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Okay Temiz

Okay Temiz (born 11 February 1939, Istanbul, Turkey)[1] is a Turkish fusion jazz percussionist and drummer.

Biography

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Temiz was influenced by his mother, Naciye, who was classically trained in music.[1] Temiz, who began playing professionally in 1955,[1] studied at the Ankara Conservatory and at the Tophane Art Institute. After meeting Maffy Falay and Don Cherry, he settled in Sweden. With Cherry and bassist Johnny Dyani he toured America and Europe in 1971. In 1972, he founded the band Xaba with Dyani and trumpeter Mongezi Feza.[1]

His drums are of his own invention, and are made of hand-beaten copper, after Turkish debuka's.[1]

Discography

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  • Don Cherry: Orient (BYG, 1971)
  • Maffy Falay & Sevda: Maffy Falay and Sevda (1972) (Caprice [sv] RIKS LP 31)
  • Maffy Falay & Sevda: Live at Jazzhus Montmartre (1972) (Caprice 1041)
  • Don Cherry: Organic Music Society (Caprice, 1972)
  • Johnny Dyani/Okay Temiz/Mongezi Feza: Rejoice (1972) (Cadillac SGC 1017)
  • Johnny Dyani/Okay Temiz/Mongezi Feza: Music For Xaba (1972) (Sonet SNTF 642)
  • Johnny Dyani/Okay Temiz/Mongezi Feza: Music For Xaba, Volume Two (1972) (Sonet SNTF 824)
  • Mongezi Feza: Free Jam (2-CD) (1972) (Ayler Records aylCD-048/049 released in 2004)
  • Nils Sandstroem: The Painter (1972) (EMI Odeon 062-34659)
  • Bengt-Arne Wallin: Wallin/Wallin (1972) (Dux 6368002)
  • Gunnar "Siljabloo" Nilson: "Flickan med den bruna hyn/Det kaenns skoent, det kaenns bra" (7" single). (1972) (Odeon E006-34609)
  • Maffy Falay & Sevda: Live at Fregatten (1973) (Sonet SNTF 665 - Kent STX 87020)
  • Salih Baysal: The Myth (1973) (Sonet SNTF 739)
  • Björn J:son Lindh: Sissel (1973) (Metronome MLP 15506)
  • Bernt Rosengren: Notes from underground (2-LP). (1973) (EMI-Harvest 34958/9 - EMI-Harvest 1364622)
  • Bo Nilsson: Drei Szenen/Fatumeh (1973) (Phono Suecia PS 33)
  • Bo Nilsson: A Spirit's Whisper (3-CD) (1973) (Phono Suecia PSCD)
  • Tony Scott: Manteca (1973) (Sonet SLP 2543)
  • Bjoern Jayson Lindh: Boogie Woogie (later entitled Second Carneval)(1974) (Metronome MLP 15.547)
  • Okay Temiz: Turkish folk jazz (1974) (Sonet SNTF 668 - Kent STX)
  • Lars Gullin: Bluesport (1974) (EMI-Harvest 1364612)
  • Okay Temiz: Dokuz sekiz/Denizaltı Rüzgârları (1975) (7" single) (Yonca YCAS-076)
  • Okay Temiz: Drummer of two worlds (1975/1980) (Finnadar Records/WEA 58186 - Melodi Plakları 1216)
  • Okay Temiz/Johnny Dyani. Yonca (1976) (YCS LP 5013)
  • Okay Temiz: Oriental Wind (1977) (Sonet SNTF 737 - Kent STX 87003)
  • Lennart Aberg: Partial solar eclipse (1977) (JAPO 60023)
  • Bernt Rosengren Big Band: First moves (1977) (EMI 062-35428)
  • Nannie Porres: Kärlekens ögon (1977) (EMI 062-35449)
  • Oriental Wind: Live in der Balver Höhle (1978) (JG Records JG 044)
  • Björn Jayson Lindh: Bike voyage II (1978) (Sonet SLP-2619)(later entitled "A Day at the Surface": Sonet SNTF 833 - Vanguard VSD 79434)
  • Don Cherry: Live Ankara (Sonet, 1978)
  • Oriental Wind: Zikir (1979) (Sun Records SEB 11005, France - Melodi Plakları 1138, Turkey - Paddle Wheel K28P 6011, Japan)
  • Okay Temiz - Oriental Wind: Zikir (1979) (KentSTX 143 100102-2, Turkey, Ada Müzik 500765, Turkey)
  • Oriental Wind: "Mus/Kabak" (7" single) (1979) (Sun Records SEB 33-005, France)
  • Oriental Wind: Chila-Chila. (1979) (Sonet SNTF 809)
  • Hans Calderas: Ziggidim (1979) (Calderas Music Production HCLP-101)
  • Oriental Wind: Bazaar (1981) (Sonet SNTF 864)
  • Oriental Wind: Live in Bremen (1981) (JA&RO 007; EFA 08-4107, Germany)
  • Open-Air Arbon Live 1982. (1982) (Delta Records 8355-001, Switzerland) (there's one piece by Oriental Wind on this 2-disc compilation album)
