Alan Silva


Alan Lee da Silva is an American free jazz multi-instrumentalist, best known as a double bassist. He has recorded on keyboards, violin, cello and trumpet among other instruments.

Biography

Silva was born a British subject to an Azorean/Portuguese mother, Irene da Silva, and a black Bermudian father known only as "Ruby". He emigrated to the United States at the age of five with his mother, eventually acquiring U.S. citizenship by the age of 18 or 19. He adopted the stage name of Alan Silva in his twenties.
Silva was quoted in a Bermudan newspaper in 1988 as saying that although he left the island at a young age, he always considered himself Bermudian. He was raised in the Harlem neighborhood of New York City, where he first began studying the trumpet, and moved on to study the upright bass.
Silva is known as one of the most inventive bass players in jazz and has performed with many in the world of avant-garde jazz, including Cecil Taylor, Sun Ra, Albert Ayler, Sunny Murray, and Archie Shepp.
Silva performed in 1964's October Revolution in Jazz as a pioneer in the free jazz movement, and for the 1967 live album Albert Ayler in Greenwich Village. Since the early 1970s, Silva has lived mainly in Paris, France, where he formed the Celestrial Communication Orchestra, a group dedicated to the performance of free jazz with various instrumental combinations. In the 1990s he picked up the electronic keyboard, declaring that his bass playing no longer surprised him. He has also used the electric violin and electric sarangi on his recordings.
In the 1980s, Silva opened a music school I.A.C.P. in Central Paris, together with François Cotinaud and Denis Colin, introducing the concept of a Jazz Conservatory patterned after France's traditional conservatories devoted to European classical music epochs.
Since around 2000, he has performed more frequently as a bassist and bandleader, notably at New York City's annual Vision Festivals.

Discography

As leader or co-leader

As sideman

with Albert Ayler
  • Albert Ayler in Greenwich Village – live recorded in 1966–67
  • Love Cry – recorded in 1966–67
with Abdelhai Bennani
  • Enfance
  • Entrelacs – live recorded in 1999
  • New Today, New Everyday
  • Free Form Improvisation Ensemble 2013
with Dave Burrell
  • Echo
  • After Love – recorded in 1970
with Bill Dixon
  • Bill Dixon in Italy Volume One
  • Bill Dixon in Italy Volume Two
  • Considerations 1
  • November 1981
with Bobby Few
  • More Or Less Few
  • Rhapsody in Few
  • Solos & Duets with Frank Wright
with Sunny Murray
  • Sunny Murray
  • Big Chief
  • Sunshine
  • Homage to Africa
  • Aigu-Grave
  • Perles Noires Volume 1 – live recorded in 2002-04
with Sun Ra
with Archie Shepp
  • Poem for Malcolm
  • Live at the Pan-African Festival – live recorded in 1969
with Cecil Taylor
  • Unit Structures
  • Conquistador! – recorded in 1966
  • Les Grandes Répétitions – recorded in 1966
  • It is in the Brewing Luminous – live recorded in 1980
with Frank Wright
  • Center of the World – live
  • Last Polka in Nancy? – live
  • Solos & Duets with Bobby Few
  • Unity
with others