Junko Onishi (musician)
{{Infobox musical artist
| name = Junko Onishi
| image =
| caption =
| image_size =
| background = non_vocal_instrumentalist
| birth_name = Ōnishi Junko
| alias =
| birth_date = {{Birth date and age|1967|4|16}}
| birth_place =Kyoto, Japan
| death_date =
| origin =
| instrument = Piano
| genre = Jazz
| occupation = Musician, composer, producer
| years_active = 1989–present
| label = {{flatlist|
- Somethin' Else (EMI Music Japan, Blue Note)
- Verve (Universal)
- Taboo (Sony Music)
}}
| associated_acts =
| website = {{Official website|http://junkoonishi.runinc.jp}}
| current_members =
| past_members =
}}
{{nihongo|Junko Onishi|大西 順子|Ōnishi Junko|extra=born April 16, 1967 in Kyoto}} is a Japanese jazz pianist; she plays in the post-bop genre.
Early career
After studying at Berklee College of Music, Onishi moved to New York City, where she played with Joe Henderson, Betty Carter, Kenny Garrett, and Mingus Dynasty. She has also worked with Jackie McLean, Holly Cole, and Billy Higgins, among others, and recorded eight CDs for Blue Note (Somethin' Else in Japan) as a leader.
In May 1994, Junko Onishi played for a week at the Village Vanguard, with Wynton Marsalis's sidemen, bassist Reginald Veal, and drummer Herlin Riley.{{Cite book|title=Madame Jazz|last=Gourse|first=Leslie|publisher=Oxford University Press|year=1995|pages=246}}
Although she lists Duke Ellington, Thelonious Monk, and Ornette Coleman as her primary influences, her playing is also reminiscent of McCoy Tyner and contemporaries such as Kenny Kirkland and Mulgrew Miller.
Onishi appeared in the documentary Blue Note: A Story of Modern Jazz (1997), playing the song "Trinity" ("Quick") from her album Play, Piano, Play.
Hiatus and later career
Onishi stopped performing in the late 1990s, having chosen to study and practice. When Jaki Byard, her mentor at that time, died in 1999, she stopped playing completely for two years: "I felt like I lost everything; I felt like I didn't have any more mentors".Murph, John (November 2010) "Junko Onishi: Time to Reflect" [http://jazztimes.com/articles/26674-junko-onishi-time-to-reflect JazzTimes.] She had to redevelop her technique when she decided to return, and started going to a gym to help her cope with the physical demands of playing.
Blue Note released her trio album, Musical Moments in 2009. Baroque (Verve), with Onishi leading a much larger group, followed a year later.
Discography
=Albums as leader=
class="wikitable sortable"
!Year recorded !Title !Label !Notes |
1992
|Wow |Somethin' Else |Trio, with Tomoyuki Shima (b), Dairiki Hara (d) |
1993
|Somethin' Else |Trio, with Rodney Whitaker (b), Billy Higgins (d) |
1994
|Somethin' Else |Trio, with Reginald Veal (b), Herlin Riley (d). |
1994
|Live at the Village Vanguard, Vol II |Somethin' Else |Trio, with Reginald Veal (b), Herlin Riley (d). |
1995
|Somethin' Else |Quintet, with Eiichi Hayashi (as), Marcus Belgrave (tp, voc), Rodney Whitaker (b), Tony Rabeson (d) |
1996
|Somethin' Else |Trio, with Shigeo Aramaki (b), Dairiki Hara (d). In concert |
1997
|Somethin' Else |Compilation |
1998
|Somethin' Else |Onishi also plays keyboards. With Reginald Veal (b), Karriem Riggins, Motohiko Hino, Tamaya Honda (d; separately) |
2008-09
|Somethin' Else |Trio, with Yousuke Inoue (b), Gean Jackson (d). Bonus track from 2008 is trio, with Reginald Veal (b), Herlin Riley (d) |
2010
| |
2016
|Taboo (Village Records) |with Terreon Gully, Yunior Terry, Tokuhiro Doi, Kazuhiro Kondo, Ryoji Ihara, Masakuni Takeno, Kei Suzuki, Eijiro Nakagawa, Nobuhide Handa, Ryota Sasaguri, Koichi Nonoshita, Eric Miyashiro, Koji Nishimura, Masahiko Sugasaka, Atsushi Osawa, Yosuke Miyajima, Naruyoshi Kikuchi, OMSB, JUMA, Saya Yoshida, Ayumu Yahaba, |
2017
|Taboo (Village Records) |with Takayoshi Baba, José James, Miho Hazama, Takuya Mori, Yoshie Sato, Shinnosuke Takahashi, Yousuke Inoue |
2017
|SOMETHIN'COOL | |
=Other recordings=
class="wikitable sortable"
!Year recorded !Leader !Title !Label !Notes |
1994
|{{sortname|Shigeharu|Mukai}} |J Quintet Featuring Junko Onishi |Somethin' Else | |
1996
|{{sortname|Jackie|McLean}} |Somethin' Else (Blue Note) | |
1996
|{{sortname|Joe|Lovano}} |Somethin' Else | |
1999
|{{sortname|Phil|Woods}} |Somethin' Else | |
References
{{reflist}}
External links
- [https://web.archive.org/web/20140327174513/http://www.vervemusicgroup.com/junkoonishi Official label website - verve music group]
- {{Official website|http://junkoonishi.runinc.jp/}}
- [http://www.jazzdisco.org/junko-onishi/catalog/ JAZZDISCO.org Junko Onishi Catalog]
- {{MusicBrainz artist|id=57f23a73-0188-4d8e-81e3-66da6019a79e|name=Junko Onishi Trio}}
- {{MusicBrainz artist|id=94fa768d-84d2-4307-9fcc-fee237d7f37b|name=Junko Onishi}}
- {{Discogs artist | artist = 676937-Junko-Onishi-Trio | name = Junko Onishi Triol}}
- {{Discogs artist | artist = 518834-Junko-Onishi | name = Junko Onishil}}
- [http://www.last.fm/music/Junko+Onishi Junko Onishi] - last.fm
{{Junko Onishi (musician)}}
{{Authority control}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Onishi, Junko}}
Category:Japanese jazz pianists
Category:Japanese women jazz pianists
Category:Berklee College of Music alumni
Category:Musicians from Kyoto Prefecture
Category:21st-century Japanese pianists
Category:21st-century Japanese women musicians
Category:21st-century Japanese women pianists
{{Japan-musician-stub}}
{{Jazz-pianist-stub}}