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Stanley Clarke

Personal Profile

Stanley Clarke
  • Birth Name:
    Stanley Marvin Clarke
  • Date of Birth:
    June 30, 1951
  • Zodiac Sign:
    Cancer
  • Place of Birth:
    Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.SA
  • Height:
    6' 3"
  • Sex:
    Male
  • Hair Color:
    Black
  • Eye Color:
    Blue
  • Nationality:
    American
  • Religion:
    Christianity
  • Education:

    Roxborough High School, Philadelphia

    Philadelphia Musical Academy, Panama

Family

Stanley Clarke

    Career

    Stanley Clarke
    • Profession:
      Lyricist, Musician
    • Claim to Fame:
      School Days - Album - 1976
    • Debut:
      A Man Called Hawk - TV Series

    Awards

    Stanley Clarke
    1952 : BMI Film Music Award

    Trivia

    Stanley Clarke
    • He is best known for his work with the fusion band Return to Forever.
    • He is a brilliant player on both acoustic and electric basses.
    • He was a musical influence on the British band Level 42.
    • Was a member of Chick Corea's band Return To Forever in the 1970s.
    • Is a Jazz musician.

    Quotes

    Stanley Clarke
    • “Usually, when I do a soundtrack, the music from the movie doesn't have anything to do with me personally. It's music to enhance to the film. My own stuff is more introspective and about what's on going in my head.”
    • “After all my years of doing instrumental music I still like just a simple instrumental song with a nice catchy melody and an opportunity to play a solo over a harmonic structure.”
    • “It was kind of cool to be able to go back and listen to what it was that I was doing during a particular time in my career.”
    • “George is a great combination of science and soul, I've never forgotten where I come from. This is my home.”
    • “He's probably the most interesting musician I've met in the last 10 years. You can write anything for him, and he can play it.”
    • “We had these huge amplifiers, and the band's energy level was just astounding. I recently saw a picture taken near the gig of myself, John McLaughlin and Tony sitting on this rock. God, we were so young. It's the only time that the three of us were together.”
    • “I think I've done more recording in the past 10 years than most people, but it's all been directed toward film composing and soundtracks. Just the same, it's been great.”
    • “After my last solo album in '93, I got heavily into the film-composing thing. I didn't really have much to say... I was going through a divorce at that point, and to be quite honest, I really wasn't in the mood for making a CD then.”
    • “Maya Angelou is a very prolific writer. You can read her stuff down once and sort of walk away, but if you really want to get the richness of what she is saying you have to check it out a couple of times.”
    • “I live a different way today. I have a family, and they are a priority for me. These days, I no longer wake up in the morning and worry if my bass is tuned properly and practice for hours and hours on end. I don't perform as much, but when I do, there's such magic to working in front of a live audience.”
    View all Quotes: Stanley Clarke

    Biography

    Stanley Clarke
    Last Updated: Wednesday, September 09, 2009

    stanley clarkeA brilliant player on both acoustic and electric basses, Stanley Clarke has spent much of his career outside of jazz, although he has the ability to play jazz with the very best. He played accordion as a youth, switching to violin and cello before settling on bass. He worked with R&B and rock bands in high school, but after moving to New York, he worked with Pharoah Sanders in the early '70s. Other early gigs were with Gil Evans, Mel Lewis, Horace Silver, Stan Getz, Dexter Gordon, and Art Blakey; everyone was impressed by his talents. However, Clarke really hit the big time when he started teaming up with Chick Corea in Return to Forever.

    When the group became a rock-oriented fusion quartet, Clarke mostly emphasized electric bass and became an influential force, preceding Jaco Pastorius. But, starting with his School Days album (1976), and continuing through his funk group with George Duke (the Clarke/Duke Project), up to his projects writing movie scores, Stanley Clarke largely moved beyond the jazz world into commercial music; his 1988 Portrait album If This Bass Could Only Talk, and his 1995 collaboration with Jean Luc Ponty and Al DiMeola on the acoustic The Rite of Strings, are two of his few jazz recordings since the '70s.

    Filmography

    Stanley Clarke

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