Fusion
Miles Davis helped usher in the fusion of jazz and rock in the
mid to late 1960's through albums such as Bitches Brew and Jack
Johnson. His bands during this period featured Herbie Hancock, Chick
Corea, and Joe Zawinul on electric piano, Ron Carter and Dave Holland
on bass, John McLaughlin on guitar, and Tony Williams and Jack
DeJohnette on drums. Tony Williams formed a rock oriented band called
Lifetime with John McLaughlin, who also formed his own high energy
group, the Mahavishnu Orchestra. Through the 1970's Miles continued to
explore new directions in the use of electronics and the incorporation
of funk and rock elements into his music, leading to albums such as
Pangea and Agharta.
Other groups combined jazz and rock in a more popularly oriented
manner, from the crossover Top 40 of Spyro Gyra and Chuck Mangione to
the somewhat more esoteric guitarist Pat Metheny. Other popular fusion
bands include Weather Report, featuring Wayne Shorter, Joe Zawinul, and
bass players Jaco Pastorius and Miroslav Vitous; Return To Forever,
featuring Chick Corea and bassist Stanley Clarke; The Crusaders,
featuring saxophonist Wilton Felder and keyboardist Joe Sample; the
Yellowjackets, featuring keyboardist Russell Ferrante; and the Jeff
Lorber Fusion, which originally featured Kenny G on saxophone. In
recent years, several fusion bands have achieved much commercial
success, including those of Pat Metheny and Kenny G.