Description of Third Stream
Third Stream refers to a loosely affiliated group of composers whose music spanned the influences of both Classical and Jazz. The Classical-influenced innovations of Cool Jazz in the 1950s led significant numbers of classically trained composers to take interest in jazz. At the forefront of this movement stood Gunther Schuller, who argued that these new musical innovations represented a "Third Stream," formed from the two "streams" of Classical and Jazz. Schuller's influential piece "Transformation" fused jazz improvisation and twelve-tone compositional techniques. In a similar vein, prominent composer-bandleader Stan Kenton relentlessly searched for new tonalities, aiming to present the audience with as diverse a sound palette as possible. Third Stream composers radically expanded the language of jazz and effectively fused it with the classical Avant-Garde; jazz-classical hybrids have continued to the present day, in the ambitious avant-garde compositions of Anthony Braxton and the sweeping orchestral suites of Wynton Marsalis.
John Lewis
The leader of the sublime
Modern Jazz Quartet, this
pianist also recorded
frequently under his name.
Modern Jazz Quartet
This innovative quartet
remained one of the
greatest jazz supergroups
for almost five decades.
Pianist/composer John Le...
Teo Macero
This famed jazz producer
started out playing sax with
Mingus and now cuts
adventurous Third Stream
works.