Jack DeJohnette, the prolific and versatile jazz drummer who played with Sonny Rollins, Herbie Hancock, Pat Metheny, Charles Lloyd, Bill Evans, Freddie Hubbard and Miles Davis โ including on Davisโ groundbreaking 1970 album โBitches Brew,โ which helped kick off the jazz fusion era โ died Sunday. He was 83.
His death was announced in a post on Instagram, which said he died at a hospital in Kingston, N.Y., near his home in Woodstock. DeJohnetteโs wife, Lydia, told NPR the cause was congestive heart failure.
As a member of Davisโ band in the late โ60s and early โ70s โ a group that also counted Chick Corea, Wayne Shorter, Keith Jarrett and Billy Cobham among its members โ DeJohnette pumped out psychedelic rock and funk rhythms that put Davisโ music in conversation with that of artists like James Brown and Sly Stone. In addition to โBitches Brew,โ which was inducted this year into the Library of Congressโ National Recording Registry, DeJohnette played on Davisโ โAt Fillmore,โ โLive-Evilโ and โOn the Cornerโ albums, the last of which was panned by critics when it came out but now is regarded as a jazz-funk landmark.
DeJohnette won two Grammy Awards on six nominations; in 2012, he was named a Jazz Master by the National Endowment of the Arts.
Living Colourโs Vernon Reid, who played on DeJohnetteโs 1992 album โMusic for the Fifth World,โ called DeJohnette โthe GOATโ on social media on Monday and wrote that his โinfluence & importance to Jazz, and contemporary improvised music can not be overstated.โ
DeJohnette was born Aug. 9, 1942, in Chicago. Encouraged by an uncle who worked as a jazz radio DJ, he learned to play piano as a child and went on to play with Sun Ra as he circulated among the forward-looking artists of Chicagoโs Assn. for the Advancement of Creative Musicians. He moved to New York in the mid-โ60s and joined Charles Lloydโs quartet before collaborating with Evans and then with Davis.
โWe couldnโt wait to play,โ he said of his tenure in Davisโ band in a 1990 interview with The Times. โMiles developed our talents by allowing us to progress naturally, having us play his music and accept the responsibility that goes with discipline and freedom. He learned from us, and we learned from him.โ
After leaving Davisโ band, DeJohnette continued collaborating with Jarrett, the influential pianist; the two formed a long-running group known as the Standards Trio with the bassist Gary Peacock that focused on material from the Great American Songbook. The drummer also led the bands New Directions and Special Edition and formed groups with Ravi Coltrane and with John Scofield.
In 2016, he released โReturn,โ a solo-piano album that served as a sequel of sorts to 1985โs โThe Jack DeJohnette Piano Album.โ According to the New York Times, DeJohnetteโs survivors include his wife, who also managed his career, and their two daughters.