  • Oriental Wind: Life road (1983) (JA&RO 013, JARO 4113-2, EFA 08-4113, Germany)
  • Okay Temiz/Saffet Gündeğer: ditto. (1983) (Organic Music OM 5, Sweden - under the new name "Klasikleri 1" (Atlas Müzik 8 691044 150121, Turkey)
  • Oriental Wind/The Karnataka College of Percussion: Sankirna (1984) (Sonet SNTF 930)
  • Percussion Summit. (1984) (Moers Music 02056)
  • Atilla Engin Group: Memories (1984) (Danish Music Production DMLP 506, Denmark)
  • Atilla Engin Group: Marmaris love (1985) (Danish Music Production DMLP 510, Denmark)
  • Lennart Aberg: Green prints (1985/86) (Caprice CAP 1276)
  • Tayfun Erdem: Ararat. The border crossing (1986) (EMI F 669.660, Germany - under the new name "Ağrı Dağı Efsanesi" Kalan CD 298 (Turkey)
  • Okay Temiz: In Europe (cass). (compilation of pieces from "Life Road"' and other work with Saffet Gündeğer) (1988) (Yankı Müzik Yapım YMC 138, Turkey)
  • Okay Temiz: Derviş (cass.) (1989) (Yankı Müzik Yapım YMC 156, Turkey - under the new name "Dervish Service", Ada Müzik 500772, Turkey - under the new name "Silver Hand", Ton Son Ton/Sonet SNTCD 1020, Vasco Da Gama VDFCD-8003 Sweden).
  • Okay Temiz: "Dance for peace/Locust" (12" single). (1989) (Ton Son Ton SONL10; (7" single). Ton Son Ton SON10)
  • Senem Diyici Sextet: Takalar (1989) (Label La Lichere CD LLL 17 - Kalan CD 186, Turkey)
  • Okay Temiz: Misket (1989) Sonet SNTCD 1031 - under the new name "Transparent Dervish": Vasco Da Gama VDFCD-8002, Sweden).
  • Okay Temiz/Sylvain Kassap: Istanbul da Eylül (1989) (Label La Lichere CD LLL 67)
  • Okay Temiz: Fis fis tziganes (1989) (Label La Lichere CD LLL 107)
  • Wutu-Wupatu: ditto. (1989) (Ano Kato Records rei 2002 (Greece)
  • Okay Temiz: Magnetic dance. (cass.) (1990) (Bayar Müzik Üretim 125, Turkey - under the new name "Okay Temiz Band", Ercan Moroğlu 123, Germany)
  • Okay Temiz's Magnetic Band: Magnet dance. (1990) (Vasco Da Gama VDFCD-8000, Sweden)
  • Four Drummers Drumming: Electricity. (1991) (Backyard Records Riff CD-911-2, Germany)
  • 2eme Rencontre Internationale de la Clarinette Populaire (compilation with other musicians). (1991) Radio Kreiz Breizh RKB K 03, France)
  • Okay Temiz: Green wave. (1992) (Uzelli CD 204, Turkey - Blue Flame DTM 35600)
  • Okay Temiz: Fishmarket. (1992–1994) (Uzelli CD 210)
  • Don Cherry: Dona Nostra. (1993) (ECM 1448)
  • Okay Temiz: Magnet dance (1994) (TipToe/Enja TIP-888819-2, Germany)
  • Karnataka College of Percussion/Okay Temiz: Mishram (1995) (Raks Müzik 4055, Turkey)
  • Okay Temiz Magnetic Band: In Finland 1995 (1995) (Ano Kato Records rei 2004, Greece - under the new name "Magnetic Orient" JARO 4244-2)
  • Tri Leta Druge Godbe II, 1994–1996 (compilation with other musicians) (1996) (Druga Godba CDG 002, Slovenia)
  • The Black Sea Project: ditto. (1996) (Lyra ML 0660, Greece)
  • Yıldız İbrahimova: Balkanatolia (1997) (Raks Müzik 006790, Turkey)
  • Okay Temiz & Group Zourna: Karsilama (1998) (Ada Müzik 8 692646 500789, Turkey - JARO 4224-2)
  • Okay Temiz: Yaşamın ritmi (tutorial LP) (1998) (Banvit, Turkey)
  • Okay Temiz: Kutlama - Celebration (tutorial LP)(1998) (Banvit, Turkey)
  • Audio Fact: Black spot (1998) (Kalan CD 103, (Turkey)
  • Embryo: Istanbul/Casablanca (2-CD). (1998) (Indigo 8536-2)
  • Gjallarhorn: Ranarop. Call of the sea witch (1998) (Elektra/Asylym 19627)
  • Floros Floridis, Nicky Skopelitis, Okay Temiz: Our trip so far (2000) (MRecords 5204876 01013, Greece)
  • Okay Temiz: Black Sea Art Project (2001) (Ada Müzik)
  • Angelite: Balkan Passions (2002) (JARO 4234-2)
  • Okay Temiz: Darbukas & Zurnas (2002) (Ada Müzik 8 692646 501946)
  • Okay Temiz: Mehteran (2002) Ada Müzik 8 692646 501953)
  • Okay Temiz: Kuzeyden Güneye Yansımalar "Senfoni" (2002) (Ada Müzik 8 692646 501977)
  • Okay Temiz: Okay Temiz ve Ritim Atölyesi (2002) (Ada Müzik 8 692646 502127)
  • Don Cherry: Live in Stockholm (2013) (Caprice CAP 21836)

