FREE FLIGHT

Creativity without Compromise

Free Flight was fathered by Jim Walker in 1980 as a jazz outlet from his career as principal flutist with the Los Angeles Philharmonic. (Scroll down for Photos & Videos or click here for audio samples.)

Their sound has turned jazz fans into classical buffs and classical audiences toward jazz. From Bach to Beethoven to Miles Davis to the Beatles, their “eclecticism without compromise” can be heard not simply piece by piece, but within each composition, blending together flavors of classical, jazz, new age and rock music into a palatable whole.

Whatever legitimacy the label “Crossover” holds for their sound, in performance Free Flight always encourages the crossover of audiences' tastes no matter what the setting.

Leader and flutist, Jim Walker, says Free Flight has always been “Performance-oriented, reaching people above and beyond the style of music played.” And the proof is, they have never had anything close to a mediocre reaction to any performance. A critic may have put it best: “If you can sit still while listening to Free Flight, you're either deaf or dead.”

Their ongoing success comes as much from their personalities as from technical brilliance, improvisational flair and compositional density. Audiences know, Free Flight is Fun!

The clairvoyant interplay between Jim & Mike Garson or Bryan Pezzone flows down into the crowd, uplifting and always entertaining. An evening of Free Flight may possess the cool side of jazz, the tranquillity of classical, as well as rock's drive, but make no mistake: Free Flight doesn't distance itself from it's listeners with these, its personalities draw people in.

Modern technology has allowed the group to keep up with the contemporary production standards, while relying primarily on the sonority of the acoustic flute, piano, bass & percussion.

Jim says his concept of a flute-led jazz/classical ensemble had a strong appeal to a musician raised on jazz, but who found his profession in world-famous orchestras for 15 years. Ten recordings plus appearances on the “Tonight Show”, Lincoln Center, and the Hollywood Bowl have justified that appeal.

Free Flight on the Tonight Show: November 1982

Jim Walker's jazz/classical group "Free Flight" performing on the Tonight Show in November 1982. Carson was so impressed by them he invited them back to perform the very next night.

 
 

Free Flight at the Playboy Jazz Festival: Hollywood Bowl, 1982

Free Flight & The Dave Brubeck Quintet live in concert at the Playboy Jazz Festival at the Hollywood Bowl in June 1982.