Larry Coryell (born Lorenz Albert Van DeLinder III; April 2, 1943 â February 19, 2017) was an American jazz guitarist, widely considered the "godfather of fusion". Alongside Gábor Szabó, he was a pioneer in melding jazz, country and rock music. Coryell was also a music teacher and a writer, penning a monthly column for Guitar Player magazine from 1977 to 1989. He collaborated with a number of other high-profile musicians, including John McLaughlin, Chick Corea, Miroslav Vitouà ¡, Billy Cobham, Lenny White, Emily Remler, Al Di Meola, Paco de LucÃÂa, Steve Morse and others.
Larry Coryell was born in Galveston, Texas, United States. He never knew his biological father, a musician. He was raised by his stepfather Gene, a chemical engineer, and his mother Cora, who encouraged him to learn piano when he was four years old.
In Coryell's teens, he switched to guitar. After his family moved to Richland, Washington, he took lessons from a teacher who lent him albums by Les Paul, Johnny Smith, Barney Kessel, and Tal Farlow. When asked what jazz guitar albums influenced him, Coryell cited On View at the Five Spot Cafe by Kenny Burrell, Red Norvo with Strings, and The Incredible Jazz Guitar of Wes Montgomery. He liked blues and pop music and tried to play jazz when he was eighteen. He said that hearing Wes Montgomery changed his life.
Coryell graduated from Richland High School, where he played in local bands the Jailers, the Rumblers, the Royals, and the Flames. He also played with the Checkers from Yakima. Coryell then moved to Seattle to attend the University of Washington.
In September 1965, Coryell moved to New York City, where he attended Mannes School of Music. After moving to New York, he listened to classical composers such as Bartók, Debussy, Ravel, Stravinsky, and Shostakovich.
Coryell replaced guitarist Gábor Szabó in Chico Hamilton's quintet. His challenge, at the time, was to combine the bluesy, psychedelic rock 'n' roll of Cream (especially Eric Clapton's guitar style) and The Jimi Hendrix Experience with his jazz training. Of the latter, Coryell first saw them live in 1967 at the Manhattan nightclub The Scene and was "very impressed" by them. Coryell's continued attendance to The Scene exposed him to further music of a similar ilk, catching the performances of Frank Zappa, Buddy Guy, The Velvet Underground, Stevie Winwood, The Doors and others.
In 1969, former Miles Davis Quintet drummer Tony Williams invited Coryell to join his new band, The Tony Williams Lifetime. While flattered by the invitation, he politely declined and suggested, in his place, his British friend and NY newcomer John McLaughlin, then known as "Johnny Mac." It was a career-making move for McLaughlin. Because of his tenure with the Lifetime, he was invited to join Davis's electric band, recording In a Silent Way (1969), the Bitches Brew (1970) double-album and Jack Johnson (1971).
In the 1970s, Coryell led the group Foreplay with Mike Mandel, a friend since childhood, although the albums of this period, Barefoot Boy, Offering, and The Real Great Escape, were credited only to Larry Coryell.
In the wake of the success of John McLaughlin's Mahavishnu Orchestra he formed The Eleventh House in 1973, with drummer Alphonse Mouzon.
Their debut album, Introducing Eleventh House with Larry Coryell (1974), peaked at #163 in Billboard 200 and stayed 11 weeks in the charts. It was deemed unfocused and overindulgent when compared with the quintet's inspiration source, the Mahavishnu Orchestra. Coryell himself admitted to such, stating that the record was a "search party", a product of a group still in search of its identity.
Larry Coryell recorded with Al Di Meola on Return to Forever drummer Lenny White's solo debut, Venusian Summer (1975). Coryell and Di Meola traded solos on "Prince of the Sea", the album's last track. The pairing caused a stir on the fusion community, with fans wondering who played what solo. Coryell reveals this was the only time he and Di Meola played together with electric guitars.
Although enthusiastic about his contemporaries - namely Bill Connors, Allan Holdsworth, Di Meola and McLaughlin - in retrospect Coryell offered the following of mid-1970s fusion:
When fusion started losing steam Coryell turned to the acoustic guitar, recording duet albums with Steve Khan and Philip Catherine. The latter was responsible for Coryell's career turn, showing him in 1976 the Django Reinhardt song "Nuages". He also strengthened, in parallel, his role as a music educator. He gave private lessons and started writing a monthly column for Guitar Player magazine.
In 1978, Larry Coryell started a working relationship with Miles Davis. Davis had hip surgery and went to convalesce on Elena Steinberg's house on Connecticut, a friend of Julie, Coryell's wife. They started working on several pieces, including an unnamed "adagio" and a James Brown-like vamp on a 12/8 meter. Trumpet and synthesizer.
Larry Coryell recalls that his encounters with Miles Davis in the late 1970s unfolded against the backdrop of his own worsening alcoholism, and that Miles immediately perceived this vulnerability. While Davis himself kept beer chilled on the porch during his recovery in Connecticut, he casually handed Coryell a nearly empty bottle to finish and dryly remarked, âÂÂOnce an alcoholic, always an alcoholic,â a comment that Coryell recognized as both perceptive and unsettling. These moments of shared drinking were not convivial bonding so much as stark reflections of mutual excess and self-awareness, occurring alongside cocaine use, erratic behavior, and physical decline. Coryell presents Miles as sharp, ironic, and unflinchingly honest about addiction, using humor and provocation rather than sympathy, and the episodes left Coryell with the sense that Miles saw through him completelyâÂÂunderstanding his struggles even as both men remained trapped in destructive patterns at the time.
