| Jazz / Hard Bop, Latin Jazz, Contemporary Jazz, Cool Jazz 
 Recorded live January 23, 1980 at Cannes, France
 
 Bass - Brian Bromberg
 Drums - Victor Jones
 Flute - Paul Horn
 Guitar - Chuck Loeb
 Harmonica - Sugar Blue
 Keyboards - Andy Laverne , Mike Garson
 Photography - Hans Harzheim
 Producer - Ronn Moss*
 Saxophone [Tenor] - Joe Farrell , Stan Getz
 Trumpet - Patrick Arturo*
 
 Paul Horn's Riviera Concert continues the tradition of the MIDEM JAZZ GALA, a showcase capturing special performances by great jazz artists. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
 
 
 
 Paul Horn
 
 Active Decades: '60s, '70s, '80s and '90s
 Born: Mar 17, 1930 in NY
 Genre: Nuage
 Styles: World Fusion, Hard Bop, Folk Jazz
 
 When one evaluates Paul Horn's career, it is as if he were two people, pre- and post-1967. In his early days, Horn was an excellent cool-toned altoist and flutist, while later he became a new age flutist whose mood music is often best used as background music for meditation. Horn started on piano when he was four and switched to alto at the age of 12. After a stint with the Sauter-Finegan Orchestra on tenor, Horn was Buddy Collette's replacement with the popular Chico Hamilton Quintet (1956-1958), playing alto, flute, and clarinet. He became a studio musician in Los Angeles, but also found time during 1957-1966 to record cool jazz albums for Dot (later reissued on Impulse), World Pacific, Hi Fi Jazz, Columbia, and RCA, and he participated in a memorable live session with Cal Tjader in 1959. In addition, in 1964, Horn recorded one of the first Jazz Masses, utilizing an orchestra arranged by Lalo Schifrin. In 1967, Paul Horn studied transcendental meditation in India and became a teacher. The following year, he recorded unaccompanied flute solos at the Taj Mahal (where he enjoyed interacting with the echoes), and would go on to record in the Great Pyramid, tour China (1979) and the Soviet Union, record using the sounds of killer whales as "accompaniment," and found his own label Golden Flute. Most of Paul Horn's work since the mid-'70s is focused on new age rather than jazz.
 ---Scott Yanow, Rovi
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