As leader Main sources: Almost all of Garrick's early recordings have been reissued on CD, especially through the Vocalion label.
Moonscape was reissued in 2007 on Trunk Records. Albums from the 1990s to 2010 appeared mainly on his Jazz Academy label.
As co-leader With The Don Rendell / Ian Carr Quintet •
Dusk Fire (Columbia, 1966) •
Phase III (Columbia, 1968) •
Live (Columbia, 1969) •
Change Is (Columbia, 1969) •
Live in London (Harkit, 2003) – live rec. 1965
As sidemen With Nette Robinson •
Remembered Time (Jazz Academy, 2010) – as Michael Garrick Trio
Compositions •
Praises: a miscellany of religious texts and images for jazz group, organ, and chorus. Recorded in 1965:
Simon Preston (organ), Louis Halsey's Elizabethan Singers, and jazz quintet with Joe Harriott (
alto sax) and Shake Keane (trumpet) • ''Mr Smith's Apocalypse
: cantata (poems by John Smith). Commission from Farnham Festival, 1969. Same forces as Praises'', plus readers. Recorded in 1970 with the Garrick septet. •
Judas Kiss: the Passion of Christ. Text compiled from the four gospels. Commission from Nottingham Festival, 1971. Same forces as ''Mr Smith's Apocalypse'', with string orchestra added in 1990. Not commercially recorded. •
A Hobbit Suite or
Gemstones: suite based on
J. R. R. Tolkien The Hobbit, in nine sections. Commission from Mersey Arts, 1973 for jazz sextet, including the voice of
Norma Winstone. Later expanded for jazz orchestra. Recorded in 1994 (selections from expanded version). •
Jazz Portraits: an ongoing project from 1975, depicting figures from jazz such as
Duke Ellington,
John Coltrane,
Dizzy Gillespie,
McCoy Tyner,
Thelonious Monk, and
Bill Evans; for large and small ensembles. •
Underground Streams: an after-death soliloquy, with interludes from angels and other heavenly beings. Based on
Rudolf Steiner's 1912 lecture-cycle
Life between Death and Rebirth. Commission from the Jazz Centre Society, London, 1978. Forces: voice, guitar, and piano. First performance at South Bank Centre, June 1978 with Norma Winstone (voice), Phil Lee (guitar), and Garrick (piano). Not commercially recorded; broadcast on BBC Radio 3. •
Hardy Country: suite for small or large ensemble, with or without vocal part; in nine self-contained movements, plus three poem settings for speaker. Commission from South-West Arts and
Eldridge Pope, brewers, of
Dorchester. First performance June 1990 in the Thomas Hardy Hall by jazz quartet with Norma Winstone. Later expanded for jazz orchestra. Selections of expanded version recorded in 1994. •
A Zodiac of Angels: suite of twelve pieces, depicting the situation and function of twelve heavenly beings as defined in
A Dictionary of Angels by
Gustav Davidson; selected and turned into verse by John Smith. Commission from Manchester Education Authority for symphony orchestra, six jazz instrumental soloists, jazz singer, chorus, and soloists. First performance at Royal Northern College of Music Opera Theatre, January 1988 in a fully staged (dance) version. •
The Royal Box: suite in nine movements based on phrases connected with royalty (e.g., "The Old Pretender", "The Royal Prerogative", "A Lady in Waiting", etc.). Inspired by the media treatment of the British Royal Family, in particular Prince Charles and Princess Diana. In two versions: piano/bass/drums trio and jazz orchestra. Trio version recorded complete; selections of jazz-orchestra version recorded. •
Bovingdon Poppies: oratorio of poem "Bovingdon Poppies" (a poem by Eva Travers), for chorus, soloists, jazz sextet, and string orchestra. First performance: Remembrance Day, November 1993. ==Autobiography==