Buy your Blues and Jazz Tickets at TicketsNow.com.    
Click here to view our Site Map
Detroit, MI | Change Location
Home > Concert Tickets > Blues and Jazz Tickets > Keith Jarrett Tickets  

Keith Jarrett Tickets

Keith Jarrett tickets are currently unavailable. Be the first to get email alerts and exclusive discounts for Keith Jarrett tickets. Complete the form below and click 'Subscribe'.

First time subscribers! Get 10% off Keith Jarrett tickets when you sign up for Insider Alerts.

Sign up with TicketsNow for Email Alerts of Hot events.
Name
Email
Mobile
Zip
TicketsNow Privacy Policy

You can also bookmark this page and check back often as our inventory is updated frequently.
How Buying & Selling Concert Tickets, Theater Tickets & Sporting Events Tickets works at TicketsNow
TicketsNow Guarantee: Authentic Tickets Or Your Money Back! - TicketsNow
Click here for TicketsNow Terms and Conditions.
Insider Email Alerts
Sign up for TicketsNow emails, get 10% off your first order.
Hot Events

Keith Jarrett Biography

One of the most significant pianists to emerge since the 1960s, Keith Jarrett maintained a career that went through several phases. He gained international fame for his solo concerts, which found him spontaneously improvising all of the music without any prior planning, but he also led a couple of dynamic quartets/quintets, performed classical music, and later played explorative versions of standards with his longtime trio. Although his tendency to sing along with his piano now and then is distracting, Jarrett continued to grow as a powerful improviser after decades of important accomplishments.

Jarrett started on the piano when he was three, and by the time he was seven he had already played a recital. A child prodigy, Jarrett was a professional while still in grade school. In 1962, he studied at Berklee, and then started working in the Boston area with his trio. He moved to New York in 1965, and spent four months with Art Blakey's Jazz Messengers. As a member of the very popular Charles Lloyd Quartet (1966-1969), Jarrett traveled the world and became well-known he also began doubling occasionally on soprano (which he would utilize through the 1970s). During 1969-1971, he was with Miles Davis' fusion group, playing organ and electric keyboards Chick Corea was also in the band for the first year. Jarrett can be heard battling Corea throughout Davis' Live at the Fillmore, but is in more creative form on Live/Evil.

Upon leaving Miles Davis, Jarrett permanently swore off electric keyboards. He had cut sessions as a leader for Vortex (1967-1969) and Atlantic (1971), but starting in November 1971, he recorded extensively for ECM (in addition to some sessions in the 1970s for ABC/Impulse), an association that continued into the 2000s. In the 1970s, Jarrett led two groups: an exciting unit with Dewey Redman, Charlie Haden, Paul Motian, and occasional percussionists (often Guilherme Franco) and a European band with Jan Garbarek, Palle Danielsson, and Jon Christensen that recorded the popular My Song. In addition, starting in 1972 Jarrett began his famous series of improvised concerts that resulted in such popular recordings as Solo Concerts, Kln Concert, and the mammoth Sun Bear Concerts. By the 1980s, Jarrett was performing classical music as much as jazz, but in the 1990s he recorded extensively (including a six-CD live set) with his standards trio, which included Gary Peacock and Jack DeJohnette. Although initially influenced by Bill Evans, Jarrett has had an original and influential style of his own since the early '70s, and remains a vital force in jazz. ~ Scott Yanow, Rovi