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・ Dennis Isherwood
・ Dennis Isherwood (footballer, born 1924)
・ Dennis Isherwood (footballer, born 1947)
・ Dennis Gersten
・ Dennis Giannini
・ Dennis Gibson
・ Dennis Gibson (academic)
・ Dennis Gibson (American football)
・ Dennis Gilbert
・ Dennis Gilbert (ice hockey)
・ Dennis Gildea
・ Dennis Gile
・ Dennis Gillespie
・ Dennis Gillette
・ Dennis Gillings Professor of Health Management
Dennis González
・ Dennis Good
・ Dennis Goodwin
・ Dennis Goulden
・ Dennis Grabosch
・ Dennis Grady
・ Dennis Grainger
・ Dennis Grassow
・ Dennis Gratton
・ Dennis Gray
・ Dennis Green
・ Dennis Green (canoeist)
・ Dennis Greene (footballer)
・ Dennis Greenland
・ Dennis Grey


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Dennis González : ウィキペディア英語版
Dennis González

Dennis González (often credited as Dennis Gonzalez; b. 1954, Abilene, Texas) is a jazz musician, poet, visual artist and music educator based in Dallas, Texas.
==Biography==
González' primary musical instrument is the trumpet (including B♭, C, and pocket trumpets), though he has also played drums, flute, synthesizer, and baritone saxophone. ''Allmusic'' describes González as "() talented trumpeter who has recorded a consistently rewarding string of lesser-known dates," whose "playing falls between advanced hard bop and free jazz."〔 , González has released at least 28 albums under his own name.
''The Penguin Guide to Jazz'' notes that González' recordings during the 1980s for Silkheart Records represented "part of a determined effort to wrest creative initiative back from New York and the West Coast." ''The Penguin Guide'' further notes that one of González' greatest achievements is having coaxed saxophonist Charles Brackeen out of retirement during the late 1980s, and that by the early 1990s, González "more than ever before... seems the heir of Don Cherry."〔 González has also been instrumental in double bassist Henry Grimes' return to performing and recording. Grimes' November 2003 appearance on González' ''Nile River Suite'' was the bassist's first official recording in more than thirty-five years.
During the late 1970s, González started the Dallas Association for Avant-Garde and Neo Impressionistic Music, or daagnim, at the suggestion of Anthony Braxton and Art Lande.〔 The daagnim organization, which functioned both as a group of musicians and as a record label, was based on and named after the AACM.〔
In 1978, González began working for Dallas radio station KERA-FM, where he hosted a music program, ''Miles Out''. He worked with KERA for 21 years, but left after the station had largely shifted from music programming to a news and talk format.〔
For several years during the 1990s, González retired from jazz performance and recording.〔〔 In 2001, he formed a trio, Yells at Eels, with his sons Aaron (double bass) and Stefan (drums, vibraphone).〔 In 2010, the trio recorded with Ariel Pink, appearing on the song "Hot Body Rub" on the album ''Before Today'', and on a vinyl EP, ''Ariel Pink With Added Pizzazz''.〔

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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