Group · 1945 · New York City [40.71, -74.01]

Charlie Parker Quintet

The small group led by Charlie Parker became the canonical bebop ensemble, a saxophone-and-trumpet front line over piano, bass and drums that distilled the music to its essentials. Over its various lineups the band gave the New York clubs their defining bop sound and recorded much of the style's core repertoire. Its format — a few horns and a fast, conversational rhythm section — became the template for modern jazz combos.

Evidence2

Connections1

  • influences Stan Getz

    Stan Getz came up through the bebop and cool-jazz groups whose ranks were full of Charlie Parker's sidemen, absorbing the harmonic expansion of the bebop generation. He then carried that jazz fluency into bossa nova, making Jazz Samba and Getz/Gilberto the bridge between the two scenes.