David Friedman (percussionist)
David Friedman (born March 10, 1944, New York, United States) is an American jazz percussionist. His primary instruments are vibraphone and marimba.
Friedman studied drums in the 1950s, then marimba and xylophone in the 1960s at Juilliard. In the 1960s he was a member of the New York Philharmonic and the pit orchestra of the Metropolitan Opera, and worked as a jazz musician with Wayne Shorter, Joe Chambers, Hubert Laws, Horace Silver, and Horacee Arnold in the 1970s. He and Dave Samuels played together in drum workshops before starting a project in 1975, called The Mallet Duo. They also assembled a quartet called Double Image during the years 1977-1980. Friedman later worked with Daniel Humair and Chet Baker, and taught at the Manhattan School of Music and in Montreux in the 1970s.
Discography
As leader
- Winter, Love, April, Joy (East Wind/Inner City, 1975)
- Futures Passed (Inner City, 1976)
- Dawn (ECM, 1978)
- Of the Wind's Eye (Enja, 1981)
- Shades of Change (Enja, 1986)
- Air Sculpture (Traumton, 1994)
- Other Worlds (Intuition, 1998)
- Birds of a Feather (Traumton, 2000)
- Earfood (Skip, 2004)
- Rodney's Parallel Universe (Skip, 2007)
As sideman
- With Chet Baker
- Peace (Enja, 1982)
With Tim Buckley
- Dream Letter: Live in London 1968 (Enigma Retro Manifesto, 1968)
- Happy Sad (Elektra, 1969)
- Blue Afternoon (Straight, 1969)
With Joe Chambers
- The Almoravid (Muse, 1974)
With George Benson
- Good King Bad (CTI, 1975)
With Billy Joel
- Orchestral chimes and percussion on Until the Night on Joel's album 52nd Street (1978)
With Dino Saluzzi
- Rios (Intuition, 1995)
References
- Ron Wynn, David Friedman at Allmusic