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   » » Wiki: Mike Stern
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Mike Stern (born January 10, 1953) is an American jazz guitarist. After playing with Blood, Sweat & Tears, he worked with drummer , then with trumpeter from 1981 to 1983 and again in 1985. He then began a solo career, releasing more than twenty albums.

Stern was named Best Jazz Guitarist of 1993 by magazine. At the Festival International de Jazz de Montréal in June 2007, he was given the Miles Davis Award, which was created to recognize internationally acclaimed jazz artists whose work has contributed significantly to the renewal of the genre. In 2009 Stern was listed on s list of 75 best jazz guitarists of all time. He received Guitar Player magazine's Certified Legend Award on January 21, 2012.


Personal life
Stern was born Michael Sedgwick in Boston, Massachusetts, the son of (née Helen Phillips Burroughs), a sculptor and art patron, and Henry Dwight Sedgwick V. His adoptive stepfather was Philip M. Stern, the son of businessman Edgar B. Stern Sr. His half-sister is actress . Stern is married to guitarist and vocalist .


Career
Stern grew up in Washington, D.C., and began playing guitar at age 12, emulating the likes of B.B. King, and . However, it wasn’t until he entered the Berklee College of Music in Boston that he took guitar seriously.
(2025). 9781617130236, Backbeat.
When he was twenty-two, he became a member of Blood, Sweat & Tears and spent three years with the band, appearing on the albums More Than Ever and Brand New Day.

Simultaneously, he was lead guitarist of a D.C. glam-rock band, the Dubonettes, who later became Charlie and the Pep Boys. The quintet released one album, the -produced Daddy's Girl, in 1976 before Stern left the group.

In 1979, he joined 's band. Two years later he joined , making his public debut in 1981, a performance recorded on the album We Want Miles. He remained with Davis through 1983 until he was replaced by guitarist . At the time, Stern was a heavy drinker and heroin user. In a 2009 interview, he said, "If Miles wants to put you in a rehab, you know you've got something wrong". From 1983 to 1984 he toured with (a period also characterized by heavy drug use)

(2025). 9780879308599, Backbeat Books. .
and in 1985 returned to tour with Davis. Stern and his wife were in rehabilitation; they were also helped by and others.

Stern's solo debut, , with Jaco Pastorius, , and , was released on in 1986. From 1986 through 1988, he was a member of Michael Brecker's quintet, appearing on Don't Try This at Home. His second Atlantic album, 1988's Time in Place, featured on drums, on keyboards, Jeff Andrews on bass, on percussion and on organ. His next album, Jigsaw, was produced by guitarist and included the song "Chief", Stern's tribute to Miles Davis.

In 1989, Stern formed a touring group with , and . They remained together through 1992 and are featured on the album Odds or Evens. In 1992, Stern joined a reunited Brecker Brothers Band for two years. His acclaimed 1993 album, Standards (and Other Songs), led to his being named Best Jazz Guitarist of the Year by the readers and critics of . He followed that with 1994's Is What It Is and 1996's Between the Lines, both of which received nominations. In 1997 he released Give and Take, with bassist , drummer , percussionist Don Alias and special guests Michael Brecker and . He won the Orville W. Gibson Award for Best Jazz Guitarist.

After fifteen years with Atlantic, Stern signed with ESC Records for the 2004 release of These Times, an eclectic album that included guest appearances by bassist , saxophonist and banjoist Béla Fleck. He joined the Heads Up label with the August 2006 release of Who Let the Cats Out? In 2008, he collaborated with the Yellowjackets for their Lifecycle album, contributing two compositions and performing on most of the tracks, and toured with the Yellowjackets for much of 2008 and 2009. In February 2009, in the first of a series of articles celebrating s 75th anniversary, Stern was named one of the 75 Great Guitarists of all time.

In August 2009, Stern released , which was nominated for a Grammy Award for Best Contemporary Jazz Album. He was presented with Guitar Player magazine's Certified Legend Award on January 21, 2012. This was given to him at the All-Star Guitar night, where he performed with .

In 2014, Stern toured with guitarist Eric Johnson in the Eclectic Guitar Tour. They recorded an album of the same name.

In the summer of 2016, Stern reported serious injuries to his shoulders and right arm after tripping and falling. It ended his European tour, and he had to modify his playing technique to keep performing. In the summer of 2017 he returned to Europe on tour with a new formation called Mike Stern/Randy Brecker Band, featuring (trumpet), Teymur Phell (bass guitar) and (drums). In 2019, Mike Stern collaborated with the Jeff Lorber Fusion to release Eleven.


Equipment
An early and important guitar for Stern was a hybrid 1950s/1960s Fender Telecaster, previously owned by and , which was stolen from him in an armed robbery in Boston. This guitar is the basis for a custom-made guitar built by Boston-based luthier Michael Aronson.

The Aronson guitar is in turn the basis for the Yamaha PA1511MS, the Mike Stern signature model. The neck position pickup is a '59 and it has a Tele Hot Rail in the bridge.

Stern uses a pair of Fender Twin amps or his Yamaha G100-212. Stern's recognizable chorused sound is created in part by a Yamaha SPX-90, split for stereo. His pedal board consists mostly of Boss pedals. He uses two DD-3 digital delays, one of which is set to a long delay time for "big, spacey sounds." His distortion pedal is a Boss Distortion DS-1.