References

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Other sources

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Okay Temiz is a Turkish percussionist, drummer, composer, and bandleader known for his pioneering fusion of traditional Turkish rhythms and instruments with jazz, avant-garde, and world music. His innovative approach, often described as ethno-jazz or world jazz, has bridged Eastern folk traditions with Western improvisation, earning him recognition as a key figure in global percussion and cross-cultural music. Born on February 11, 1939, in Istanbul, Temiz grew up influenced by his mother Naciye, a classically trained musician in Turkish traditions, and studied percussion and tympani at the State Conservatoire of Classical Music in Ankara. He began performing professionally in 1955, initially with dance and show groups in Turkey and touring internationally, and developed a talent for designing and building unique percussion instruments, including ethnic and electronic creations such as his signature copper drum kit and the Magic Pyramid. In the late 1960s, Temiz relocated to Sweden, where he formed long-term collaborations with musicians like trumpeter Don Cherry and saxophonist Maffy Falay, co-founding groups including Sevda (which blended Turkish folk melodies with jazz) and Xaba (an avant-garde ensemble with South African musicians Johnny Dyani and Mongezi Feza). In the mid-1970s he established Oriental Wind, a prominent ensemble that toured extensively in Europe and highlighted Turkish rhythms within jazz contexts, while he also worked with figures like Dexter Gordon and George Russell. Over subsequent decades, Temiz continued to explore traditional Turkish instruments such as the darbuka, davul, and zurna through recordings, collaborations with Turkish folk musicians, and conducting percussion workshops worldwide. His extensive discography and performances have consistently emphasized cultural exchange, bringing Turkish folklore to international audiences and integrating it into contemporary improvised music.

Early life and background

Family influences and childhood

Okay Temiz was born on February 11, 1939, in Istanbul. He was strongly influenced by his mother Naciye, who was classically trained in Turkish music, played the oud even during her pregnancy with him, and had graduated from the Muğla Musiki Muallim Mektebi conservatory where she studied oud, cümbüş, and general Turkish music traditions. Naciye served as his first teacher, introduced him to Turkish classical and folk music from an early age, and was the first to recognize and encourage his musical talent. After his father, a former military officer and pilot with an interest in mechanics, left the army, the family relocated to a large farm in Çatalca, where Temiz spent significant parts of his childhood working in the fields, tending animals, and living immersed in rural life. This environment exposed him to natural sounds and local folklore, while radio reception in the area brought in strong signals from Balkan stations alongside Turkish broadcasts of folklore, Turkish classical music, and Western classical works, broadening his early musical palette beyond his mother's direct influence. These family-driven experiences with Turkish musical traditions laid the foundation for his lifelong engagement with rhythm and percussion, leading him to begin playing professionally in 1955.

