Kiyoshi Kitagawa

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Kiyoshi Kitagawa
北川潔
Kitagawa at the Oslo Jazz Festival, 2018
Kitagawa at the Oslo Jazz Festival, 2018
Background information
Born(1958-12-05)December 5, 1958
Osaka, Kansai, Japan
DiedApril 28, 2026(2026-04-28) (aged 67)
GenresJazz
OccupationMusician
InstrumentDouble bass
Years active1980s–2026
LabelAtelier Sawano

Kiyoshi Kitagawa (Japanese: 北川潔; December 5, 1958 – April 28, 2026) was a Japanese-American jazz double bassist.

Life and career

Kitagawa first played bass guitar and was in a rock band as a high school student. He switched to double bass while a student at Kansei Gakuin Daigaku, and in the 1980s, performed with Sadayasu Fujii [de] and Takashi Furuya. In October 1988, he immigrated to the United States, settling in New York City.[1] Kitagawa joined the Harper Brothers (Philip and Winard) and worked with Kenny Barron, Andy Bey, Jon Faddis, Kenny Garrett, Jimmy Heath, Susannah McCorkle, Makoto Ozone, Ben Riley, and Terell Stafford in the late 1980s and 1990s. He worked with Barron again several times in the 2000s, as well as with Brian Blade and Danny Grissett, and in the 2010s, with Regina Carter and Charles McPherson.

He received Grammy Award nominations for Kenny Barron's Book of Intuition and Beyond This Place, in 2017 and 2025, respectively.[2]

Kitagawa died on April 28, 2026, at the age of 67.[3]

Discography

As leader

  • Ancestry (Atelier Sawano, 2004)
  • Prayer (Atelier Sawano, 2005)
  • Solo (Atelier Sawano, 2006)
  • Live at Tsutenkaku (Atelier Sawano, 2006)[DVD-Video]
  • I'm Still Here (Atelier Sawano, 2007)
  • Solo 2 (Atelier Sawano, 2008) – with photo album
  • Live in Japan (Atelier Sawano, 2008) – compilation; recorded live in 2005
  • Walkin' Ahead (Atelier Sawano, 2015)
  • Turning Point (Atelier Sawano, 2017)
  • Spring Night (Atelier Sawano, 2020)

As sideman

With Makoto Ozone

  • Makoto Ozone – The Trio (Polydor, 1997)
  • Dear Oscar (Polydor, 1998)
  • Three Wishes (Verve, 1998)
  • No Strings Attached (Polydor, 1999)
  • Ballads (Universal Music Japan, 2008)

With Kenny Barron

With others

References

  1. ^ "アーティスト | 北川 潔" [Artist | Kiyoshi Kitagawa]. Atelier Sawano (in Japanese). Retrieved January 30, 2021.
  2. ^ "Kiyoshi Kitagawa". Grammy Awards. Retrieved April 29, 2026.
  3. ^ Johnson, Kevin (April 30, 2026). "Remembering Kiyoshi Kitagawa, Beloved Jazz Bassist and Kenny Barron Trio Mainstay". notreble.com. Retrieved May 3, 2026.

Sources


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