Eicher was born in
Lindau, Germany. He studied music at the Academy of Music in Berlin. He started as a
double-bass player of classical music and later became a
record producer. In 1969, he founded
ECM Records (Edition of Contemporary Music) in Munich. Some of the jazz artists he has recorded over more than 50 years of his career include
Paul Bley,
Keith Jarrett,
John Abercrombie,
Jan Garbarek,
Egberto Gismonti,
Chick Corea,
Gary Burton,
Jack DeJohnette,
Anouar Brahem,
Dave Holland,
Pat Metheny,
Ralph Towner,
Terje Rypdal,
Steve Kuhn,
Eberhard Weber,
Jon Hassell, and the
Art Ensemble of Chicago.
The Köln Concert, a solo piano performance by Keith Jarrett, recorded and released by ECM in 1975, became the all-time best-selling jazz solo piano album. In 1984, Eicher started a sublabel, ECM New Series, for
classical music. Some of the artists whose work was released on the New Series were
Steve Reich,
Arvo Pärt,
John Adams,
Gavin Bryars,
Meredith Monk, and the mediaeval composer
Pérotin. The best-selling album
Officium (1994)—the idea for which "occurred to Mr. Eicher while he was in Iceland to work on [the film]
Holocene"—was a collaboration between Jan Garbarek and the
Hilliard Ensemble, performing compositions by
Cristóbal de Morales, Pérotin and others. In 1992, Eicher co-directed and co-wrote the film
Holozän (
Man in the Holocene). In 2002 he wrote the score for the Israeli film
Kedma. Pianist Steve Kuhn has said of him: "If he likes you, Manfred is a wonderful producer. If not, you might as well make a record on the moon. Personally, I admire jazz musicians like Louis Armstrong, Ahmad Jamal and Count Basie, who showed that less is more. But before meeting Manfred Eicher, I hardly practiced it myself." (
Artist Interviews) Eicher has produced most of the records released on his label. Each jazz record takes an average of two days to record and one day to mix. Most were recorded with
Jan Erik Kongshaug (of Talent Studios and later Rainbow Studios in Oslo, Norway) as
sound engineer. Eicher has produced more than a thousand albums to date. "Eicher's deceptively simple aesthetic is unfailingly harmonious. He records musicians he likes, allows them to trust their own instincts, and plays a directorial role." (
Jazz Review) ==Awards==