Guitarist Kurt Rosenwinkel began his professional
career in 1990, when he dropped out of Berklee only two and a
half years into his college education to go on tour with Gary
Burton and his band. Burton gave the young musician a hand up,
helping him move to New York, giving him money, and setting him
up with the kind of connections that Rosenwinkel needed to get
started.
The effort paid off when Rosenwinkel shortly became one of the
most respected jazz guitarists on the East Coast. His fluid style
got him jobs as a member, session musician, and touring musician
within a number of ensembles and earned him praise from other
veteran guitarists like John Scofield and Pat Metheny. Over the
following eight years he was featured on 12 albums, with Burton,
Paul Motian, Mark Turner, Seamus Blake, and others.
He also won a Composer's Award from the National Endowment for
the Arts in 1995. In 1998 he released a solo album on Criss Cross
Records -- a collection of standards entitled Intuit. 2000 brought
him his major-label debut on Verve, Enemies of Energy, which allowed
him to stretch creatively and simultaneously show off the performance
skills which were honed during touring and nearly weekly gigs
at Small's in New York as well as his interpretive and compositional
strengths. Next Step followed in early 2001.
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