A harmonically advanced cool-toned and subtle guitarist,
Jim Hall has been an inspiration to many guitarists, including some (such as
Bill Frisell) who sound nothing like him.
Hall attended the Cleveland Institute of Music and studied classical guitar in Los Angeles with
Vincente Gomez. He was an original member of
the Chico Hamilton Quintet (1955-1956), and during 1956-1959 was with
the Jimmy Giuffre Three. After touring with
Ella Fitzgerald (1960-1961) and sometimes forming duos with
Lee Konitz,
Hall was with
Sonny Rollins' dynamic quartet in 1961-1962, recording
The Bridge. He co-led a quartet with
Art Farmer (1962-1964), recorded on an occasional basis with
Paul Desmond during 1959-1965 (all of their quartet performances are collected on a Mosaic box set), and then became a New York studio musician. He has mostly been a leader ever since and, in addition to his own projects for World Pacific/Pacific Jazz, MPS, Milestone, CTI, Horizon, Artists House, Concord, Music Masters, and Telarc,
Jim Hall recorded two classic duet albums with
Bill Evans. A self-titled collaboration with
Pat Metheny followed in 1999. A flurry of studio albums, reissues, and compilations followed throughout the next few years, with the exceptional Jim Hall & Basses standing out for its bass/guitar duet format.
–
Scott Yanow, Rovi