Kosuke Mine

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Kōsuke Mine ( Japanese 峰 厚 介 , Mine Kōsuke , actually Kenji Wakabayashi , born February 6, 1944 in Tokyo Prefecture ) is a Japanese jazz and fusion musician ( tenor, alto and soprano saxophone , also bass clarinet ).

Livers and work

Kōsuke Mine first learned the clarinet as a child before switching to the saxophone as a teenager. In 1970 he recorded his debut album First / Morning Tide ( Philips ) in the postbop idiom . Now he has worked on the Japanese jazz scene with Masabumi Kikuchi , Hideto Kanai ( Q , 1971) and the guest musicians Gil Evans , Joe Henderson and Mal Waldron . From 1973 to 1975 he lived in New York City to study; after his return to Japan he was a member of the fusion band Native Son (with Takehiro Honda (keyboards), Motonobu Ohde (electric guitar), Tamio Kawabata (electric bass) and Hiroshi Murakami (drums)), with whom he recorded several albums and 1983 performed at the Montreux Jazz Festival ( Carnival , Polydor ). He also played with Nobuyoshi Ino , Sadao Watanabe , Terumasa Hino , Masahiko Togashi , Hiroshi Murakami, Sumiko Yoseyama , Masahiko Satō , Shun Sakai , Takeshi Shibuya , and also with Nancy Wilson and George Russell . In the field of jazz he was involved in 76 recording sessions between 1970 and 2011.

Discographic notes

Lexical entry

  • Kazunori Sugiyama, Kosuke Mine . The New Grove Dictionary of Jazz. 2nd edition, ed. Barry Kernfeld.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Tom Lord The Jazz Discography (online, accessed June 18, 2017)