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Tasteful, low-key, and ingratiatingly melodic,
Charlie Byrd had two notable accomplishments to his credit - applying
acoustic classical guitar techniques to jazz and popular music and helping
to introduce Brazilian music to mass North American audiences. Born into
a musical family, Byrd experienced his first brush with greatness while
a teenager in France during World War II, playing with his idol Django
Reinhardt. After some postwar gigs with Sol Yaged, Joe Marsala and Freddie
Slack, Byrd temporarily abandoned jazz to study classical guitar with
Sophocles Papas in 1950 and Andre Segovia in 1954. However he re-emerged
later in the decade gigging around the Washington D.C. area in jazz settings,
often splitting his sets into distinct jazz and classical segments. He
started recording for Savoy as a leader in 1957, and also recorded with
the Woody Herman band in 1958-59. A tour of South America under the aegis
of the U.S. State Department in 1961 proved to be a revelation, for it
was in Brazil that Byrd discovered the emerging bossa nova movement. Once
back in D.C., he played some bossa nova tapes to Stan Getz, who then convinced
Verve's Creed Taylor to record an album of Brazilian music with himself
and Byrd. That album Jazz Samba became a pop hit in 1962 on the strength
of the single "Desafinado" and launched the bossa nova wave
in North America. Thanks to the bossa nova, several albums for Riverside
followed, including the defining Bossa Nova Pelos Passaros, and he was
able to land a major contract with Columbia, though the records from that
association often consisted of watered-down easy-listening pop. In 1973,
he formed the group Great Guitars with Herb Ellis and Barney Kessel and
also that year, wrote an instruction manual for the guitar that has become
widely used. From 1974 onward, Byrd recorded for the Concord Jazz label
in a variety of settings, including sessions with Laurindo Almeida and
Bud Shank. He died December 2, 1999 after a long bout with cancer.
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