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Bronislaw Suchanek
Bronislaw (Bronek) Suchanek is an established double bass jazz
player and composer and one of the most important bass players in
history of Polish Jazz. He studied music at the State College of
Music, Katowice, Poland with a Master of Fine Arts in Double Bass
Performance. He also attended the National College of Music,
Stockholm, Sweden for the year long Teacher’s Course for Jazz
Musicians.
Suchanek started professional career as a bass player in the early
'70s he, initially at the Silesian Jazz Quartet; later on becoming a
member of legendary pianist Mieczyslaw Kosz trio (1971).
Around the same time Suchanek joined trumpeter Tomasz Stanko
Quintet. Beside Stanko the line-up of the Quintet included Zbigniew
Seifert on alto saxophone and violin, Janusz Muniak on the
saxophones and flute, Jan Gonciarczyk / Bronislaw Suchanek on the
bass and Janusz Stefanski on the drums. The Quintet made three
records: "Music for K" (1970), "Jazz Message from Poland" (1972) and
"Purple Sun" (1973) but the albums could not compare to the magic of
Quintet's life performances. The music of Quintet escaped easy
definitions. Sophisticated, collective improvisations and breath
taking instrumental solos were bands' trademarks; hypnotic
cosmic-like interactions between members of the band, and between
the band and the life public, complemented the whole experience.
Stanko Quintet disbanded in 1973 on the pick of its creative
potential and after achieving cult-like following in Europe.
After that Suchanek continued advancing his career on Polish Jazz
field; during that time especially important was his collaboration
with the Jazz Studio of Polish Radio with Jan “Ptaszyn” Wroblewski
at the helmet . The Studio was a unique blend: part venue for free
expression by virtuosos and soloists and part workshop for musicians
and composers. It would be virtually impossible to find any
important Polish Jazz composer or soloist who at one time or another
in their career had not been involved with the Studio. In Studio’s
environment musicians, composers and soloists like Suchanek had a
chance to test their own ideas and have them confronted and
discussed in a peer-group setting.
In 1976 Bronislaw Suchanek moved to Scandinavia, where he became
part of the jazz scene, by 1976 recording with the tenor saxophonist
Urban Hansson as well as Swedish-radio jazz groups under the
direction of George Russell. In the early '80s, Suchanek
participated in projects based out of Austria, including the 1983
G.A.P. band.
In 1980s Suchanek become a member of in the Polski Jazz Ensemble –
an unique assembly of Polish Jazz expatriates (Leszek Zadlo,
Wladyslaw Sendecki, Bronislaw Suchanke and Janusz Stefanski), which
in 1985 released a self-titled album (Polski Jazz Ensemble).
Suchanek has performed and recorded in 26 recordings in Europe, and
the United States with such notables as Michael Urbaniak, Adam
Makowicz, Art Farmer, George Russell and the Swedish Radio Jazz
Group, Don Cherry, Benny Bailey, Thad Jones, Pepper Adams, Roland
Hannah, Mal Waldrom, Mel Lewis, Kenny Hadley Big Band, Rick Stepton
Sextet, Artie Shaw Orchestra, Rebecca Paris, James Williams, Alan
Dawson, Jerry Bergonzi, Bill Brown, Mark Templeton, Jon Almark Big
Band, Chris Neville, Amanda Carr and Pat Mitchell.
In the early '90s, Bronislaw Suchanek joined faculty of the
University of Southern Maine (USA) where he teaches master classes
in double bass in classical and improvised music. His musical
odyssey continues - his latest release (2008) is a duet with Polish
pianist and Dominik Wania called “Sketch in Blue” with 9 songs all
originally composed by Bronek and Dominik.
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