A year later Coryell formed The Guitar Trio with John McLaughlin and Paco de Lucia. The group toured Europe briefly, releasing a video recorded at Royal Albert Hall in London entitled Meeting of the Spirits.
Larry Coryell and John McLaughlin took part on the making of Paco de LucÃÂa's Castro MarÃÂn (1981). It was named after the hometown of Paco's Portuguese mother, Luzia. Recorded at Tokyo in Dezember 1980, Castro MarÃÂn remains one of the most obscure titles in his catalogue. Coryell and Paco played as duo on the fifth track, "Convite (Rumba)", and as a trio on the next track "Palenque".
Coryell's alcoholism and drug abuse eventually cost him his spot on The Guitar Trio, in the early 1980s. Of his struggles in that period, he said:
When Coryell overcame his self-exile and his bout with alcoholism, he took on his most challenging project yet: solo versions of three Igor Stravinsky ballets: L'oiseau de feu, Petrouchka (1982) and Le sacre du printemps (1983).
Coryell prepared for three months for recording Le sacre du printemps. He became so "obsessed" by it that he got hand sores and blisters hands from over-rehearsing his parts. Three weeks before the recording sessions Coryell got cold feet, calling producer Teo Macero to say he was quitting the project. Macero convinced him otherwise, and he finally recorded the whole piece on March 21, 1983, on the vernal equinox. In the end he was proud of it, a "milestone" in his life. "It's like, if you can tackle Stravinsky, you can tackle anything," he said on an interview to DownBeat.
One year later, Coryell collaborated with award-winning classical guitarist Kazuhito Yamashita on a guitar duo rendition of Antonio Vivaldi's The Four Seasons, a Japan-only release. "All I remember about this record is how amazingly this young Japanese guitarist played", Coryell wrote on his autobiography. He also said he had "fun" playing the "music of Vivaldi, of all people." The concert was also released on laser disc.
In 1985, Coryell recorded Together with fellow guitarist Emily Remler, who died in 1990.
Since 2008, Coryell toured in a duo with fusion guitarist Roman Miroshnichenko.
Starting in 2010, Coryell toured with a trio that included pianist John Colianni.
CoryellâÂÂs speaks about his first encounter with Indian raga music, when he first heard a Ravi Shankar record in 1962. What struck him immediately was the way the strings were bent, something that resonated with what he had already absorbed from musicians like Chuck Berry. Beyond that, he was drawn to the sustained drone and the depth of expression in the music, which made him feel an immediate sense of affinity with it. Coryell attributes his sense of connection with Indian music to shared folk origins. He heard strong traces of the blues in raga: the plaintive quality, the twang, and even a kind of vocalized gasp or cry that gives the music its emotional weight.
Coryell was first married to writer-actress Julie Nathanson (1947âÂÂ2009), daughter of actress Carol Bruce. She appeared on the covers of several of his albums (including Lady Coryell, Larry Coryell at the Village Gate and The Lion and the Ram) and later wrote the book Jazz-Rock Fusion, which was based on interviews with many of Coryell's peers, including Chick Corea and John McLaughlin. She also sang intermittently with Coryell, including one track on the 1984 album Comin' Home. The couple had two sons (Murali Coryell (b. 1969) and Julian Coryell (b. 1973), both professional guitarists, before divorcing in 1985. Thereafter, he had a brief romance with fellow jazz guitarist and artistic collaborator Emily Remler.
In 1988, Coryell remarried, to Connecticut native Mary Schuler; they divorced in 2005. Two years later, he married his last wife, Tracey Lynn Piergross, in Orlando, Florida, where he resided until his death in 2017.
After overcoming his alcohol and heroin addictions in 1981, Coryell began practicing Nichiren Buddhism. In November 2016, Coryell condemned Donald Trump following his election to the presidency of the United States. "This is an unacceptable situation", he said to Bill Milkowski of DownBeat.
Shortly after these comments were published, Coryell wrote to Downbeat to apologize and retract:
Coryell died of heart failure on February 19, 2017, in a New York City hotel room at the age of 73. He had performed at the Iridium Jazz Club in Manhattan on the preceding two days.
Coryell's last opera, based on Leo Tolstoy's novel Anna Karenina, was presented at the 2017 World of Guitar opening, featuring the Moscow Symphony along with Roman Miroshnichenko, Serbian classical guitarist Nenad Stephanovich, and Slovenian opera soloists. The world premiere was dedicated to Coryell, the "godfather of fusion". The opera was completed by Miroshnichenko and Stephanovich after the death of Coryell.
With Gary Burton
With Paco de Lucia
With Teo Macero
With Leslie Mándoki
With Herbie Mann
With Steve Marcus
With Charles Mingus
With Don Sebesky
With L. Subramaniam
With Michal Urbaniak
With Kazumi Watanabe
With others