Tom Harrell has managed to fight courageously (and successfully) against schizophrenia to become one of jazz's top trumpeters of the 1980s and '90s and well into the new millennium. On-stage, he is totally focused on his playing and seems to only come alive when he is improvising. His style mixes together the power of
Clifford Brown with the lyricism of
Chet Baker.
Harrell grew up in Northern California and toured with
Stan Kenton (1969),
Woody Herman (1970-1971), and
Horace Silver (1973-1977). He moved to New York in the mid-'70s, and played during this period with
Cecil Payne,
Bill Evans (1979),
the Lee Konitz Nonet (1979-1981), and
George Russell (1982).
Harrell traveled the world with
the Phil Woods Quintet (1983-1989) and went on to generally lead his own bands, recording for Contemporary and Chesky before landing at RCA for 1996's
Labyrinth; subsequent outings include 1997's
The Art of Rhythm, 1999's
Time's Mirror, 2001's
Paradise, and 2003's
Wise Children. In 2007,
Harrell moved to High Note and released
Light On.
Harrell continued in a similar vein with his atmospheric 2009 release
Prana Dance and 2010's Roman Nights. In 2011, he released the similarly expansive The Time of the Sun.
–
Scott Yanow, Rovi