Daniel Schnyder

Summary

Daniel Schnyder (born March 12, 1961) is a Swiss jazz reedist and composer of both jazz and classical music.

Daniel Schnyder
Born (1961-03-12) March 12, 1961 (age 63)
Zürich, Switzerland
GenresJazz, Classical
Occupation(s)Musician, composer
Instrument(s)Saxophone, clarinet, flute
LabelsEnja
Websitedanielschnyder.com

Schnyder learned to play cello before saxophone. He attended Berklee College of Music and the Conservatory of Winterthur. He has recorded for Enja Records and composes pieces which meld jazz and classical music. His work has been published by Hal Leonard, Universal Edition, and Edition Kunzelmann; he has been commissioned by Vienna Art Orchestra, NDR Big Band [de], Opera Philadelphia, Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra and Berlin Philharmonic.[1] Sidemen on his albums include Michael Philip Mossman, Marvin "Smitty" Smith, Kenny Drew Jr., Dave Taylor, Adam Taubitz, Michael Formanek, and Mark Feldman. He has also worked with Flavio Ambrosetti, Lee Konitz, and Abdullah Ibrahim.

Discography edit

  • Secret Cosmos (Enja, 1988)
  • The City (Enja, 1989)
  • Decoding the Message (Enja, 1990)
  • Mythen (Koch, 1991)
  • Mythology (Enja 1991)
  • Granulat with Mossman (Red, 1991)
  • Nucleus (Enja, 1995)
  • Tarantula (Enja, 1996)
  • Words Within Music (Enja, 1999)
  • Jazz Meets Weill and Gershwin with Kurt Weill, David Taylor, Kenny Drew Jr. (Koch, 2000)
  • Songbook with Kenny Drew Jr., Kristjan Jaervi, Symphony Orchestra of Norrlands Opera (CCn'C, 2002)
  • Zoom In (Universal/EmArcy, 2003)
  • Da Skale with Kenny Drew Jr. (TCB, 2003)
  • Colossus of Sound with NDR Radio Philharmonic Orchestra, Kristjan Järvi, Reinhold Friedrich, Kathrin Rabus (Enja, 2004)
  • Just Follow Instructions with Adam Unsworth (Block M, 2009)
  • Manhattanite (Neuklang, 2010)
  • Around the World with Stefan Schulz (BIS, 2011)
  • Daniel Schnyder (Migros-Kulturprozent, 2011)

As sideman edit

References edit

  1. ^ Marcus Gammel, "Daniel Schnyder". The New Grove Dictionary of Jazz. 2nd edition, ed. Barry Kernfeld, 2004.