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  1. 12 de nov. de 1999 · William Lester Bowie, trumpet and flugelhorn player, composer and bandleader: born Frederick, Maryland 11 October 1941; twice married (six children); died New York 8 November 1999. A CONTRADICTION ...

  2. African Children, an Album by Lester Bowie. Released in 1978 on Horo (catalog no. HDP 29-30; Vinyl LP). Genres: Free Jazz. Featured peformers: Lester Bowie (trumpet), Malachi Favors (bass), Phillip Wilson (drums), Amina Claudine Myers (piano, organ, vocals), Arthur Blythe (alto saxophone), Aldo Sinesio (producer).

  3. All the Magic! / The One and Only is a double album by American jazz trumpeter Lester Bowie, recorded in June 1982 and released on ECM the following year—his second for the label. All the Magic! features a septet, with saxophonist Ari Brown, rhythm section Art Matthews, Fred Williams and Phillip Wilson, and singers Fontella Bass and David Peaston.

  4. LESTER BOWIE is a eclectic fusion avant-garde jazz music artist. This page includes LESTER BOWIE's : biography, official website, pictures, ... African Children Avant-Garde Jazz 1978 4.50 | 2 ratings. The 5th Power Avant-Garde Jazz 1978 4.00 | 1 ratings. Duet Avant-Garde Jazz 1978

  5. Lester Bowie ‎– African Children (1978 - Double Album) 1:21:11; Lester Bowie - Amina / From : African Children ( 1978 ) 19:34; Listes Ajouter à une liste. 8881 par 1854132054; Discos que quiero par mplanet00; Records - Rare Grooves par AoVivo;

  6. Serious Fun. Serious Fun is the first album by Lester Bowie recorded for the Japanese DIW label and the fourth album by his "Brass Fantasy" group. [1] It was released in 1989 and features performances by Bowie, Vincent Chancey, Frank Lacy, Steve Turre, E. J. Allen, Gerald Brezel, Stanton Davis, Bob Stewart, Ken Crutchfield, Vinnie Johnson and ...

  7. From the 1970s until his death in 1999, Lester Bowie was the preeminent trumpeter of the jazz avant-garde -- one of the few trumpet players of his generation to adopt the techniques of free jazz successfully and completely. Indeed, Bowie was the most successful in translating the expressive demands of the music -- so well suited to the tonally pliant saxophone -- to the more difficult-to ...