Formal education and training

Okay Temiz began his formal musical education at the State Conservatoire of Classical Music in Ankara, where he took percussion and tympanum courses. These studies provided him with foundational training in classical percussion techniques. He continued his training at the Tophane Art Institute after launching his professional musical career in 1955, which complemented his earlier conservatory work.

Professional beginnings in Turkey

Start of professional career

Okay Temiz began his professional music career in 1955 at the age of sixteen. He set out to tour Turkey and North Africa as a drummer with Turkish show groups, marking his entry into paid performance work after his formal training. In 1956, he joined a dance orchestra in Ankara, where he played the drumset and continued performing in such ensembles, gaining extensive experience in the local music scene. These early engagements allowed him to develop his percussion skills within Turkey's vibrant entertainment circuits, focusing on rhythm, timing, and ensemble playing before any international exposure.

Early performances and influences

Okay Temiz was born in Istanbul in 1939 and received his earliest musical influences from his mother, Naciye Temiz, who was classically trained in Turkish music and introduced him to the art from a young age. This family foundation sparked his lifelong passion for rhythm and percussion, which he later expanded through formal study. After his family relocated to a farm in Çatalca following his father's departure from the army, Temiz developed a deep sensitivity to natural rhythms, drawing inspiration from the sounds of animals, the environment, and everyday life on the farm. He pursued structured training in drums and percussion at the Ankara State Conservatory, where he honed his technical skills in both traditional and Western percussion techniques. He experimented with instruments like the darbuka, bongos, and congas, blending traditional Turkish rhythms with modern elements that would define his later innovations.

International breakthrough and relocation

Move to Sweden

Okay Temiz relocated to Sweden in the late 1960s after meeting trumpeter Maffy Falay and Don Cherry during visits to Stockholm. These encounters proved decisive in his decision to settle there, building on his prior professional experiences and European performances in Turkey-based groups. The relocation occurred amid Sweden's emerging role as a hub for experimental jazz and world music fusions, where Don Cherry had already established a presence as a pioneer in blending global influences. While sources consistently link the move to these meetings, the precise date of his permanent settlement varies slightly across accounts, often situated in the late 1960s before his documented collaborations intensified. This shift marked Temiz's initial integration into the European jazz community and opened pathways for sustained cross-cultural musical exploration.

Collaboration with Don Cherry

Okay Temiz developed a long-term musical partnership with American trumpeter Don Cherry after relocating to Sweden, blending Turkish percussion traditions with Cherry's pioneering world jazz explorations. Their collaboration began in 1969 and continued until Cherry's death in 1995, with Cherry showing particular interest in Turkish rhythms and facilitating Temiz's integration into European jazz scenes. In 1971, Temiz toured America and Europe with Don Cherry and South African bassist Johnny Dyani, performing in a trio format that emphasized improvisational interplay and cross-cultural fusion. A notable performance from this tour occurred in April 1971 in Paris, captured in live recordings by the ORTF, where Temiz provided dynamic rhythmic support on percussion alongside Cherry's pocket trumpet and Dyani's bass. This period produced key recordings, including material for the album Orient (1973), where Temiz contributed drums and percussion on tracks featuring Cherry, Dyani, and others in extended improvisational pieces. Another major collaborative work was Organic Music Society (1972), which incorporated Temiz's percussive elements into Cherry's expansive, organic approach to collective music-making. Later collaborations extended into subsequent decades, including work in 1978, the 1993 album Dona Nostra—on which Temiz performed alongside Cherry and other musicians—and a posthumous release in 2013 drawing from their shared material. These projects underscored Temiz's role in expanding Cherry's global sound palette through intricate rhythmic contributions.

Formation of Xaba

In 1972, Okay Temiz formed the trio Xaba with South African bassist Johnny Dyani and trumpeter Mongezi Feza. This group emerged following Temiz's earlier collaborations with Dyani in Don Cherry's ensembles. The trio produced two albums that same year, Music for Xaba and Music for Xaba, Volume Two, featuring free jazz improvisations blending South African elements with Temiz's distinctive percussion. The recordings capture the project's spontaneous energy, with Dyani also contributing piano and vocals alongside his bass work, and were engineered and released through Swedish jazz channels.

