CONCERTS & SESSIONS
BIO
Corea had taken piano lessons as a child, encouraged by a musical family. His biggest influences in his early years were Bud Powell and Horace Silver. He worked with Mongo Santamaria and Willie Bobo (1962-1963), Blue Mitchell (1964 -1966), Herbie Mann, and Stan Getz. He made his recording debut in 1966's with an LP called Tones for Joan's Bones featuring his first trio (with Miroslav Vitous and Roy Haynes).
He worked with Sarah Vaughan and then Corea joined Miles Davis' band filling in for Herbie Hancock when he was unable to do a Davis gig. Eventually, he replaced Hancock. While with Davis, he performed on several landmark LPs, including In a Silent Way, Bitches Brew, and Miles Davis at the Fillmore. It was after the Davis experience that Corea came into his own as a jazz pianist.
By the time 1973 had rolled around, he formed the first version of Return To Forever, mainly as an acoustic-driven Latin jazz ensemble. The following year, with the addition of 19-year-old Berkeley Music graduate, Al DiMeola, Return To Forever (featuring Stanley Clarke on bass and Lenny White on drums) had become one of the premier jazz-rock fusion bands.
But after RTF disbanded in 1977, Corea was eager to return to a more acoustic sound, hence the legendary 1978 tour with Herbie Hancock, where both pianists performed as a duo. The two would eventually release both a studio and live album before each returned to their various solo projects.