Jeff Lorber Fusion with Michael Manson (bass), Edward Emory (drums), and Everette Harp (sax).
By the late 1970s, trailblazing keyboardist/composer/producer and multiple GRAMMY® Award winner Jeff Lorber had become a prominent figure in the movement known as jazz fusion – a marriage of traditional jazz with elements of rock, R&B, funk and other electrified sounds. - and has since evolved from ‘fusion’ into what is currently known as contemporary jazz.
His band, Jeff Lorber Fusion, first honed their craft in the Portland, Oregon, club scene and rapidly expanded their reach to a national and international audience with a powerful combination of complex harmonies, unconventional time signatures, and compelling rhythms.
Jeff Lorber Fusion with Michael Manson (bass), Edward Emory (drums), and Everette Harp (sax).
By the late 1970s, trailblazing keyboardist/composer/producer and multiple GRAMMY® Award winner Jeff Lorber had become a prominent figure in the movement known as jazz fusion – a marriage of traditional jazz with elements of rock, R&B, funk and other electrified sounds. - and has since evolved from ‘fusion’ into what is currently known as contemporary jazz.
His band, Jeff Lorber Fusion, first honed their craft in the Portland, Oregon, club scene and rapidly expanded their reach to a national and international audience with a powerful combination of complex harmonies, unconventional time signatures, and compelling rhythms.