Jerome Hunter
{{short description|American jazz musician}}
{{Infobox person
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| birth_date = {{birth date and age|1942|1|14}}
| birth_place = Spartanburg, South Carolina
| citizenship = {{ubl|American}}
| occupation = Musician
}}
Jerome Hunter (born January 14, 1942) is an American jazz double-bassist.
Personal life
Jerome learned to play guitar in his youth but switched to stand-up bass at age 12, studying formally in both classical and jazz styles. He worked early in the 1960s with Ray Bryant, Roy Haynes, and Philly Joe Jones, then moved increasingly toward free jazz, playing with Marzette Watts in 1964 and Byard Lancaster in 1966–1967. Following this he worked with Ahmed Abdullah, Dorothy Donegan, Johnny Hammond, J. R. Mitchell, Sam Rivers, Sonny Sharrock, and Grover Washington, Jr. He played with Jamaaladeen Tacuma in 1993.
Discography
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With Ahmed Abdullah
- Life's Force (About Time, 1979)
- Live at Ali's Alley (Cadence, 1980)
With Byard Lancaster
- It's Not Up to Us (Vortex, 1966 [1968])
- Live at Macalester College (Dogtown, 1972) with J. R. Mitchell
References
- Gary W. Kennedy, "Jerome Hunter". The New Grove Dictionary of Jazz. 2nd edition, ed. Barry Kernfeld.
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Category:American jazz double-bassists
Category:American male double-bassists
Category:Musicians from South Carolina
Category:21st-century American double-bassists
Category:21st-century American male musicians
Category:American male jazz musicians
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