Blues 04:08 Tools
Summertime 11:57 Tools
Sacre Bléu - Take 2 06:18 Tools
My Foolish Heart - Rehearsal Tape: Bill Evans and Scott LaFaro - 1960 02:29 Tools
Bass Blues (Commentary By Richie Kamuca) 15:15 Tools
You And The Night And The Music 02:29 Tools
Sacre Bléu - Take 1 06:11 Tools
The Scene Is Clean 01:16 Tools
Chasing Shadows 13:39 Tools
The Alchemy of Scott LaFaro 13:39 Tools
C. & D. - Live 13:12 Tools
I'm Glad There Is You 04:26 Tools
Interview With Bill Evans - By George Klabin 1966 13:39 Tools
My Foolish Heart (Rehearsal Tape: Bill Evans & Scott LaFaro - 1960) 13:39 Tools
Homage to Scott by Bill Evans 01:00 Tools
Sacre Bléu [Take 2] 13:39 Tools
Deep in a Dream - Original Mix 01:16 Tools
First Take - Live 17:05 Tools
Woody 'n' You 17:05 Tools
What Is This Thing Called Love? 05:02 Tools
Sacre Blйu (Take 2) 01:00 Tools
Yesterdays - Original Mix 01:00 Tools
There Is No Greater Love 01:00 Tools
The Alchemy Of Scott LaFaro - Live 09:52 Tools
Sacre Bleu (take 1) 01:00 Tools
Flamingo - Original Mix 01:00 Tools
Sacre Bléu, Take 2 01:00 Tools
Onilisor - Original Mix 09:52 Tools
Gloria's Step (Take 2) 09:52 Tools
JazzRadio.com 09:52 Tools
My Foolish Heart (rehearsal 1960) 09:52 Tools
Gloria's Step 08:20 Tools
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Scott LaFaro (April 3, 1936 – July 6, 1961) was an influential American jazz double bassist, perhaps best known for his seminal work with the Bill Evans Trio. Born in Irvington, New Jersey, Rocco Scott LaFaro grew up in a musical family (his father played in many big bands). His family moved to his parents' hometown of Geneva, New York when Scott was five years old. He started on piano while in elementary school, began on the bass clarinet in junior high school, changing to tenor saxophone when he entered high school. He took up the double bass at 18, in the summer before he entered college, when he learned a string instrument was required for music education majors. About three months into his studies at Ithaca College in Ithaca, New York, LaFaro decided to concentrate on bass. He often played in groups at the College Spa and Joe's Restaurant on State Street in downtown Ithaca. He entered college to study music but left during the early weeks of his sophomore year, when he joined Buddy Morrow and his big band. He left that organization in Los Angeles after a cross-country tour and decided to try his luck in the Los Angeles music scene. There, he quickly found work and became known as one of the best of the young bassists. In 1959, after many gigs with such luminaries as Chet Baker, Victor Feldman, Stan Kenton, Cal Tjader, and Benny Goodman, LaFaro joined Bill Evans, who had recently left the Miles Davis Sextet. It was with Evans and drummer Paul Motian that LaFaro developed and expanded the counter-melodic style that would come to characterize his playing. LaFaro replaced Charlie Haden as Ornette Coleman's bassist in January, 1961. LaFaro played a double bass made in 1825 in Concord, New Hampshire by Abraham Prescott. The top of the instrument is a three-piece plate of slab-cut fir; the back is a two-piece plate of moderately flamed maple with an ebony inlay at the center joint; the sides are made of matching maple. It has rolled corners on the bottom and very sloped shoulders on the top, making it easier to get in and out of thumb position. In 2009, the University of North Texas Press published Jade Visions, a biography of LaFaro by his sister Helene LaFaro-Fernandez. It includes an extensive discography of his recorded work. In 2009, Resonance Records released Pieces of Jade, the first album released featuring LaFaro as a bandleader. The album includes five selections recorded in New York City during 1961 that showcase LaFaro with pianist Don Friedman and drummer Pete LaRoca, as well as 22 minutes of LaFaro and Bill Evans practicing "My Foolish Heart" in late 1960 during a rehearsal. LaFaro died in an automobile accident in the summer of 1961 in Flint, New York on U.S. Route 20 between Geneva and Canandaigua, two days after accompanying Stan Getz at the Newport Jazz Festival. His death came just ten days after recording two live albums with the Bill Evans Trio, Sunday at the Village Vanguard and Waltz for Debby, albums considered among the finest live jazz recordings. LaFaro's death took an enormous emotional toll on Bill Evans, who was, according to drummer Paul Motian, "numb with grief," "in a state of shock," and "like a ghost" after LaFaro's death. Evans, according to Motian, would play "I Loves You Porgy", a song with which he and LaFaro became synonymous, almost obsessively, but always as a solo piece. Evans also went on hiatus after LaFaro's death for a period of several months. Many believe that Evans never fully recovered from the loss, as well as that it contributed to his pattern of heroin usage, an addiction that would later kill him. Although his performing career lasted only six years, LaFaro's innovative approach to the bass redefined jazz playing, bringing an "emancipation" introducing "so many diverse possibilities as would have been thought impossible for the bass only a short time before", and inspiring a generation of bassists who followed him. Discography: Pieces of Jade, Resonance Records -With Ornette Coleman Free Jazz: A Collective Improvisation (Atlantic, 1961) Ornette! (Atlantic, 1962) The Art of the Improvisers (Atlantic, 1970) Twins (Atlantic, 1971) -With Bill Evans Portrait in Jazz (Riverside, 1960) Explorations (Riverside, 1961) Sunday at the Village Vanguard (Riverside, 1961) Waltz for Debby (Riverside, 1962) -With Booker Little Booker Little (Time, 1961) -With Hampton Hawes For Real (Contemporary, 1958) -With Victor Feldman The Arrival of Victor Feldman (Contemporary Records, 1958) Latinsville! (Contemporary, 1958) -With Stan Getz and Cal Tjader Stan Getz with Cal Tjader (Fantasy, 1958) -With Pat Moran Pat Moran Trio (Bethlehem Records, 1957) -With Tony Scott Sung Heroes (Sunnyside, 1959) -With John Lewis Jazz Abstractions (Atlantic, 1960) Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.