A brilliant player on both acoustic and electric basses,
Stanley Clarke has spent much of his career outside of jazz, although he has the ability to play jazz with the very best. He played accordion as a youth, switching to violin and cello before settling on bass. He worked with R&B and rock bands in high school, but after moving to New York he worked with
Pharoah Sanders in the early '70s. Other early gigs were with
Gil Evans,
Mel Lewis,
Horace Silver,
Stan Getz,
Dexter Gordon, and
Art Blakey; everyone was impressed by his talents. However,
Clarke really hit the big time when he started teaming up with
Chick Corea in
Return to Forever. When the group became a rock-oriented fusion quartet,
Clarke mostly emphasized electric bass and became an influential force, preceding
Jaco Pastorius. But, starting with his
School Days album (1976) and continuing through his funk group with
George Duke (
the Clarke/Duke Project) and his projects writing movie scores,
Stanley Clarke largely moved beyond the jazz world into commercial music, notable exceptions during the '80s and '90s including his 1988 Portrait album
If This Bass Could Only Talk and his 1995 collaboration with
Jean-Luc Ponty and
Al DiMeola on the acoustic
The Rite of Strings.
Clarke signed with Sony in the early 21st century, releasing
Find Out and
1, 2, to the Bass before leaving the label. In 2006 he recorded
Standards for the independent Kind of Blue imprint, an innovative -- even radical -- live-to-two-track, no-overdub set with drummer
Leon "Ndugu" Chancler and pianist
Patrice Rushen. In 2007
Clarke released the double album
Toys of Men, his debut for Heads Up Records, as well as a live DVD entitled Night School: An Evening with Stanley Clarke & Friends. In 2008 he reunited with
Return to Forever for a second time, for an acclaimed tour that produced a live album and DVD. In 2010 he released
The Stanley Clarke Band on Heads Up/Concord. The band included Japanese pianist
Hiromi, keyboardist
Ruslan Sirota, drummer
Ronald Bruner, Jr., and a slew of guest performers.
–
Scott Yanow & Thom Jurek, Rovi