From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Don Friedman Don Friedman by Stella Dacuma.jpg Don Friedman at The Kitano Jazz Lounge, September 2009 Background information Born 4 May 1935 (age 78) San Francisco California United States Genres Jazz Occupations Musician, songwriter, bandleader Instruments Piano Associated acts Pepper Adams, Booker Little, Jimmy Giuffre, Clark Terry Website Don Friedman.net Donald Ernest Friedman (born May 4, 1935 in San Francisco California), better known as Don Friedman, is a jazz pianist. On the West Coast, he performed with Dexter Gordon, Chet Baker, Buddy DeFranco and Ornette Coleman, among others, before moving to New York. There, he led his own trio in addition to playing in Pepper Adams's, Booker Little's and Jimmy Giuffre's bands in the sixties. He was also a part of Clark Terry's big band. He currently works in New York as a pianist and jazz educator.[1] He has many fans in Japan, and has toured the country.[2]
As leader A Day in the City (Riverside, 1961) Circle Waltz (Riverside, 1962) Flashback (Riverside, 1963) Dreams and Explorations (Riverside, 1964) Metamorphosis (Prestige, 1966) Hope for Tomorrow (East Wind, 1975) Hot Knepper and Pepper (Progressive, 1978) I Hear a Rhapsody (Stash, 1984) Don Friedman at Maybeck (Concord, 1993) Invitation (Progressive, 1994) Opus D'Amour (Sackville, 1994) - with Don Thompson Thingin' (Hat Art, 1996) - with Lee Konitz and Attila Zoller Piano Works VI (ACT, 2006)