Awards and honors
  • Nominations for Grammy Award for Best Contemporary Jazz Album: Is What It Is (1995), Between the Lines (1997), Voices (2002), Who Let the Cats Out? (2007), Lifecycle (2009), Big Neighborhood (2010)
  • Jazz Guitarist of the Year, Guitar Player (1993)
  • Best Jazz Guitarist, Orville W. Gibson Award (1997)
  • 75 Great Guitarists, (2009)
  • Certified Award, Guitar Player (2012)


Discography

As leader/co-leader
  • High Standards with , Teddy Saunders, , (Polydor, 1982)
  • Neesh (Trio, 1983) – aka Fat Time
  • (, 1986)
  • Time in Place (Atlantic, 1988)
  • Jigsaw (Atlantic, 1989)
  • Odds or Evens (Atlantic, 1991)
  • Standards (and Other Songs) (Atlantic, 1992)
  • Dedication with , , (Musidisc, 1992)
  • Is What It Is (Atlantic, 1994)
  • Vertical Reality with , , , (Musidisc, 1994)
  • Between the Lines (Atlantic, 1996)
  • Give and Take (Atlantic, 1997)
  • 55 Bar Sessions with , Haru Takauchi, (Paddle Wheel, 1998)
  • Play (Atlantic, 1999)
  • Voices (Atlantic, 2001)
  • These Times (ESC, 2004)
  • Who Let the Cats Out? (Heads Up, 2006)
  • (Heads Up, 2009)
  • All Over the Place (Heads Up, 2012) – rec. 2011
  • Eclectic with Eric Johnson (Heads Up, 2014)
  • Trip (Heads Up, 2017)
  • Eleven with Jeff Lorber Fusion (Concord Jazz, 2019)
  • Echoes (and Other Songs) (Mack Avenue, 2024)


As a member
Blood, Sweat & Tears

  • Live in Tokyo 1986 (NYC, 1994)

Bob Berg/Mike Stern Group


As sideman
With
  • The Man with the Horn (Columbia, 1981)
  • We Want Miles (Columbia, 1982)
  • (Columbia, 1983)

With others

  • Randy Roos, Mistral (Spoonfed, 1978)
  • Billy Cobham, Stratus (Inak, 1981)
  • Michael Mantler, Something There (Watt, 1983)
  • Steve Slagle, High Standards (Polydor, 1984)
  • Harvie Swartz, Urban Earth (Gramavision, 1985)
  • Harvie Swartz, Smart Moves (Gramavision, 1986)
  • , Yesterdays (Paddle Wheel, 1986)
  • , My One and Only Love (CBS/Sony, 1986)
  • , Short Stories (, 1987)
  • , Manhattan Blue (Projazz, 1987)
  • Harvie Swartz, In A Different Light (Bluemoon, 1990)
  • Jukkis Uotila, Live (Stunt, 1991)
  • Chroma, Music On The Edge (CTI, 1991)
  • , Summerhill (Lipstick, 1991)
  • , Return of the Brecker Brothers (, 1992)
  • , Echoes Of A Note (JVC, 1993)
  • , It's There (FunHouse, 1993)
  • Jerry Bergonzi, Vertical Reality (Musidisc, 1994)
  • Steps Ahead, Live In Tokyo 1986 (NYC Records, 1994)
  • Jim Hall, Dialogues (Telarc, 1995)
  • Les Arbuckle, The Bush Crew (AudioQuest, 1995)
  • Arturo Sandoval, Swingin' (GRP, 1986)
  • Hue & Cry, Jazz Not Jazz (Linn, 1996)
  • Jaco Pastorius, Live in New York City Volume Five - Raca (Big World Music, 1997)
  • , All Sides Now (Blue Note, 1997)
  • Jukkis Uotila, Avenida (Stunt, 1998)
  • Ron Thaler, Grain (Hot Wire Records, 1998)
  • Michael Brecker, Don't Try This At Home (Impulse!, 1998)
  • Charles Blenzig, Charles Blenzig (Chase, 1989)
  • Alex Riel, Rielatin' (Stunt, 2000)
  • George Coleman - 4 Generations of Miles (Chesky, 2002)
  • Michael Brecker, Jazz Academy: Pure Essentials for Jazzaholics (C&B Productions, 2006)
  • DR Big Band, Chromazone (EMI, 2008)
  • Yellowjackets, Lifecycle (Heads Up, 2008)
  • Cindy Blackman, Another Lifetime (4Q, 2010)
  • Jan Gunnar Hoff, Jan Gunnar Hoff Group feat Mike Stern (, 2018)
  • , Carolina (Treehouse, 2020)
  • Harvie S Trio, Going For It (Savant, 2021)
  • Michael Brecker Band, Live At Fabrik 1987 (Fabrik, 2022)
  • , Steve Bailey, , S'low Down (Vix, 2022)
  • Derek Sherinian, Vortex (Inside Out Music, 2022)
  • Dan Costa, Beams (Dan Costa, 2023)
  • Roman Miroshnichenko, Roman Miroshnichenko plays Stas Namin (SNC, 2023)
  • Varre Vartiainen, Head & Heart (Eclipse Music, 2025)


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