Search - Artist/Band: The Brecker Brothers

Artist Info

  • Band Name: The Brecker Brothers
  • Formed: 1974
  • Originated From: New York, NY
  • Disbanded: 1980
  • Decades Active: 1970,1980,1990,2000
  • Genre: Rhythm & Blues
  • Styles: Crossover Jazz, Funk, Fusion
  • Moods: Exuberant, Manic, Stylish, Complex, Passionate, Rousing, Energetic, Fiery

Albums

Green links represent an available CD.
Red links represent a CD that is not currently available.
Title Release
  • Sneakin' Up Behind You: The Very Best of the Brecker Brothers W
  • 08/01/2006
  • Planet Jazz
  • 12/25/2004
  • Best of the Brecker Brothers
  • 10/28/2002
  • New Best One
  • 07/07/1999
  • Priceless Jazz
  • 04/06/1999
  • Electric Jazz Fusion W
  • 03/09/1999
  • East River
  • 08/26/1997
  • Out of the Loop
  • 1994
  • Return of the Brecker Brothers W
  • 09/22/1992
  • The Brecker Bros. Collection, Vol. 2
  • 10/08/1991
  • The Brecker Bros. Collection, Vol. 1
  • 02/08/1990
  • Detente
  • 1980
  • Straphangin'
  • 1980
  • Don't Stop the Music
  • 1977
  • Back to Back WA
  • 1976
  • Brecker Bros. WA
  • 01/1975

    Group Bio

    In the '70s, brothers Michael and Randy Brecker co-led a band of New York session big shots that included, at various times, David Sanborn, Don Grolnick, Will Lee, and George Duke, among others. When they chose, the Brecker Brothers Band could be one of the most intelligent and creative fusion outfits. Chief composer/trumpeter Randy's best tunes were structurally unpredictable, melodically intricate, and harmonically complex, inside/out bop heads played in an impossibly precise manner over a bed of funk rhythms. Unlike the bulk of jazz-funk (then and now), the Breckers -- on their first record, at least -- kept the pandering to a minimum. Though it had a certain commercial appeal, 1975's Back to Back was an artistic success as well. The Brothers' music was a smart combination of extended pop forms, top-notch jazz improvisation, and sophisticated compositional techniques. On later albums, the temptation to sell lots of records apparently became too great to resist. Even the otherwise excellent first record bore some marks of disco, and with each subsequent album, the band's creative IQ shrank by several points. Still, virtually every record had something of substance to recommend it. In the early '90s, RCA issued a pair of compilation CDs that combined the best of the band's purely instrumental, jazz-based work. By 1982, the brothers had ceased working together, but did reunite for touring and recording in the early '90s. ~ Chris Kelsey, All Music Guide