Zürcher Nachrichten - Jazz innovator Wayne Shorter dies at 89

EUR -
AED 4.257886
AFN 73.02921
ALL 95.817917
AMD 437.281848
ANG 2.07505
AOA 1062.978988
ARS 1613.312372
AUD 1.673525
AWG 2.089444
AZN 1.983567
BAM 1.954017
BBD 2.33424
BDT 142.55419
BGN 1.981417
BHD 0.437693
BIF 3437.00418
BMD 1.159192
BND 1.486826
BOB 8.008105
BRL 5.977986
BSD 1.158977
BTN 107.56439
BWP 15.762497
BYN 3.446647
BYR 22720.162541
BZD 2.330873
CAD 1.609944
CDF 2660.345655
CHF 0.920027
CLF 0.026803
CLP 1058.330871
CNY 7.966837
CNH 7.97214
COP 4251.916133
CRC 538.838399
CUC 1.159192
CUP 30.718587
CVE 110.695617
CZK 24.508911
DJF 206.011511
DKK 7.472348
DOP 70.098958
DZD 153.894188
EGP 62.042623
ERN 17.387879
ETB 180.964195
FJD 2.616761
FKP 0.879249
GBP 0.870791
GEL 3.118534
GGP 0.879249
GHS 12.751035
GIP 0.879249
GMD 85.204531
GNF 10177.705362
GTQ 8.86587
GYD 242.561161
HKD 9.085457
HNL 30.787095
HRK 7.530696
HTG 152.129677
HUF 383.11932
IDR 19627.554294
ILS 3.635747
IMP 0.879249
INR 107.411772
IQD 1518.173248
IRR 1528829.304946
ISK 144.400737
JEP 0.879249
JMD 183.291913
JOD 0.821878
JPY 184.03158
KES 150.752775
KGS 101.371224
KHR 4648.941398
KMF 494.68483
KPW 1043.207097
KRW 1756.604853
KWD 0.358677
KYD 0.965873
KZT 550.954749
LAK 25447.144126
LBP 103805.641081
LKR 365.344961
LRD 213.117207
LSL 19.642507
LTL 3.422792
LVL 0.701183
LYD 7.389798
MAD 10.809509
MDL 20.415511
MGA 4903.777977
MKD 61.629952
MMK 2434.773759
MNT 4141.470892
MOP 9.357664
MRU 46.518629
MUR 54.261674
MVR 17.909689
MWK 2013.516367
MXN 20.679283
MYR 4.668071
MZN 74.14163
NAD 19.6425
NGN 1600.101911
NIO 42.652358
NOK 11.257366
NPR 172.103566
NZD 2.014253
OMR 0.445713
PAB 1.159002
PEN 4.032441
PGK 5.012317
PHP 69.825114
PKR 323.361962
PLN 4.28271
PYG 7527.032423
QAR 4.225588
RON 5.097086
RSD 117.377505
RUB 93.087935
RWF 1696.146978
SAR 4.351092
SBD 9.322265
SCR 16.1242
SDG 696.674312
SEK 10.912222
SGD 1.487568
SHP 0.869694
SLE 28.458447
SLL 24307.688488
SOS 662.332606
SRD 43.312058
STD 23992.933305
STN 24.47903
SVC 10.140701
SYP 128.377386
SZL 19.458331
THB 37.831388
TJS 11.082558
TMT 4.068764
TND 3.402051
TOP 2.791055
TRY 51.56105
TTD 7.866261
TWD 37.080812
TZS 3002.307538
UAH 50.714274
UGX 4317.189906
USD 1.159192
UYU 47.106801
UZS 14078.089729
VES 548.619881
VND 30527.320435
VUV 139.385868
WST 3.219903
XAF 655.395549
XAG 0.015329
XAU 0.000243
XCD 3.132774
XCG 2.088585
XDR 0.82413
XOF 655.350359
XPF 119.331742
YER 276.640762
ZAR 19.528177
ZMK 10434.121112
ZMW 22.338767
ZWL 373.25934
  • CMSC

    0.0900

    21.99

    +0.41%

  • NGG

    2.2400

    86.84

    +2.58%

  • BCC

    -0.7700

    75.08

    -1.03%

  • GSK

    0.8000

    55.99

    +1.43%

  • BCE

    0.1400

    25.38

    +0.55%

  • RYCEF

    0.9500

    16

    +5.94%

  • RIO

    1.5200

    94.81

    +1.6%

  • JRI

    0.2200

    12.52

    +1.76%

  • CMSD

    0.0500

    22.15

    +0.23%

  • RBGPF

    -13.5000

    69

    -19.57%

  • RELX

    0.0800

    33.23

    +0.24%

  • BTI

    -0.5800

    57.89

    -1%

  • VOD

    0.1100

    15.13

    +0.73%

  • AZN

    3.5100

    200.73

    +1.75%

  • BP

    -0.8300

    46.17

    -1.8%

Jazz innovator Wayne Shorter dies at 89
Jazz innovator Wayne Shorter dies at 89 / Photo: SEBASTIEN NOGIER - AFP/File

Jazz innovator Wayne Shorter dies at 89

Wayne Shorter, the storied saxophonist considered one of America's greatest jazz composers and among the genre's leading risk-takers, died on Thursday in Los Angeles. He was 89.

