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Barry Finnerty
Barry Finnerty
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Key Information

Michael Barry Finnerty (born December 3, 1951) is an American jazz guitarist, keyboardist, singer, songwriter, and arranger, known for his work as a touring and recording session musician for Miles Davis, The Crusaders, the Brecker Brothers, Hubert Laws, and Ray Barretto. Finnerty is the author of books on music improvisation and a semi-autobiographical novel.

Music career

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Finnerty was born in San Francisco and raised on the West Coast, studying at the San Francisco Conservatory of Music and University of California Berkeley.

He lived in Hong Kong with his mother in the early 1960s. When he was fourteen, he began playing electric guitar and joined a band that opened a show for Herman's Hermits. On returning to San Francisco, he became friends with guitarist Jim Checkley, who invited him to join Beefy Red in 1969. He played in that band for several years.[1]

He moved to New York City after attending Berklee College of Music for a short time in 1971. In 1974 he began playing with Chico Hamilton, Airto Moreira, and Flora Purim. In 1975 he became a member of the Joe Farrell quartet, and later in the decade played with Hubert Laws, Tower of Power, Thad Jones and Mel Lewis, and Ray Barretto.

Finnerty played and recorded with Michael Brecker and Randy Brecker (1977–81) and The Crusaders (1979–84), in addition to touring in Europe with Billy Cobham in 1980. He played and recorded with Miles Davis in 1981, being featured on much of Davis's 1981 album The Man with the Horn and is mentioned in Davis's autobiography.

Finnerty has worked both as a session musician and as leader of his own bands.

As author

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He released his first jazz education book, The Serious Jazz Practice Book, in 2006. The work was endorsed by notable musicians including Randy Brecker, Bob Sheppard and Dave Liebman.[2] Finnerty authored a follow-up work in 2008, The Serious Jazz Book II, endorsed by jazz flautist Hubert Laws. In 2016 Finnerty released a novel loosely based on his life in New York City in the mid-90s.

Personal

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Finnerty is the son of actor Warren Finnerty (1925–1974) who appeared in numerous films including Cool Hand Luke (1967) and Easy Rider (1969). He is married to artist and songwriter Clarita Zarate.

Discography

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  • New York City (Victor, 1982)
  • Lights On Broadway (Morning, 1985)
  • 2B Named Later (Cheetah, 1988)
  • Straight Ahead (Arabesque, 1995)
  • Space Age Blues (Hot Wire, 1998)
  • Manhattan Sessions Part 1 (ESC, 2009)
  • Blues for Trane (Finn, 2010)
  • Nothing's Gonna Be All Right (Birdland, 2015)

As sideman

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With Ray Barretto

  • Tomorrow: Barretto Live (Atlantic, 1976)
  • Eye of the Beholder (Atlantic, 1977)
  • Gracias (Fania, 1978)

With The Crusaders

With Jun Fukamachi

  • The Sea of Dirac (Kitty, 1977)
  • Evening Star (Kitty, 1978)
  • On the Move (Alfa, 1978)

With others

References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
''Barry Finnerty'' is an American jazz guitarist, keyboardist, singer, songwriter, and arranger known for his prolific career as a session and touring musician, with notable collaborations including Miles Davis, The Crusaders, and the Brecker Brothers. He has contributed electric guitar to Miles Davis' 1981 album The Man with the Horn and performed on The Crusaders' platinum-selling Street Life (1979), among other key jazz-fusion recordings of the era. Born in San Francisco on December 3, 1951, Finnerty grew up in a musical family—his father was an award-winning actor and his mother a classical pianist and educator—and began studying piano at age five before taking up guitar in his early teens. Influenced by rock and blues guitarists as well as jazz masters such as George Benson and Kenny Burrell, he studied informally in San Francisco and briefly attended UC Berkeley and Berklee College of Music before relocating to New York City in 1973. There he quickly joined Chico Hamilton's band, performed at the Montreux Jazz Festival, and went on to work with Airto Moreira, Flora Purim, Hubert Laws, and the Brecker Brothers. During the late 1970s and 1980s, Finnerty toured and recorded extensively with The Crusaders and contributed to Miles Davis' comeback recordings, while also forming his own groups such as The Negatives and releasing solo albums including 2B Named Later (1989) and Straight Ahead (1995). He participated in international tours sponsored by the U.S. State Department and performed with various ensembles in Europe and Japan. In addition to his performing career, Finnerty has authored instructional books on jazz harmony and composition, and he continues to release music, including recent projects such as Nothing's Gonna Be All Right with the Bad Barry Finnerty Collective.

Early life

Family background and childhood

Barry Finnerty was born on December 3, 1951, in San Francisco, California. He is the son of Warren Finnerty (1925–1974), an award-winning stage and film actor who received the Obie Award for Best Actor in 1960 for his performance in "The Connection" and appeared in films such as Cool Hand Luke (1967) and Easy Rider (1969). His mother, Ruth Finnerty, was a classical pianist who taught English at UC Berkeley Extension. During 1965–1966, Finnerty lived in Hong Kong with his mother while she held a Fulbright grant to teach there. This period marked a significant relocation during his early adolescence, exposing him to a different cultural environment amid his family's artistic background. His mother's work as a pianist provided early exposure to music in the home.

