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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Don_ByronDon Byron - Wikipedia

    Nonesuch, Blue Note, Cantaloupe. Donald Byron (born November 8, 1958) is an American composer and multi-instrumentalist. He primarily plays clarinet but has also played bass clarinet and saxophone in a variety of genres that includes free jazz and klezmer .

  2. Don Byron (* 8. November 1958 in New York City) ist ein US-amerikanischer Jazzmusiker, Klarinettist, Saxophonist und Komponist aus der Bronx. Er bewegt sich seit vielen Jahren konsequent in immer wechselndem Umfeld und setzt sich mit den unterschiedlichsten Musikgenres auseinander.

  3. Bug Music is an album by clarinetist Don Byron featuring music from the 1930s, specifically Duke Ellington, Billy Strayhorn, John Kirby, and Raymond Scott. It was released on the Nonesuch label in 1996. [1] Reception.

  4. 15. Juni 2018 · Jun 15, 2018. Rhythm & Form: Cubism's Love Affair with Music. By Sotheby's. Ahead of the Impressionist & Modern Art Day Sale on 20th June, in which two Cubist works by Jean Metzinger and Jacques Lipchitz will be offered, we look at the idiosyncratic approaches to the theme of music in the work of both artists.

    • Cubist Music Don Byron1
    • Cubist Music Don Byron2
    • Cubist Music Don Byron3
    • Cubist Music Don Byron4
  5. 12. Jan. 2006 · Edsel Gomez: Cubist Music. By Mark F. Turner. January 12, 2006. Sign in to view read count. A prodigious musician who led his first salsa band at the age of nine, Edsel Gomez is continuing to impress as a dynamic pianist in various bands and through associations with artists like clarinetist Don Byron and saxophonist David Sanchez.

  6. If you’ve been following the idiosyncratic career of jazz maverick and clarinetist Don Byron, then Edsel Gomez is a name you respect. Appearing as a pianist in Mr, Byron’s “Six Musicians...

  7. How would one create music based on the principles of Cubism? (e.g., 20th century painters: Pablo Picasso, Georges Braque, Juan Gris, Fernand Léger) The basic definition of Cubism calls for the use of multiple geometric planes juxtaposed, or multiple perspectives of the same subject woven together.