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Naosuke Miyamoto Sextet

Naosuke Miyamoto Sextet

Naosuke Miyamoto Sextet has been played on NTS in shows including Japanese Jazz Week, featured first on 5 May 2021. Songs played include One For Trane.

Naosuke Miyamoto Sextet: Naosuke Miyamoto (bass) Kunji Shigi (flugelhorn,trumpet) Takashi Furuya (alto sax) Takeshi Goto (soprano sax,tenor sax) Masayoshi Yoneda (piano) Shoji Nakayama (drums) Born in 1936, Naosuke Miyamoto was already a veteran bassist when he made this debut album as a leader. In 1960 he had joined George Kawaguchi's "Big Four Plus One" band and played with Sadao Watanabe et al. The lack of his recording was only due to his decision to leave Tokyo and go back to his home town in Kansai (the Mid-Western part of Japan).

For this first album he had waited more than 15 years to make, he assembled established musicians about his age and younger musicians with fresh sensibilities. The fiery playing style of the band reflects their influences from the post-bop movements by progressive artists such as John Coltrane and Wayne Shorter.

Interestingly, they chose two relatively unknown but attractive compositions ("Step Right up to the Bottom" and "A New Shade of Blue" by Harold Land, who was a personal friend of the tenor sax player Takeshi Goto. Original compositions "One for Trane" is by Goto, and "Where Do They Go?" by pianist Masayoshi Yoneda. Miyamoto himself contributed with the original "Blues."

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Naosuke Miyamoto Sextet

Naosuke Miyamoto Sextet has been played on NTS in shows including Japanese Jazz Week, featured first on 5 May 2021. Songs played include One For Trane.

Naosuke Miyamoto Sextet: Naosuke Miyamoto (bass) Kunji Shigi (flugelhorn,trumpet) Takashi Furuya (alto sax) Takeshi Goto (soprano sax,tenor sax) Masayoshi Yoneda (piano) Shoji Nakayama (drums) Born in 1936, Naosuke Miyamoto was already a veteran bassist when he made this debut album as a leader. In 1960 he had joined George Kawaguchi's "Big Four Plus One" band and played with Sadao Watanabe et al. The lack of his recording was only due to his decision to leave Tokyo and go back to his home town in Kansai (the Mid-Western part of Japan).

For this first album he had waited more than 15 years to make, he assembled established musicians about his age and younger musicians with fresh sensibilities. The fiery playing style of the band reflects their influences from the post-bop movements by progressive artists such as John Coltrane and Wayne Shorter.

Interestingly, they chose two relatively unknown but attractive compositions ("Step Right up to the Bottom" and "A New Shade of Blue" by Harold Land, who was a personal friend of the tenor sax player Takeshi Goto. Original compositions "One for Trane" is by Goto, and "Where Do They Go?" by pianist Masayoshi Yoneda. Miyamoto himself contributed with the original "Blues."

Original source: Last.fm

Tracks featured on

Most played tracks

One For Trane
Naosuke Miyamoto Sextet
Three Blind Mice1973