Silver [Silva], Horace (Ward Martin Tavares) (Norwalk, CT, 2 Sept 1928)
Pianist, bandleader, and composer
As a child he was exposed to
By 1951 Silver had developed sufficient confidence to move
to
Silver's music was a major force in modern jazz on at least four counts. He was the first important pioneer of the style known as Hard bop, which combined elements of rhythm-and-blues and gospel music with jazz, influencing pianists such as Bobby Timmons, Les McCann, and Ramsey Lewis. Second, the instrumentation of his quintet (trumpet, tenor saxophone, piano, double bass, and drums) served as a model for small jazz groups from the mid-1950s until the late 1960s. Further, Silver's ensembles provided an important training ground for young players, many of whom (such as Donald Byrd, Art Farmer, Blue Mitchell, Woody Shaw, Benny Golson, and Joe Henderson) later led similar groups of their own. Finally, Silver refined the art of composing and arranging for his chosen instrumentation to a level of craftsmanship as yet unsurpassed in jazz. He is a prolific composer, and one of very few jazz musicians to record almost exclusively original material; his work consistently combines simplicity and profundity in a rhythmically infectious style which, despite its sophistication, sounds completely natural. Several of his compositions have become jazz standards, including The Preacher, Doodlin', Opus de Funk, Señor Blues, Nica's Dream, Sister Sadie, and Song for my Father.
From the mid-1960s Silver has written lyrics as well as music for a series of three quintet recordings, The United States of Mind, and recorded a number of albums featuring the quintet with ensembles of brass, woodwind, percussion, voices, and strings. His quintet continues to tour regularly in the 1980s, performing a wide range of material from his impressive and influential library of original works.
Bill Dobbins
The New Grove Dictionary of Jazz, © Macmillan Reference Ltd 1988