In 1967, Brecker ventured into jazz-rock with the band
Blood, Sweat & Tears, on their first album
Child Is Father to the Man, but left to join the
Horace Silver Quintet. Brecker recorded his first solo album,
Score, in 1968, featuring his brother
Michael Brecker. After Horace Silver, Randy Brecker joined
Art Blakey's Jazz Messengers before teaming up with brother Michael,
Barry Rogers,
Billy Cobham, and
John Abercrombie to form the fusion group
Dreams. The group recorded two albums:
Dreams and
Imagine My Surprise for
Columbia Records before they disbanded in 1971. In the early 1970s, Brecker performed live with many artists, including
The Eleventh House,
Stevie Wonder, and
Billy Cobham. He also recorded several albums with his brother under pianist/composer
Hal Galper. By 1975, Randy and Michael formed the
Brecker Brothers band. They released six albums on
Arista and garnered seven Grammy nominations between 1975 and 1981. Their first record,
The Brecker Bros., featured Randy's composition "Some Skunk Funk", and he composed several pieces on this and subsequent albums. After the Brecker Brothers disbanded in 1982, Randy recorded and toured as a member of
Jaco Pastorius' Word of Mouth big band. It was soon thereafter that he met and later married Brazilian jazz pianist
Eliane Elias. Eliane and Randy formed their own band, touring the world several times and recording one album named after their daughter together,
Amanda, on
Passport Records. In 1977 he founded the jazz club
Seventh Avenue South with his brother Michael Brecker. in Denmark in 2017 In 1992 Randy and Michael reunited for a world tour and the triple-Grammy nominated GRP recording
The Return of the Brecker Brothers. The follow-up, 1994's
Out of the Loop, was a double-Grammy winner. In 1995, he was featured on
Turtles, an album by Polish composer
Włodek Pawlik. In 1997,
Into the Sun (Concord), a recording featuring Brecker's impressions of Brazil, garnered Brecker his first Grammy as a solo artist. In 2001, Brecker released ''Hangin' in the City'' (ESC), a solo project that introduced his alter-ego Randroid with lyrics and vocals by Randroid himself. This CD was released in Europe, where Brecker toured extensively with his own line-up. Brecker's next CD for ESC Records,
34th N Lex, won him his third Grammy for Best Contemporary Jazz Album in 2003. That summer he went back to Europe with the
Bill Evans Soulbop Band. In the summer of 2003, the Brecker Brothers appeared in
Japan at the
Mount Fuji Jazz Festival. 2004 saw Brecker touring Europe as co-leader (with Bill Evans) of the band Soulbop. The
WDR Big Band also invited Brecker to perform at the [Jazz Fest]. The date was of significance to Randy as it was the last time he played with his brother, who took ill shortly thereafter with a rare form of leukemia known as
MDS. In 2005, Brecker's wife Ada (married 2001) sat in for the first time. Brecker's schedule continued with the Randy Brecker Band performing throughout Eastern Europe. In 2007, Brecker was awarded his fourth Grammy for
Randy Brecker Live with the WDR Big Band (Telarc/BHM), the live recording (also available in DVD format) of his performance with Michael at the Leverkusen Jazz Fest in 2004. Michael died that same year on January 13. 2007 also saw the release of a two-CD set of live recordings of the band Soulbop (BHM) featuring
Dave Kikoski,
Victor Bailey,
Steve Smith, Rodney Holmes and
Hiram Bullock. Brecker returned to Brazilian music in 2008 for the album
Randy in Brazil, which was recorded in
São Paulo with Brazilian musicians and released on
Summit Records. Chosen as one of the top 10 CDs of 2008 by
All About Jazz, the CD won the Grammy for "Best Contemporary Jazz Album", bringing his Grammy total to five. In 2009, Brecker released
Jazz Suite Tykocin, a project initiated and conceived by Włodek Pawlik, featuring Randy as a soloist with members of the Bialystok Philharmonic.
Tykocin is the area in Poland where Brecker's ancestors (mother's maiden name: Tecosky) hail from, a fact that Pawlik discovered. 2011 saw the release of
The Jazz Ballad Song Book: Randy Brecker with the Danish Radio Big Band and The Danish National Chamber Orchestra, which garnered four Grammy nominations and critical acclaim. In 2012,
Legacy Recordings released the boxed set
The Brecker Brothers – The Complete Arista Albums Collection. In November of that year the album
Night in Calisia, a collaboration between Brecker, the Wlodek Pawlik Trio, the Kalisz Philharmonic Orchestra and Adam Klocek was released in Poland. The album came out in the US in August 2013, and won the 2014
Grammy Award for Best Large Jazz Ensemble Album, Brecker's sixth Grammy Award. A Brecker Brothers Band Reunion tour of European festivals in the summer of 2013 supported Brecker's
Brecker Brothers Band Reunion, a dual-disk project which was released on September 25, 2013, on Piloo Records. It features a live DVD recorded at the
Blue Note in New York City with a new 11-song studio recording featuring members of the Brecker Brothers bands from throughout the years including
David Sanborn,
Mike Stern,
Will Lee, and
Dave Weckl.
George Whitty produced the album, and Brecker's wife, Ada Rovatti, also played saxophone. The recording was released in North America by Magenta/E-One, in Europe by Moosicus Records in November, and in Japan by Victor. It is dedicated to his brother, Michael, and other departed Brecker Brothers Band members. In 2022, Brecker began performing the acoustic jazz compositions of his brother
Michael, arranged for the first time to include trumpet, with saxophonist Tod Dickow and the Bay Area trio, Charged Particles. Performances have included shows at
Birdland in New York, at
Ronnie Scott's Jazz Club in London, England, plus The Merchants House in
Glasgow, Scotland, SF Jazz in
San Francisco, Vibrato in
Los Angeles, the Scarborough Jazz Festival in
North Yorkshire, England, the San Jose Jazz, the new Palo Alto jazz club, The Spin Jazz Club in
Oxford, England, plus The Stoller Hall, also in England. The collaboration was the subject of an article in the
San Jose Mercury News, and a review of the Dazzle performance written by Geoff Anderson. ==Discography==