Early musical development

Barry Finnerty began his musical training at age five with classical piano lessons, laying the foundation for his lifelong engagement with music. His father's career as an award-winning actor offered early cultural exposure to the arts, influencing his creative environment. He transitioned to guitar at age thirteen, starting with classical guitar, before acquiring his first electric guitar—a Fender Jaguar—at age fourteen while living in Hong Kong. There, he formed his first band, The New Breed, which opened for Herman’s Hermits. Returning to San Francisco, Finnerty played in local high school bands and regularly attended concerts at the Fillmore and Avalon ballrooms, where he absorbed influences from the Grateful Dead, Jimi Hendrix, and Eric Clapton. He pursued formal jazz instruction by studying guitar and theory with teacher Dave Smith, while drawing inspiration from jazz guitarists George Benson and Kenny Burrell, as well as from Miles Davis and John Coltrane. In 1969, Finnerty joined the San Francisco-based band Beefy Red, remaining with the group for several years and upgrading his equipment to include a Guild Starfire and various Gibson Les Paul models during this period. He briefly attended Berklee College of Music in 1971 for one semester and also studied at the University of California, Berkeley, exploring courses in philosophy, astronomy, and music theory.

Professional music career

Move to New York and initial collaborations

In April 1973, Barry Finnerty moved to New York City, intent on breaking into the professional jazz world. He had briefly attended Berklee College of Music in Boston for one semester in 1971, where he was exposed to heavyweight artists in New York, before returning to the West Coast and eventually making the permanent relocation. A Bay Area friend, saxophonist Alex Foster, had already joined Chico Hamilton's band several months earlier and helped Finnerty secure an audition, leading to his immediate entry into the group. Three months after arriving, in June 1973, Finnerty performed with Chico Hamilton at the Montreux Jazz Festival in Switzerland, appearing on the same bill as Miles Davis. A live recording of the concert, featuring one of Finnerty's first compositions, "In View," was later released on Stax Records, although he never received any royalties from the album. In 1974, on a recommendation from drummer Billy Cobham who had heard him perform, Finnerty joined the group led by percussionist Airto Moreira and singer Flora Purim, who were then riding high from their contributions to Chick Corea's Light as a Feather album. That year the group performed at the Monterey Jazz Festival, featuring bassist Charles Fambrough and pianist Mike Wolff. In 1975 Finnerty joined Joe Farrell's quartet, which included drummer Victor Lewis and electric bassist Jeff Berlin, while also beginning a collaboration with flutist Hubert Laws alongside pianist Mark Gray and bassist Mike Richmond. By 1976 he was performing with conguero Ray Barretto at New York's Bottom Line club.

Major bands and recordings

Barry Finnerty rose to prominence in the late 1970s and early 1980s through high-profile sideman roles in jazz fusion ensembles, beginning with the Brecker Brothers. He joined the group in 1977 for the Heavy Metal Be-Bop tour, performing in a lineup that included Randy Brecker on trumpet, Michael Brecker on saxophone, Terry Bozzio on drums, and Neil Jason on bass, with Finnerty contributing guitar and notable use of electronic effects. He recorded guitar on their albums Heavy Metal Be-Bop (1978) and Straphangin' (1981). Additional tours included a 1980 European run featuring festivals such as Montreux and NorthSea. Finnerty's tenure with The Crusaders from 1979 to 1984 marked one of his most commercially successful periods. He played guitar on Street Life (1979), a major commercial success certified gold by the RIAA, followed by Standing Tall (1980) and Royal Jam (1982). The association involved extensive international touring, during which he refined his rhythm playing under the group's demanding groove standards. In 1981, Finnerty participated in sessions for Miles Davis' The Man with the Horn, overdubbing electric guitar on the title track and "Shout," and contributing the opening power chords on "Back Street Betty." He also performed sideman work with other artists during this era, including a 1980 European tour with Billy Cobham and recordings or appearances connected to Joe Sample and Ray Barretto (building on an earlier 1976 performance with Barretto in New York that helped lead to his Brecker Brothers opportunity).

Later career developments

In the mid-1980s, Finnerty formed The Negatives, a band that held a six-month Tuesday night residency at Kenny's Castaways in Greenwich Village, regularly filling the club with its high-musicianship rock material focused on satirical themes of hypocrisy, politics, and personal grievances. The group released the cassette In The No in 1985. From 1987 to 1998, he served as lead singer for the Bob Hardwick Society Orchestra, performing classic standards and rock 'n' roll at elite venues including the Plaza Hotel and at President George H. W. Bush's Inaugural Ball in 1989. In 1988, Finnerty toured Turkey, Bulgaria, Romania, and Czechoslovakia with Randy Brecker as part of a U.S. State Department cultural exchange program before the fall of Communism in the region. He released the album 2B Named Later on Cheetah Records in 1989. During the 1990s, Finnerty toured Europe and Japan extensively, including collaborations with organist Jon Hammond (with a live Radio France broadcast in Paris) and multimedia "Visible Sound" performances with painter Tom Reyes. In 1998, he relocated to the San Francisco Bay Area after 25 years in New York and began working in theater pit orchestras, including six months with the San Francisco production of RENT, as well as Mamma Mia and a short run of Tommy in 2000. In the early 2000s, Finnerty developed TRAZZ, a groove-oriented trance jazz project intended to reach non-jazz listeners through modern electronic elements, premiering it at the Aalen Jazzfest in Germany in November 2002. He continued recording in subsequent years, releasing Manhattan Sessions Part 1 on ESC Records in Europe in March 2010 and Blues for Trane on Cheetah Records in Japan in 2010. In 2015, he released Nothing's Gonna Be All Right with the Bad Barry Finnerty Collective, featuring German musicians in funky, soulful interpretations and originals.