Major groups and collaborations

Oriental Wind

Oriental Wind was a jazz fusion group formed and led by Okay Temiz in 1974, building on his earlier collaborations with Don Cherry and the group Xaba. The ensemble fused Turkish folk and traditional elements with jazz improvisation, prominently incorporating Turkish instruments such as the ney, gayda, zurna, kaval, ud, saz, and sipsi, while featuring various Turkish musicians to promote their international exposure. Active as Temiz's primary long-term project from the mid-1970s through the mid-1980s, Oriental Wind produced a series of notable albums that highlighted his percussive innovations and cross-cultural approach. The group's discography began with the self-titled debut Oriental Wind in 1977, recorded in Stockholm. This was followed by Zikir in 1979, recorded and mixed in February of that year, and Chila-Chila also in 1979. The group continued with Bazaar in 1981, recorded in January of that year, and concluded its main studio output with Life Road in 1983, recorded in June at Europa Film in Stockholm. These releases documented Oriental Wind's evolution as a key vehicle for Temiz's exploration of world music fusion during this period.

Karnataka College of Percussion and other partnerships

Okay Temiz developed a notable collaboration with the Karnataka College of Percussion, blending his Turkish percussion expertise with South Indian classical traditions and rhythms. This partnership produced the album Sankirna (1985), recorded with members of Oriental Wind alongside the Karnataka ensemble's musicians and vocalists. The project highlighted cross-cultural fusion through traditional Indian elements supporting Temiz's dynamic drumming. Later, the collaboration continued with Mishram (1996), a jazz-fusion recording that further explored Indo-Turkish musical intersections. Beyond these works, Temiz formed other significant partnerships across genres. He collaborated with French clarinetist Sylvain Kassap on improvisational projects, including the album Istanbul da Eylül (1989). With Greek clarinetist Floros Floridis and guitarist Nicky Skopelitis, he created a long-running trio focused on free improvisation, yielding albums such as Our Trip So Far (2001) and Three of a Sort (2011). Temiz also worked with groups including the Finnish folk ensemble Gjallarhorn and the German avant-garde band Embryo, contributing to experimental world music contexts.

Later collaborations

In the 1990s, Okay Temiz continued his innovative work through solo and collaborative releases that emphasized his percussion expertise. He released Magnet Dance in 1994, a project highlighting his distinctive approach to rhythm and sound. Following his return to Turkey in 1998 after decades abroad, Temiz deepened his engagement with local traditional musicians while maintaining international ties. He collaborated with Group Zourna on the 1998 album Karsilama, featuring zurna masters Ahmet Özden, Ali Özden, and Yusuf Ünal alongside his own performances on congas, daf, ghatam, tabla, talking drum, and Jew's harp. This project reflected his interest in integrating Turkish folk elements with broader improvisational contexts. In 2001, Temiz launched the Black Sea Art Project, a collaborative effort uniting musicians from the Black Sea region, including clarinetist Ivo Papazov, guitarist Enver Izmailov, accordionist Nariman Umerov, and others on instruments such as bassoon, trumpet, viola, and piano. The album featured Temiz on percussion with his son Akay Temiz on drums, exploring regional folk and improvisational forms. Temiz sustained this direction into the early 2000s with Darbukas & Zurnas in 2002, focusing on traditional Turkish percussion and zurna interplay. He has since pursued ongoing collaborations with world music artists, alongside teaching percussion workshops for adults and children, guest appearances with orchestras, and performances featuring his self-invented instruments like copper drums and the Artemiz. Details of his activities in subsequent decades remain somewhat incomplete in available sources.

Musical style and innovations

Percussion instruments

Okay Temiz is renowned for his innovative percussion instruments, particularly his self-crafted drums made from hand-beaten copper. These drums are modeled after the traditional Turkish darbuka, a goblet-shaped instrument, but feature double-headed designs in varying sizes that Temiz configured as tom-toms and bass drums within a custom kit. He began this development in Stockholm during the early 1970s, initially attaching bass drum pedals to large double-headed copper darbuka and progressively building a full drum set made entirely of hand-hammered copper components, including a snare drum, floor tom, hi-hat, and Paiste cymbals alongside the copper elements. This approach allowed him to create a personal sound that integrated traditional forms with his own modifications. In addition to the copper drums, Temiz has invented other distinctive percussion setups, such as the Artemiz, which consists of large racks incorporating camel and sheep bells. He also created the Magic Pyramid, a three-sided electronic drum built after a visit to the Egyptian pyramids in Cairo inspired him to conceptualize the structure as a playable instrument. These creations reflect Temiz's ongoing practice of constructing instruments from metal, wood, and electronics to produce unique timbres tailored to his musical expression.

