Biography
Trombonist Ed Byrne has long demonstrated mastery as a jazz improviser, composer, arranger, and educator. He first rose to prominence within New York’s thriving Latin jazz community during the 1970s, appearing on multiple Grammy-nominated recordings alongside Eddie Palmieri and Bobby Paunetto, and later forged his own path fronting ensembles under his name. In addition to his long-term faculty role at Berklee College of Music in Boston and his authorship of an extensive jazz instruction series, he issued the albums Two Shades of Blue in 2000 and Conquistador in 2012.
Philadelphia-born in 1946, Byrne attracted early attention in New York through associations with Eddie Palmieri, Willie Colon, Manu Dibango, and other Latin jazz figures. His work with Palmieri included the 1974 album Unfinished Masterpiece, which earned a Grammy. In 1976 he performed on Bobby Paunetto’s Paunetto’s Point, another Grammy-nominated project, and he also took part in the celebrated Carnegie Hall Concert reunion recording by Gerry Mulligan and Chet Baker. Across subsequent decades his collaborators encompassed Joe Henderson, Herbie Hancock, Charles Mingus, James Brown, Tito Puente, and Archie Shepp.
Maintaining leadership of his own bands, Byrne documented Two Shades of Blue in 2000 through two distinct lineups: one studio session featuring guitarist John Abercrombie, pianist Jim McNeely, bassist Ron McClure, drummer Victor Lewis, and percussionist Milton Cardona, and a live quartet date with guitarist Mick Goodrick, bassist John Lockwood, and drummer Bob Gulotti. He pursued advanced studies at Boston’s New England Conservatory of Music, completing a Doctor of Musical Arts in Jazz Studies. Alongside his extended tenure instructing at Berklee, he produced the seventeen-volume Linear Jazz Improvisation methodology series. In 2012 he returned with the Latin Jazz Evolution band on the album Conquistador.
Philadelphia-born in 1946, Byrne attracted early attention in New York through associations with Eddie Palmieri, Willie Colon, Manu Dibango, and other Latin jazz figures. His work with Palmieri included the 1974 album Unfinished Masterpiece, which earned a Grammy. In 1976 he performed on Bobby Paunetto’s Paunetto’s Point, another Grammy-nominated project, and he also took part in the celebrated Carnegie Hall Concert reunion recording by Gerry Mulligan and Chet Baker. Across subsequent decades his collaborators encompassed Joe Henderson, Herbie Hancock, Charles Mingus, James Brown, Tito Puente, and Archie Shepp.
Maintaining leadership of his own bands, Byrne documented Two Shades of Blue in 2000 through two distinct lineups: one studio session featuring guitarist John Abercrombie, pianist Jim McNeely, bassist Ron McClure, drummer Victor Lewis, and percussionist Milton Cardona, and a live quartet date with guitarist Mick Goodrick, bassist John Lockwood, and drummer Bob Gulotti. He pursued advanced studies at Boston’s New England Conservatory of Music, completing a Doctor of Musical Arts in Jazz Studies. Alongside his extended tenure instructing at Berklee, he produced the seventeen-volume Linear Jazz Improvisation methodology series. In 2012 he returned with the Latin Jazz Evolution band on the album Conquistador.
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