His publicist, Alisse Kingsley, said he died in
Los Angeles, without citing a cause.
Shorter made his name playing the tenor sax with drummer Art
Blakey's Jazz Messengers in the late 1950s and joined trumpeter
Miles Davis' influential 1960s quintet alongside pianist Herbie
Hancock, bass player Ron Carter and drummer Tony Williams.
Shorter wrote some of the group's most famous songs including
"E.S.P." and "Nefertiti." Davis hailed him as his band's "idea
person, the conceptualizer of a whole lot of the musical ideas
we did" who also "understood that freedom in music was the
ability to know the rules in order to bend them."
Hancock also hailed Shorter's songwriting. "The master writer to
me, in that group, was Wayne Shorter," the keyboardist said.
"Wayne was one of the few people who brought music to Miles that
didn't get changed."
Shorter led his own band to produce a string of albums in the
1960s including "Juju", "Speak No Evil" and "Adam's Apple" which
featured one of jazz's greatest standards "Footprints."
He co-founded jazz fusion band Weather Report in 1969 around the
time he began to focus his playing on the soprano sax, and the
band recorded one of the best-selling jazz records of all time,
"Heavy Weather," in 1977.
Other hit records included "Native Dancer" featuring Brazilian
singer Milton Nascimento which mixed jazz, rock and funk with
Brazilian rhythms.
In 2000, Shorter formed his first permanent acoustic group with
pianist Danilo Perez, bassist John Patitucci, and drummer Brian
Blade, which led to four albums of live recordings.
Shorter co-wrote an opera "Iphigenia" with singer and bass
player Esperanza Spalding that premiered in 2021.
He won 12 Grammy awards including one as recently as last month.
Shorter suffered tragedy in his life with the death in 1985 of a
daughter he had with his second wife, Ana Maria Patricio, who
herself died when a TWA jetliner exploded shortly after taking
off from New York in 1996.
(Writing by William Schomberg; Editing by Andrew Heavens and
Bill Berkrot)
(Photo: U.S. jazz saxophonist Wayne Shorter performs at the
Jazzaldia Festival in San Sebastian, Spain, July 21, 2017.
REUTERS/Vincent West)
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