Fusion of Turkish traditions and jazz

Okay Temiz is recognized as a pioneering Turkish fusion jazz percussionist and drummer whose work blends the intricate rhythms and melodies of Turkish folk traditions with the improvisational elements of jazz. His approach creates a pulsating fusion that merges striking Turkish folk motifs and percussion patterns with western jazz structures and harmonies. Temiz serves as a bridge between Turkish percussion traditions and international jazz, including free improvisation, by incorporating authentic Turkish rhythmic cycles into jazz frameworks and exploring cross-cultural musical dialogues. This synthesis extends to combining Turkish elements with influences from African, Latin, and other global traditions within a jazz context, resulting in a musically borderless expression. His contributions are credited with establishing fusion jazz in Turkey, particularly through innovative integrations of Anatolian and Turkish folk rhythms into jazz improvisation and ensemble playing. Temiz has described his ongoing effort to build bridges between jazz and Turkish rhythms as a means to connect world music traditions. This stylistic fusion is facilitated by his custom and traditional instruments that enable seamless blending of these musical worlds.

Discography highlights

Albums as leader or co-leader

Okay Temiz has led or co-led numerous albums that highlight his pioneering role in fusing Turkish percussion traditions with jazz, avant-garde, and world music elements. His early leadership credit came with Turkish Folk Jazz (1975), performed by the Okay Temiz Trio and featuring clarinetist Saffet Gündeger alongside Temiz on drums and percussion. This album blended Turkish folk melodies with jazz improvisation, marking an important step in his exploration of cross-cultural sounds. In 1980, Temiz released Drummer of Two Worlds, a solo project where he performed all instruments himself, including grand piano, handmade drums, and amplified percussion, creating a personal synthesis of diverse musical influences. The recording emphasized his multi-instrumental approach and rhythmic innovation. From 1977 to 1983, Temiz led the ensemble Oriental Wind, producing a series of albums that featured collaborations with international musicians and focused on rhythmic experimentation within a jazz fusion framework. The group's self-titled debut, Oriental Wind (1977), established this direction, with subsequent releases including studio and live material extending through the early 1980s. Later leadership efforts included Magnet Dance (1995), which continued his emphasis on magnetic percussion interplay and hybrid styles. Karsilama (1999), recorded with The Zurna Project, drew on traditional Turkish karşılama dance rhythms integrated with contemporary arrangements. Black Sea Art Project (2001) incorporated musicians from the Black Sea region, such as clarinetist Ivo Papazov and bassoonist Alexander Alexandrov, to explore regional folk traditions through Temiz's percussive lens. These selected albums represent key milestones in Temiz's output as leader or co-leader, reflecting his consistent pursuit of rhythmic and cultural fusion.

Selected sideman and collaborative recordings

Okay Temiz has made significant contributions as a sideman and collaborator, particularly in cross-cultural jazz and world music projects that integrated his distinctive percussion style with diverse traditions. His most prominent sideman work came through his extended partnership with trumpeter Don Cherry, beginning in the late 1960s and yielding several influential recordings where Temiz provided percussion. Among these, Temiz performed percussion on Don Cherry's live album Orient, recorded in 1971 during concerts in Paris and Carpentras, France, collaborating alongside musicians such as Johnny Dyani and Han Bennink in improvisational settings that blended jazz with global influences. He also contributed percussion to Cherry's Organic Music Society, recorded in 1971 and released in 1972 on Caprice Records, a project emphasizing communal and organic musical approaches with various international participants. Their collaboration extended into the 1990s with Dona Nostra, recorded in 1993 and released on ECM, where Temiz again added percussion to Cherry's ensemble work. In 1972, Temiz joined bassist Johnny Dyani and trumpeter Mongezi Feza for the collaborative sessions that produced Music for Xaba (recorded November 1972 in Stockholm and released in 1973 on Sonet), where he played drums and percussion in an organic, unrehearsed trio exploring South African and global folk sounds. Temiz's collaborative recordings also include projects with India's Karnataka College of Percussion, such as Sankirna (1984), credited to Oriental Wind and the Karnataka College of Percussion, where he performed percussion in a fusion of Turkish, Indian, and jazz elements, and Mishram (1995), another direct collaboration with the Karnataka ensemble that further explored rhythmic intersections between traditions. These selected recordings illustrate Temiz's role in bridging Turkish percussion techniques with African, Indian, and free jazz contexts through supportive yet innovative contributions.

