Ron Carter: Bass’s Most Recorded Voice
The Life and Sound of Jazz’s Defining Bassist
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Narrado por:
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Virtual Voice
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De:
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Zube Saphra
Este título utiliza narración de voz virtual
For more than six decades, Ron Carter has defined the sound of the acoustic bass in modern jazz. From the post-bop innovation of Miles Davis’s Second Great Quintet to the elegance of his own trios and orchestral collaborations, his career traces the evolution of American music itself. Ron Carter: Bass’s Most Recorded Voice offers the first full-scale, documentary-grade portrait of the bassist’s life, rendered with historical precision and human depth.
Born in Ferndale, Michigan, in 1937, Carter began on cello before systemic racism in classical ensembles redirected him toward the double bass. His early grounding in intonation and bow control shaped a sound of uncommon clarity. Through Eastman, Juilliard, and the electric energy of New York’s jazz scene, Carter refined both technique and philosophy, merging classical discipline with improvisational imagination.
As Miles Davis’s bassist through the 1960s, Carter became the rhythmic anchor of one of the most innovative groups in jazz history. His intuitive interplay with Herbie Hancock, Wayne Shorter, and Tony Williams redefined the role of the rhythm section. In the decades that followed, he became a studio architect, bandleader, and educator whose tone embodied integrity as much as musical intelligence.
This biography follows Carter through his prolific freelance years, his lush CTI recordings, his own compositional breakthroughs, and his later leadership on Blue Note. It explores his long teaching career, his orchestral ventures, and the disciplined routines that sustained his artistry into his ninth decade. Drawing from archives, interviews, and contemporaneous accounts, it reveals a musician for whom professionalism itself was a creative act.
Readers encounter the evolution of jazz through Carter’s measured tempo and moral clarity—a living demonstration that mastery is not flash but focus. His story speaks to the art of perseverance, the dignity of craft, and the resonance that endures when sound and character remain in tune.