Music database

Musician

Alex Riel

Alex Riel

born on 13/9/1940 in Kopenhagen, Hovedstaden, Denmark

Alex Riel

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Alex Riel (born 13 September 1940) is a Danish jazz and rock drummer.[1][2] His first group Alex Riel/Palle Mikkelborg Quintet won Montreux Grand Prix Award at the Montreux Jazz Festival in 1968 and it was published in Billboard's June 1968 edition.[3] He is married to the writer Ane Riel.

Biography

Riel has recorded with, among others, Kenny Drew, Kenny Werner, Bob Brookmeyer, Thomas Clausen, Bill Evans, Eddie "Lockjaw" Davis, Jackie McLean, and Dexter Gordon. He has also worked with a wide range of important jazz musicians, including Ray Brown, Donald Byrd, Don Cherry, Art Farmer, Stéphane Grappelli, Hank Jones, Thad Jones, and Ben Webster. He formed a renowned jazz ensemble with bass player Niels-Henning Ørsted Pedersen and Kenny Drew.[4]

He was also a founding member in 1968 of the popular Danish rock group The Savage Rose.[5]

His album The Riel Deal won a Danish Grammy Award Jazz in 1996.

In September 2010, Riel reached seventy years of an age and it was celebrated at the famed Jazzhus Montmartre. The event was broadcast live with the title Celebration of a Living Jazz Legend by the Danish national television station TV2 which was also showing rare photos depicting Riel with Duke Ellington, Ben Webster, Bill Evans and The Savage Rose.[6]

Personal life

Alex Riel married Ane Riel in 2002, an awarded author of crime fiction. They have lived in Liseleje in North Zealand since 2005.[7]

Awards

  • Danish Jazz Musician Award 1965 presented by Duke Ellington and Sam Woodyard (Photo)[8]
  • Ben Webster 90 Years Honorary Prize 1999 (shared with Niels-Henning Ørsted Pedersen and Olivier Antunes)
  • Danish Grammy Award Jazz in 1996 for Riel's album The Riel Deal
  • Life Time Achievement Award from IFPI 2007 (Photo)[9]

Discography

As leader

  • Alex Riel Trio with Kenny Drew, Niels-Henning Ørsted Pedersen (Fona, 1965)
  • Emergence with Jesper Lundgaard, Jerry Bergonzi (Red, 1994)
  • The Riel Deal with Kenny Werner, Jerry Bergonzi (Stunt, 1996)
  • Unriel with Jerry Bergonzi, Michael Brecker, Eddie Gómez, Mike Stern, Niels Lan Doky (Stunt, 1997)
  • DSB Kino with Harry Sweets Edison, Roger Kellaway (Stunt, 1998)
  • Rielatin with Jerry Bergonzi, Mike Stern, Kenny Werner (Stunt, 1999)
  • Celebration (Stunt, 2000)
  • Live at Jive Alex Riel/Luts Büchner Quartet (Stunt, 2001)
  • What Happened? Alex Riel Trio (Cowbell, 2004)
  • The High & The Mighty Alex Riel Trio (Cowbell, 2007)
  • Live at Stars Alex Riel Quartet feat. Charlie Mariano (Cowbell, 2008)
  • Riel Time Alex Riel Quartet (Cowbell, 2008)
  • Get Riel (Cowbell, 2008)

As sideman

With Eddie "Lockjaw" Davis

  • Swingin' Till the Girls Come Home (SteepleChase, 1976)

With Dexter Gordon

  • Cheese Cake (SteepleChase, 1964 [1979])
  • King Neptune (SteepleChase, 1964 [1979])
  • Love for Sale (SteepleChase, 1964 [1982])
  • It's You or No One (SteepleChase, 1964 [1983])
  • Billie's Bounce (SteepleChase, 1964 [1983])
  • Loose Walk (SteepleChase 1965 [2003])
  • Misty (SteepleChase, 1965 [2004])
  • Heartaches (SteepleChase, 1965 [2004])
  • Ladybird (SteepleChase, 1965 [2005])
  • More Than You Know (SteepleChase, 1975)
  • Swiss Nights Vol. 1 (SteepleChase, 1975 [1976])
  • Swiss Nights Vol. 2 (SteepleChase, 1975 [1978])
  • Swiss Nights Vol. 3 (SteepleChase, 1975 [1979])
  • Lullaby for a Monster (SteepleChase, 1976 [1981])

With Ken McIntyre

  • Hindsight (SteepleChase, 1974)

With Jackie McLean

  • Live at Montmartre (SteepleChase, 1972)
  • Ode to Super (SteepleChase, 1973) with Gary Bartz
  • A Ghetto Lullaby (SteepleChase, 1974)
  • The Meeting (SteepleChase, 1974) with Dexter Gordon
  • The Source (SteepleChase, 1974) with Dexter Gordon

With Archie Shepp and Lars Gullin

  • The House I Live In (SteepleChase, 1963 [1980])

With Sahib Shihab

  • Sahib's Jazz Party (Debut, 1963)

With Thorgeir Stubø

  • Flight (Hot Club, 1985)

With Ben Webster

  • My Man: Live at Montmartre 1973 (SteepleChase, 1973)

Gallery

References

  1. ^ Jeg skal sgu sidde ved trommerne Af Bine Madsen. Dagbladenes Bureau, 9 February 2010. Same interview in Flensborg Avis, 17 February 2010, Side 18
  2. ^ Alex Riel Horsens Folkeblad, 16 February 2010, 2. sektion, Side 12
  3. ^ Riels' Quintet Wins Award at the Montreux Jazz Festival in 1968. Billboard. Retrieved 23 October 2010.
  4. ^ Jazz at Foreign Ministry of Denmark
  5. ^ Riel og rytmen. Portræt: Alex Riel Af Tove Skytte Erngaard. Jyllands-Posten, 27 July 1997, Kultur og tv, Side 1
  6. ^ "Alex Riel 70 Year Celebration Danish National TV Live". Nyhederne-dyn.tv2.dk. Archived from the original on 16 July 2011. Retrieved 24 March 2010.
This page was last modified 12.06.2020 20:20:14

This article uses material from the article Alex Riel from the free encyclopedia Wikipedia and it is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.