Legacy and recognition

Influence on world music and percussion

Okay Temiz has established himself as a pivotal figure in the fusion of Turkish percussion traditions with global jazz and world music, serving as a bridge between Anatolian rhythms and international jazz scenes since the late 1960s. His work pioneered the integration of Turkish, Balkan, and Gypsy elements into jazz aesthetics, helping introduce Turkish melodies and polyrhythms to European and global audiences at a time when they were largely unfamiliar in jazz contexts. This cross-cultural approach contributed significantly to the emergence of world music as a genre, blending Turkish folk structures with jazz improvisation, African, Indian, and Latin influences. Temiz's innovations in percussion have further amplified his impact, as he invented and customized numerous instruments to expand rhythmic possibilities in fusion settings. These include hand-beaten copper darbuka sets adapted into full drum kits, the Artemiz rack incorporating camel and sheep bells, the electronic Magic Pyramid, and modified berimbaus with effects processing, allowing for novel timbres that merge traditional and modern elements. Such creations enabled fluid polyrhythmic layers that adapt across diverse musical contexts, reinforcing percussion's role as a communicative and expressive force in multicultural music. His influence extends through landmark collaborations and ensembles that demonstrated the viability of Turkish-jazz synthesis on international stages. Temiz is recognized as a legend whose reach surpasses avant-garde boundaries, with a distinctive fluidity that integrates Middle Eastern-inflected rhythms into jazz and rock frameworks while maintaining cultural authenticity. By emphasizing respect, listening, and organic interplay in his approach, he has inspired subsequent generations of musicians to explore multi-cultural percussion in world and fusion genres.

Current status and recent activities

In the early 2000s, Okay Temiz continued recording, including the 2002 release Okay Temiz Ve Ritm Atölyesi, which reflected his ongoing work with his rhythm workshop ensemble. Public documentation of his activities became more limited in the following years, with fewer major releases under his own name compared to earlier periods. As of 2023, Temiz remained active at age 84, primarily through music education and occasional collaborations. He continues to direct Ritm Atölyesi, a percussion-focused school and atelier in Istanbul's Galata district, where he instructs students of all levels—from beginners to professional musicians—on global rhythms, using hundreds of instruments, many of which he designed himself. This work emphasizes listening, respect for traditions, and community engagement, including regular group concerts with children. Recent collaborations include the 2021 electronica album Şelale with Belgian producer soFa, constructed around Temiz's performances on his custom-built instruments, and the 2023 live-recorded Direct-to-Disc Sessions with Turkish group Islandman, which followed rehearsals at Ritm Atölyesi and performances in London and Amsterdam. Several archival reissues have also appeared, such as Okay Temiz’s Oriental Wind – Live at Montreux Jazz Festival 1982 (2022), The ORTF Recordings Paris 1971 (2023), and Drummer of Two Worlds (2024 reissue), alongside the first vinyl release of Music For Turkish Theatre (2024), underscoring renewed interest in his historical contributions. Beyond 2023, detailed public information on Temiz's current activities, performances, or health remains scarce in available sources.

Areas of incomplete documentation

Despite Okay Temiz's influential career spanning Turkish percussion traditions and international jazz collaborations, several key aspects of his biography and achievements remain inadequately documented in accessible English-language and music industry sources. No major awards or formal honors are listed in standard discographical databases or biographical overviews, leaving his recognition primarily tied to critical praise and peer collaborations rather than institutional accolades. Information on his personal life is limited almost exclusively to early training and influences in Ankara and Istanbul, with little to no verified detail available on family, later residences, or non-musical pursuits. Most published sources concentrate on his prolific period from the 1970s through the 1990s, resulting in sparse coverage of any activities, recordings, or performances after the early 2000s. Major music reference sites show no confirmed credits for film scores, soundtracks, or television appearances, suggesting either minimal involvement in those media or insufficient archival documentation. These gaps underscore the need for primary source research, archival investigation, and updated interviews to provide a more complete picture of Temiz's contributions and life beyond his established discography.

References

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