Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Hiroshi Suzuki (鈴木 弘, Suzuki Hiroshi, November 12, 1933 – January 16, 2020) was a Japanese American jazz trombonist. [1] Career
Category: Japanese jazz trombonists. 1 language. ... Hiroshi Suzuki (trombonist) This page was last edited on 24 April 2017, at 02:07 (UTC). Text ...
Hiroshi Suzuki (cinematographer), on films such as Love Letter; Hiroshi Suzuki, CEO of the Japanese corporation Hoya Corporation; Hiroshi Suzuki, CEO of the Japanese corporation skip Ltd. Hiroshi Suzuki, President & CEO of the Toshiba Samsung Storage Technology Corporation; Hiroshi Suzuki, Japanese diplomat who is the current ambassador to the ...
TBM's records captured a very important, vibrant era in the development of Japanese jazz. Stars like Isao Suzuki, Tsuyoshi Yamamoto, George Kawaguchi, Terumasa Hino and Mari Nakamoto recorded their very first albums with the label. Artists also include Shuko Mizuno's "Jazz Orchestra '73", Toshiyuko Miyama and Masaru Imada.
Kuramoto admired Earth, Wind, and Fire for the way it combined jazz and R&B, and Santana for his identification with Latinos. He wanted to create a band that would represent Asian Americans. He named it after the Japanese city Hiroshima, which was mostly destroyed by an atomic weapon at the end of World War II. [2]
In 2006, Shimizu made his playful one-man-band concept of the Saxophonettes into a real-life quintet, featuring Ryoko Egawa, Hirokazu Hayashida, Ryota Higashi and Hiroshi Suzuki in an ensemble of three tenor and two baritone saxophones. Their album Pentatonica (2007) transcends genre limitations in a recording based on the five-note pentatonic ...
Casiopea (カシオペア, Kashiopea, derived from the name of the constellation Cassiopeia), now known in its fourth iteration as Casiopea-P4, is a Japanese jazz fusion band formed in 1976 by guitarist Issei Noro, bassist Tetsuo Sakurai, drummer Tohru "Rika" Suzuki, and keyboardist Hidehiko Koike.
For Trane is a compilation album by American jazz vocalist Johnny Hartman that was released in 1995 by Blue Note Records. It contains material from two albums that Hartman recorded in Tokyo in 1972, Hartman Meets Hino and Hartman Sings Trane's Favorites. The original LPs were only available in Japan.