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  1. The Wonderful World of Jazz is an album by pianist and composer John Lewis recorded for the Atlantic label in 1960. ... Gunther Schuller - French horn (tracks 4 & 6) Eric Dolphy - alto saxophone (tracks 4 & 6) Benny Golson (tracks 4 & 6) ...

    • July 29 and September 8 & 9, 1960, NYC
    • Jazz
    • 1961
  2. The Wonderful World of Jazz (Atlantic, 1960) Essence (Atlantic, 1962) With Mitch Miller. Conversation Piece (Columbia, 1951) Horns O' Plenty (Columbia, 1951) Horn Belt Boogie (Columbia, 1951) Serenade For Horns (Columbia, 1951) With Frank Sinatra. Come Back to Sorrento (Columbia, 1950) April in Paris (Columbia, 1950)

    • November 22, 1925, Queens
    • Library of Congress
    • June 21, 2015 (aged 89)
    • Gunther Schuller papers, 1943-2015
  3. Gunther Alexander Schuller (* 22. November 1925 in New York City, New York; † 21. Juni 2015 in Boston, Massachusetts [1]) war ein US-amerikanischer Hornist, Komponist, Musikwissenschaftler und Dirigent . Inhaltsverzeichnis 1 Der Instrumentalist und Pädagoge 2 Der Komponist 3 Schuller und der Jazz 4 Würdigungen 5 Publikationen (Auswahl)

  4. John Lewis, Nesuhi Ertegun. John Lewis chronology. The Wonderful World of Jazz. (1960) Jazz Abstractions. (1961) Original Sin. (1961) Jazz Abstractions (subtitled John Lewis Presents Contemporary Music: Compositions by Gunther Schuller and Jim Hall) is a third stream album combining elements of jazz and classical music recorded in ...

    • December 19 & 20, 1960, NYC
    • Jazz
  5. Gunther Schuller (ldr), Gerardo Levy, Andrew Lolya (f), Ronald Roseman (ob), Phillip West (enh), Arthur Weisberg (bsn), Donald McCourt (cbn), Charles Russo (cl, bcl), Jack Kreiselman (scl), Paul Howland (bcl), Robert Nagel (t), Paul Ingraham, Larry Wechsler (frh), John Swallow (tb), Paul Jacobs (p, cel), Matthew Raimondi, Paul Zukovsky (vn ...

  6. Early Jazz: Its Roots and Musical Development, by Gunther Schuller, is a seminal study of jazz from its origins through the early 1930s, first published in 1968. [1] It has since been translated into five languages (Italian, French, Japanese, Portuguese and Spanish). [2]