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Music For Zen Meditation And Other Joy...

4.4M streams

4,388,660

Tony Scott

915.2K streams

915,213

Music For Yoga Meditation And Other Jo...

632.4K streams

632,419

The Jazz Collection

383.3K streams

383,253

30 Tony Scott Essentials

377.2K streams

377,209

Best Jazz Players (Remastered)

33K streams

330,032

Jazz Side Story (A Timeless Jazz Recor...

267.3K streams

267,348

The Lady Is a Tramp

266.1K streams

266,147

Five

172.7K streams

172,733

Meditation

165.4K streams

165,393

Biography

Since leaving New York in 1959, Tony Scott (a top bebop-oriented clarinetist) has been an eager world traveler who enjoys exploring the folk music of other countries. Unfortunately, his post-1959 recordings have been few, far between, difficult-to-locate, and sometimes erratic, but Scott was an unheralded pioneer in both world music and new age. Tony Scott attended Juilliard during 1940-1942, played at Minton's Playhouse, and then after three years in the military he became one of the few clarinetists to play bop. His cool tone (heard at its best on a 1950 Sarah Vaughan session that also includes Miles Davis) stood out from the more hard-driving playing of Buddy DeFranco. Scott worked with a wide variety of major players (including Ben Webster, Trummy Young, Earl Bostic, Charlie Ventura, Claude Thornhill, Buddy Rich, and Billie Holiday), led his own record dates (among his sidemen were Dizzy Gillespie and a young Bill Evans) which ranged from bop and cool to free improvisations (all are currently difficult to locate), and ranked with DeFranco at the top of his field. Unfortunately the clarinet was not exactly a popular instrument in the 1950s (as opposed to during the swing era) and Tony Scott remained an obscure name outside of jazz circles. In 1959, he gave up on the U.S. and began extensive tours of the Far East. He played Eastern classical music, recorded meditation music for Verve, and, other than some brief visits to the U.S, lived in Italy since the 1970s where he sometimes experimented with electronics. Tony Scott passed away in Italy on March 3rd, 2007. ~ Scott Yanow, Rovi