Skip to main content
DeepCutsArchive
BrowseArtistsTimelineMapDecadesSubmit

DeepCutsArchive

Preserving the footage that shaped music history. Rare clips, studio sessions, and moments lost to time.

BrowseArtistsGenresDecadesLocationsSubmit a ClipAboutContactEditorial PolicyArticles

© 2026 DeepCutsArchive. All footage remains the property of its original creators.

Privacy PolicyTerms of UseSupport

Developed with love as a personal project by Jamie McDonnell

ui-ux-design.comai-consultancy.company
Meet the Joe Lovano Nonet — DeepCutsArchive
PreviousUse arrow keysNext
0 views
Share this clip

Meet the Joe Lovano Nonet

John ColtraneWoody HermanThe BandWeen


Know someone who'd love this clip?

Share it with friends and fellow fans.

Share this clip

Keep Exploring

1990s2010sAll ArtistsAll GenresAll Decades
Jam session
Frank Sinatra
Youth
2000s2005StudioRareLiveyoutube

Joe Lovano and his Nonet record the Blue Note CD, Streams of Expression, December, 2005 Active during a period of jazz history when it seemed radical innovation was a thing of the past, Joe Lovano nevertheless coalesced various stylistic elements from disparate eras into a personal and forward-seeking style. While not an innovator in a macro sense, Lovano has unquestionably charted his own path. His playing contains not an ounce of glibness, but possesses in abundance the sense of spontaneity that has always characterized the music's finest improvisers. Lovano doesn't adopt influences, he absorbs them, and when playing a standard, he exudes the same sense of abandon as when playing totally free (which, it should be pointed out, he does well, if infrequently). Lovano's most significant achievement is his incorporation of free and modal expressive devices into traditional chord-change improvisation. Lovano is the son of the respected Cleveland saxophonist Tony "Big T" Lovano. Joe started playing alto sax as a child, taught by his father, who also introduced him to jazz. In his youth, Joe would hear many of the prominent jazz artists who passed through town, including Dizzy Gillespie, James Moody, Sonny Stitt, and Rahsaan Roland Kirk. Lovano began playing in jam sessions around Cleveland while still in his teens. Although thoroughly steeped in bebop, he also developed an interest in the jazz experimentalism of the '60s, listening to such musicians as John Jazz Video Guy Recommends Audioengine A2+ Wireless Speakers https://amzn.to/3GVZrTJ John Coltrane - His Life and Music https://amzn.to/3vTG72Z Michael Brecker - Ode to a Tenor Titan https://amzn.to/3CDQ5JK Saxophone Colossus - The Life and Music of Sonny Rollins https://amzn.to/3CDQ5JK, Jimmy Giuffre, and Ornette Coleman. Following high school, Lovano moved to Boston and attended the Berklee School of Music. Fellow students included such future collaborators as John Scofield, Bill Frisell, and Kenny Werner. While at Berklee, Lovano discovered modal harmony and opened up to the broad areas of tonal freedom that he found so attractive in the music of John Jazz Video Guy Recommends Audioengine A2+ Wireless Speakers https://amzn.to/3GVZrTJ John Coltrane - His Life and Music https://amzn.to/3vTG72Z Michael Brecker - Ode to a Tenor Titan https://amzn.to/3CDQ5JK Saxophone Colossus - The Life and Music of Sonny Rollins https://amzn.to/3CDQ5JK, among others. After leaving Berklee, Lovano worked with organists Lonnie Smith (with whom he made his recording debut) and Jack McDuff. He toured with Woody Herman from 1976 to 1979. After leaving Herman, Lovano settled in New York City where he quickly established himself. He joined drummer Mel Lewis' orchestra in 1980; he played the band's regular Monday night gigs at the Village Vanguard until 1992. He also recorded several times with the band. Lovano would also work with Elvin Jones, Carla Bley, Lee Konitz, Charlie Haden, and Bob Brookmeyer, among others. He joined drummer Paul Motian's band in 1981 (which also included his Berklee classmate Frisell), and played with guitarist John Scofield's quartet. Lovano began leading dates for Blue Note in the '90s, and continued doing so throughout that decade and into the next, recording in a variety of contexts ranging from trios to larger woodwind and brass ensembles. Lovano's wife, vocalist Judi Silvano, has appeared on a number of the saxophonist's Blue Note releases, including 1992's Universal Language and 1994's Rush Hour. Lovano has received a number of Grammy nominations for his work on Blue Note. His 1996 album, Quartets: Live at the Village Vanguard, was named Jazz Album of the Year by readers of Down Beat magazine. Since then, Lovano has split his time in the studio between releasing impressive original recordings and albums, reinterpreting the work of artists who have influenced him -- including vocalist Frank Sinatra on 1996's Celebrating Sinatra (on which Judi Silvano also appeared), various bop-era stalwarts like pianist Tadd Dameron on 2000's 52nd Street Themes, and opera tenor Enrico Caruso on 2001's Viva Caruso. In 2004, the always unpredictable reedman released the ballads album I'm All for You, featuring pianist Hank Jones. Joyous Encounter followed in spring 2005, with Streams of Expression appearing on Blue Note a year later. Lovano once again paired up with Jones for the live duets album Kids: Duets Live at Dizzy's Club Coca-Cola in 2007.