Text size:

Shorter's publicist Alisse Kingsley confirmed his death to AFP, without specifying the cause.

The enigmatic jazz elder performed with fellow legend Miles Davis and went on to become a leading bandleader on both soprano and tenor sax, including with his group Weather Report.

He was one of the last living jazz greats to have cut his teeth in the genre's 1950s heyday when it was both the soundtrack at dance halls and gained ground in intellectual circles.

Tributes quickly began pouring in, with trumpeter and composer Wynton Marsalis hailing Shorter as a "giant of saxophone regardless of register" and a "jazz messenger."

Born on August 25, 1933 in Newark, New Jersey, Shorter expressed early interest in music and took up clarinet as a teenager.

He picked up the saxophone -- which became his instrument of choice -- shortly thereafter.

Shorter and his brother would play bebop, calling themselves "Mr Weird" and "Doc Strange" for their antics like wearing dark sunglasses in a dimly lit club.

"And we had wrinkled clothes, because we thought you played bebop better with wrinkled clothes," Shorter told The Atlantic in 2004.

"You had to be raggedy to be for real."

He attended New York University, where he graduated with a degree in music education in 1956, and spent two years in the army, where he played with jazz pianist Horace Silver.

"I knew that people start on instruments when they're five years old, so I did think I had a lot of catching up to do," he told The Washington Post before receiving the prestigious Kennedy Center Honor, celebrating the best in American arts, in 2018.

"But when things started to move, opportunities came at a pace I hadn't seen."

- 'Real composer' -

In 1964, Shorter left Art Blakey's Jazz Messengers -- with which he found international fame, touring for four years and becoming the band's musical director -- to join trumpeter Davis.

Davis' Second Great Quintet included keyboardist Herbie Hancock, who became one of Shorter's best friends and regular collaborators.

It was with this group that Shorter began flexing his composing muscles, channeling his innovative spirit within the traditional rules of jazz.

Davis often described the Second Great Quintet's ethos as "time, no changes" -- allowing free jazz without completely scrapping strictures.

The collaboration delivered some of the 20th century's best known jazz, including the songs "E.S.P.," "Nefertiti" and "Footprints."

"Wayne is a real composer" with "a kind of curiosity about working with musical rules," Davis said in his autobiography.

"If they didn't work, then he broke them, but with musical sense; he understood that freedom in music was the ability to know the rules in order to bend them to your own satisfaction and taste."

- 'Eternity in composition' -

In 1970, Shorter co-founded Weather Report, where he played a leading role in the development of jazz fusion -- which combined the harmonies and improvisation of jazz with developing forms of rock, funk and R&B.

Over the band's 16-year career, it adopted a new way of playing that dropped the standard format of soloists playing with accompaniment to instead encourage all band members to improvise simultaneously.

Weather Report also showed an interest in music's technological innovations, experimenting with electronic elements.

Already famous in his own right, Shorter's crossover collaborations with acts including Joni Mitchell, Steely Dan and Carlos Santana brought his talent to a wider audience.

His partnership with Mitchell was particularly poignant: Shorter worked on every album she released between 1977 and 2002.

"One of the greatest experiences I ever had was listening to a conversation with Joni Mitchell and Wayne Shorter," Hancock said of their work.

"Just to hear them talking, my mouth was open. They understand each other perfectly, and they make these leaps and jumps because they don't have to explain anything."

Mitchell also lavished praise on Shorter, saying the way he worked was "the difference between genius and talent."

A lover of comics and a long-time practicing Buddhist, Shorter in 2018 dropped "Emanon," a triple-disc tucked inside a 74-page fantasy graphic novel he co-wrote that details the adventures of a "rogue philosopher" who fights evil with truth.

"I'm looking to express eternity in composition," he had said more than a decade before, in his 2007 biography.

The decorated Shorter -- he nabbed most of the available lifetime achievement awards throughout his career, along with a Guggenheim fellowship -- continued to tour well into his golden years, though chronic health issues eventually slowed his pace.

Recently he had laid low, composing an opera with bassist Esperanza Spalding, which premiered in 2021.

He was forced to cut short a SFJAZZ residency due to his ailing health, and as he struggled to pay medical bills, Hancock spearheaded a series of all-star tribute shows to fund the expenses.

"To me, the definition of faith is to fear nothing," Shorter told The New York Times in 2018.

"I think that music opens portals and doorways into unknown sectors that it takes courage to leap into."

N.Fischer--NZN