Shunzo Ohno
Biography
Shunzo Ohno (大野 俊三, Ōno Shunzō; born 22 March 1949) is a Japanese trumpeter, composer and arranger. In 1974 Ohno accepted Art Blakey's offer and went to the U.S. He made recordings in cooperation with famous musicians, and some of his songs sold very well. He played active parts as a member of MACHITÖ Y SUS AFROCUBANAS and became known in Europe and South America. In 1984, he won a Grammy Award for his album Machito and His Salsa Big Band. Four years later, he also won for Live at Sweet Basil. Ohno was a passenger in a automobile accident in 1988 severing his lip, concussion, and broke teeth. He had to take months to re establish his embouchure to play trumpet 3 months later he played on the Buster Williams 'Something More" album with Herbie Hancock, Wayne Shorter, and Al Foster. In 2014, he won the Grand Prize in the International Songwritting Competition. The first Jazz artist to win the Grand Prize and became the first Japanese composer/musician to win the Grand Prize The song is one of his most well known compositions, "Musashi".
Bio from Wikipedia
Discography
Records they worked on — most-collected first.

Rei Momo
1989

You Are My Starship
1976

Machito And His Salsa Big Band 1982
1982

J Jazz: Deep Modern Jazz From Japan 1969-1984
2018

Last Session - Live At "Perugia Jazz Festival" July 11, 1987
1993

Live At Sweet Basil
1985

Bougie
1982

Good Question
1981

The Rise Of Atlantis
1979

This Is Your Life
1977

Evolution
1984

Sea Breeze
1971
Credited work
377 releases · 68 albums · active 1970–2026
- Performance · 588
- Other credits · 23
- Production · 12
- Engineering · 1
Studios: Sweet Basil · Electric Lady Studios · Atlantic Studios · Right Track Recording
Frequent collaborators
- Gil Evans
- Various
- Norman Connors
- George Otsuka Quintet
- Machito And His Salsa Big Band
- Shunzoh Ohno
- The Third (2)
- Eri
