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・ Abbie Myers
・ Abbie Newell
・ Abbie Park Ferguson
・ Abbie Prosser
・ Abbie Shaba
・ Abbie Shadbolt
・ Abbie Smith
・ Abbie Taylor
・ Abbie Taylor (BMX)
・ Abbie Wolanow
・ Abbigere
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・ Abbigeri, Gadag
・ Abbey Presbyterian Church, Dublin
・ Abbey Pumping Station
Abbey Rader
・ Abbey Rangers F.C.
・ Abbey Records
・ Abbey River
・ Abbey River, Limerick
・ Abbey Road
・ Abbey Road (disambiguation)
・ Abbey Road DLR station
・ Abbey Road on the River
・ Abbey Road Sessions
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・ Abbey Road, London
・ Abbey Ryan
・ Abbey School, Rotherham


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Abbey Rader : ウィキペディア英語版
Abbey Rader

Abbey Rader (October 14, 1943 – Present) is an American jazz and improvised/creative music drummer, percussionist, and composer. Throughout his childhood and his early career, he worked in the New York City (NYC) jazz scene where the contemporary loft jazz, bebop, and free jazz movements formed his musical expressions. He later played and taught across Europe in the 1970s and 1980s, and then returned to North America to create improvised music that combines his free jazz, martial arts, and Buddhist spiritual roots. He recorded over 25 albums as a leader/composer thus far in his career, and worked with David Liebman, John Handy, Billy Bang, Dr. L. Subramaniam, and Mal Waldron in a professional career spanning over four decades.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Artist Biography - Abbey Rader )〕〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Abbey Rader- Biography )
Rader's most recent album, "The Message", was released in August 2014 and is a recording of his live January 2014 radio performance on Evenin' Jazz with the Real Tracy Fields at WLRN Miami. Prior to this, his quartet featuring John McMinn, Noah Brandmark and Kyle Motl released their second recording, "Reach for the Skies" a runner-up for Album of Year in 2013. Their first effort, ''Live at PAX'', was named one of the "Best of 2012". In 1999, Abbey Rader's "Ballistics of Yin and Yang", was awarded as one of the year's best jazz CDs - "providing a glimmer of hope that the art form will live on into the next millennium".
== Biography ==

Abbey Rader was born in New Brunswick, NJ but was raised in the Bronx, NY where he moved by the time he was six months old. His introduction to drumming began early as his father was a band leader and drummer. Rader started playing traditional jazz gigs in the early 1960s, typically piano/bass/drum or saxophone/organ/drum trios, which exposed him to a variety of musicians that subtly influenced his style.
His learning went beyond simply musicality, but increasingly, spirituality as well. Rader met drummer Clarence "Scoby" Strohman while playing opposite the Marin Rivers trio. Scoby introduced Rader to books like ''Light on the Path'' by Mabel Collins and Paramahansa Yogananda's ''The Autobiography of a Yogi'', which helped begin Rader's spiritual journey. Rader recalls an anecdote that touched his confidence as well. "My music reading skills were not very good, but Scoby had lots of faith in me. He stood behind me on the bandstand one night as I started to play acts with lots of music to read. Scoby said, “That’s not a problem for you. That’s nothing for you.” I played remarkably well that night. I said to Scoby, “Did you see those difficult charts I read?”, and he said he couldn’t read a note. So I learned something else about the spiritual power and the power of the mind."
Rader recalls that hearing John Coltrane's quartet with Elvin Jones at the Half Note Club was a pivotal moment that changed his musical expression to embracing improvisation and searching for the union between mind, spirit, and body. 〔(【引用サイトリンク】title= Abbey Rader: Get Free, A Documentary Film )〕 Additionally, the free jazz style in full motion at the time influenced Rader's musical style. He started playing in the mid-70s loft jazz movement, which led him to creating his first master as a band leader, a recording entitled "The Thing". He decided that to continue to play his freer style of music, moving to Europe would provide opportunities not available in the U.S. With nothing but a drum set and $500, he traveled to London and later published "The Thing" while in Paris under Atmosphere Records.
From France, he moved to Germany - initially playing with Bob Lenox in Lenox's original style of rock- and funk-oriented pieces. His desire to continue playing free jazz brought Rader to drumming with George Bishop in improvised duet performances. In the 1980s, he worked with alto saxophonist, John Handy; violinist, L. Subramaniam; and bassist, Sigi Busch. John encouraged Rader to play powerfully, asking him to play drum solos behind his saxophone as they toured Europe. Later, Rader spent five years in the
Gunter Hampel Big Band that included Jeanne Lee and Marion Brown. Rader's next lesson came from playing with Mal Waldron and Marc Levin, a NYC friend, on trumpet. As Rader described, Mal often helped Rader put life's tribulations in perspective and encouraged him to play freely, to transform the energy he might be feeling by channeling it into his drumming.
During this time, Rader started his "Abbey Rader's Right Time" band. He recorded several times with this band and established record label Abray Productions.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Abray Productions - Abbey Rader )〕 He also became a touring clinician for Sonor and Tosco (later Sabian, see: UFIP) cymbals, and taught at multiple universities in Germany. During his teaching, he frequently featured improvisational artists he worked with to teach how to improvise on music tracks a band may play.
Rader met his wife and raised two sons in Germany, and then moved to South Florida in 1989. In the 1990s and 2000s he recorded with David Liebman, putting out four CDs together. He then spent nearly five years with violinist Billy Bang in the Jazz Doctors. In this group, Rader replaced recently deceased Dennis Charles; other band members included Frank Lowe on saxophone and bass player Ed Schuller. While doing a sound check for the Vision Festival in memory of Dennis Charles, Rader had the fortune of meeting Billy Higgins. Higgins was getting the stage ready for a drum choir and encouraged Rader to get his drum set, after which they began an impromptu drum performance. Later, Rader recorded "One for Jazz" with Bang and Lowe in Bedford-Stuyvesant, Brooklyn, NY. He spent much of his time touring the East Coast of the U.S, including Charleston, South Carolina, Atlanta, Georgia, and the Zeitgeist Art Center in New Orleans, Louisiana.
Most recently, Rader has been performing with John McMinn, Noah Brandmark, Kyle Motl, and Kidd Jordan.〔(【引用サイトリンク】url=http://photos.allaboutjazz.com/gallery_image.php?id=104344#.U_pynWRkGWI )〕〔(【引用サイトリンク】url=http://events.miamiherald.com/miami_fl/events/show/289026105-kidd-jordan-abbey-rader-quartet )
These experiences, and his current performances, continue to influence Abbey Rader's style of music. He draws on his traditional jazz roots to create a "circular feeling...() a lot of polyrythmn between cymbals, bass drum, and snare drum", which he employs to play with other musicians to free himself from the original way of drumming and ultimately himself.〔

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