Born in Rzeszow in southern Poland in 1942,
Stanko made his debut in the late 1950s in Krakow. He later
gained a global reputation playing alongside jazz luminaries
such as drummer Jack deJohnette and bassist Dave Holland.
Stanko's early influences came from jazz trumpet icons such as
Miles Davis and Chet Baker, but he was soon drawn primarily to
the free-form jazz of Ornette Coleman and Don Cherry, and often
recorded for the ECM label.
His first global bestseller was a 1997 album, Litania, a tribute
to the music of Polish film music composer and jazz pianist
Krzysztof Komeda, the record company ECM Records said.
"I am in shock ... (Stanko) was an absolute prophet, a great
musician, and a consistent one," said Michal Urbaniak, a Polish
jazz violinist and saxophonist.
(Reporting by Anna Koper and Justyna Pawlak; Editing by Mark
Heinrich)
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