About John Coltrane

John William Coltrane (September 23, 1926 – July 17, 1967) was an American jazz saxophonist, bandleader, and composer. He is among the most influential and acclaimed figures in the history of jazz and 20th-century music. Born and raised in North Carolina, Coltrane moved to Philadelphia after high school, where he immersed himself in the local jazz scene, studied music, and served in the Navy toward the end of World War II before making his professional debut in 1945. Working in the bebop and har...

More about John Coltrane→

Added 15 Jun 2026

Browse by Tag
More from 2000s
All studio

More from the 2000s

View all →
Thumbnail for 1 Hour Summer Beach Party Music Steel Drums - Steel Rhythm Steel Drum Band by Steel drums57:05

1 Hour Summer Beach Party Music Steel Drums - Steel Rhythm Steel Drum Band

Steel drums

2000sLive
Thumbnail for Jump in the Line -Steel Drums - Steel Rhythm Steel Drum Band by Steel drums0:16

Jump in the Line -Steel Drums - Steel Rhythm Steel Drum Band

Steel drums

2000sLive
Thumbnail for Under the Boardwalk - Relaxing Steel Drums- Steel Rhythm Steel Drum Band by Steel drums3:01

Under the Boardwalk - Relaxing Steel Drums- Steel Rhythm Steel Drum Band

Steel drums

2000sLive
Thumbnail for Jump In The Line - Shake Senora - Steel Rhythm Band - Steel Drums - Calypso Soca - Harry Belafonte by Steel drums2:26

Jump In The Line - Shake Senora - Steel Rhythm Band - Steel Drums - Calypso Soca - Harry Belafonte

Steel drums

2000sLive

Related Artists

Billie HolidayDuke EllingtonLouis ArmstrongMiles DavisNina SimoneThelonious Monk

More from John Coltrane

View all →
Thumbnail for Santana - Full Concert [HD] | Live at North Sea Jazz Festival 2004 by R.E.M., Herbie Hancock, John Coltrane, Sine, Ray Charles, Carlos Santana, The Band, Cream, Frida, Concert, Y&T1:16:57

Santana - Full Concert [HD] | Live at North Sea Jazz Festival 2004

R.E.M., Herbie Hancock, John Coltrane, Sine, Ray Charles, Carlos Santana, The Band, Cream, Frida, Concert, Y&T

2000sRareLive
Thumbnail for MORE JAZZ DRUMMING VINYLS YOU'VE NEVER HEARD, PART II by R.E.M., John Coltrane, Dave Holland, Burns, Steve Jordan, Kenny Clarke, Thelonious Monk, Miles Davis, Jazz drumming26:02

MORE JAZZ DRUMMING VINYLS YOU'VE NEVER HEARD, PART II

R.E.M., John Coltrane, Dave Holland, Burns, Steve Jordan, Kenny Clarke, Thelonious Monk, Miles Davis, Jazz drumming

RareLive
Thumbnail for Miles Davis Band feat. Steve Grossman- So What (unreleased studio outtake), March 20 1970 | REMASTER by The Sound, R.E.M., Steve Mast, Herbie Hancock, The 1975, John Coltrane, Dave Holland, The Band, Dave Liebman, Concert, Sugar Ray, Miles Davis5:33

Miles Davis Band feat. Steve Grossman- So What (unreleased studio outtake), March 20 1970 | REMASTER

The Sound, R.E.M., Steve Mast, Herbie Hancock, The 1975, John Coltrane, Dave Holland, The Band, Dave Liebman, Concert, Sugar Ray, Miles Davis

1970sSoloStudio
Thumbnail for John Worley Pays Tribute to Miles Davis' "Kind of Blue" LP #1 by John Coltrane, The Band, John Davis, Miles Davis13:46

John Worley Pays Tribute to Miles Davis' "Kind of Blue" LP #1

John Coltrane, The Band, John Davis, Miles Davis

1950sRareLive