Discography

Albums as leader

Barry Finnerty has released a series of albums under his own name as leader, primarily in jazz fusion and blues-oriented styles, beginning in the early 1980s after establishing himself through sideman work. These recordings highlight his guitar virtuosity, compositional range, and evolving musical voice. His debut as leader was New York City, issued in 1982 on Victor. This was followed by Lights On Broadway in 1985 on Morning and 2B Named Later in 1989 on Cheetah. In the mid-1990s, Finnerty released Straight Ahead in 1995 on Arabesque. He then issued Space Age Blues in 1998 on Hot Wire, a compilation drawing on earlier material. Later works include Manhattan Sessions Part 1 in 2009 on ESC, Blues for Trane in 2010 on Finn, and Nothing's Gonna Be All Right in 2015 on Birdland.

Notable sideman appearances

Barry Finnerty established himself as a prominent sideman in jazz fusion and related genres during the late 1970s and early 1980s, contributing guitar to several influential recordings by leading artists and bands. He was a featured guitarist on the Brecker Brothers' albums Heavy Metal Be-Bop (1978), where he also provided background vocals and production input, and Straphangin' (1981), helping shape their energetic blend of jazz, rock, and funk. Finnerty also recorded with The Crusaders on Street Life (1979), Standing Tall (1981), and Royal Jam (1981), adding his distinctive electric guitar work to their groove-heavy sound on these commercially and critically notable projects. His collaboration with Miles Davis included guitar performances on The Man with the Horn (1981), marking his involvement in Davis' electric period comeback. Additional significant sideman credits include Joe Sample's Rainbow Seeker (1978), Ray Barretto's Eye of the Beholder (1977) where he also composed material, and Hubert Laws' Romeo & Juliet (1976). These appearances across jazz fusion, Latin jazz, and funk contexts solidified Finnerty's reputation as a versatile session musician and contributed to his later work as a leader.

Contributions to film and television

Music performances and arrangements

Barry Finnerty contributed to film and television as a guitarist on several projects. He performed as the guitarist on the 1983 motion picture Strangers Kiss. He was also an uncredited guitarist on the 1978 film A Hero Ain't Nothin' But a Sandwich. These credits reflect his work in media scoring and performance outside his main activities as a jazz session guitarist.

Authorship and education

Jazz instructional books

Barry Finnerty has contributed to jazz education through two instructional books focused on developing essential skills for improvisation. His first book, The Serious Jazz Practice Book, published in 2006, offers a structured and comprehensive regimen for mastering the core building blocks of jazz—scales, chords, intervals, and melodic patterns—applicable to musicians on any instrument. It includes an accompanying CD with audio examples to support practice, providing a rigorous path toward technical and musical fluency in jazz. The book has been endorsed by prominent jazz figures including Randy Brecker, Bob Sheppard, and Dave Liebman. Building on this foundation, Finnerty published The Serious Jazz Book II: The Harmonic Approach in 2008. This sequel concentrates on harmonic mastery, guiding improvisers to understand and melodically navigate individual chords, their interconnections, and broader harmonic contexts in jazz. It has been endorsed by flutist Hubert Laws, who described it as a testimony to Finnerty's prowess. These works extend Finnerty's role as an educator, leveraging his professional experience to offer practical tools for aspiring and established jazz musicians.

Other writings

Barry Finnerty has authored a semi-autobiographical novel titled Start: Warning! Contains: Sex! Drugs! Jazz! Reality!, published in 2016. The work is loosely based on his experiences in mid-1990s New York City life, centering on an internationally known jazz guitarist in a difficult personal phase involving despondency and self-medication in 1994. It mixes fictionalized accounts with actual events, particularly those drawn from Finnerty's real-life encounters, and is described as funny, twisted, deep, down, and decadent. Details about the novel remain limited in available sources, reflecting its independent publication and niche focus.

Personal life

Family and relocation

Barry Finnerty returned to the San Francisco Bay Area in the late 1990s after more than two decades living and working in New York City. In 2000, while participating in a short two-weekend production of the musical Tommy, he met artist and songwriter Clarita Zarate. The couple later formed a long-term relationship and have collaborated extensively as a songwriting team on various projects, including original compositions and holiday-themed songs. Their joint work has been featured on platforms such as SoundCloud and YouTube, often highlighting their creative partnership.

References

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