Tom Coster
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Tom Coster | |
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Background information | |
Born | Detroit, Michigan, U.S. | August 21, 1941
Genres | Rock, Latin rock, jazz fusion, classical |
Occupation(s) | Musician, composer |
Instrument(s) | Keyboards, synthesizer, programming, piano, organ, accordion, guitar, bass guitar, drum machine |
Tom Coster (born August 21, 1941) is an American keyboardist, composer, and longtime backing musician for Carlos Santana.[1]
Early years
[edit]Detroit-born and San Francisco-raised, Coster played piano and accordion as a youth, continuing his studies through college and a productive five-year stint as a musician in the U.S. Air Force Band.
Career
[edit]Coster has played with and/or composed for many groups and musicians including The Loading Zone, Gábor Szabó, Carlos Santana, Billy Cobham, Third Eye Blind, Coryell/Coster/Smith, Claudio Baglioni, Stu Hamm, Boz Scaggs, Zucchero and Bobby Holiday, Joe Satriani, Frank Gambale, and Vital Information. Coster also produced several solo jazz fusion recordings as a leader for Fantasy, Headfirst, and JVC.
Some of Coster's best-known compositions are "Europa (Earth's Cry Heaven's Smile)", "Flor D'Luna (Moonflower)" and "Dance, Sister, Dance (Baila Mi Hermana)" performed by Santana and "The Perfect Date" performed by Vital Information.
Personal life
[edit]Coster's son was born in 1966, also called Tom Coster, also a keyboardist and composer.
Solo discography and personnel
[edit]- T.C. (Fantasy, 1981)
- Tom Coster - keyboards, Linn-1 drum machine programming
- Joaquin Lievano - guitar
- Randy Jackson - bass
- Steve Smith - drums
- Ivory Expeditions (Fantasy, 1983)
- Tom Coster - keyboards
- Joaquin Lievano - guitar
- Randy Jackson - bass
- Steve Smith - drums
- Walter Afanasieff - additional keyboards
- Tommy Coster - additional keyboards
- Did Jah Miss Me?!? (Headfirst/JVC, 1989)
- Tom Coster - keyboards
- Tommy Coster - keyboards
- Jordan Rudess - keyboards
- Ernie Watts - alto, soprano and tenor saxophones, and Yamaha WX-7 wind driver
- Norbert Stachel - tenor saxophone
- Frank Gambale - acoustic and electric guitars
- Randy Jackson - electric bass
- Dennis Chambers - drums
- Steve Smith - drums
- Larry Grenadier - acoustic bass
- From Me to You (Headfirst/JVC, 1990)
- Tom Coster - keyboards
- Tommy Coster - keyboards
- Mark Russo - saxophones
- Corrado Rustci - guitar
- Kai-Eckhardt Karpeh - bass
- William Kennedy - drums
- Armando Peraza - congas, bongos
- Jimi Tunnell - vocals
- Gotcha (JVC, 1992)
- Tom Coster - keyboards, computer programming, synth and drum programming
- Mark Russo - saxophones
- Chris Camozzi - guitar
- Alphonso Johnson - electric and fretless bass
- Dennis Chambers - drums
- Norbert Stachel - saxophones
- Let's Set the Record Straight (JVC, 1993)
- Tom Coster - keyboards
- Bob Berg - saxophones
- Frank Gambale - acoustic and electric guitars
- Alphonso Johnson - electric and fretless bass
- Dennis Chambers - drums
- Raul Rekow - congas, bata, vocals
- Karl Perazzo - congas, bongos
- Steve Smith - drums
- Tommy Coster - Producer, keyboards and synth
- The Forbidden Zone (JVC, 1994)
- Tom Coster - keyboards, synthe bass
- Bob Berg - tenor saxophone
- Scott Henderson - guitars
- Jeff Andrews - electric bass
- Alphonso Johnson - electric and fretless bass
- Dennis Chambers - drums
- Raul Rekow - congas, bata, chekere, vocal chant
- Karl Perazzo - timbales, congas, miscellaneous percussion
- Tommy Coster - Producer
- Interstate '76 Soundtrack (w/Bullmark) (Activision, 1996)
- Tom Coster - keyboards
- Arion Salazar (Third Eye Blind) - electric bass
- Bryan Mantia (Primus) - drums & percussion
- Jon Bendich -
- Les Harris (Curveball) -
- Dave Schul (Curveball) -
- From the Street (JVC, 1996)
- Tom Coster - keyboards, synth bass
- Bob Malach - tenor saxophone
- Michael Brecker - tenor saxophone
- Dean Brown - rhythm guitar
- Steve Cardenas - lead guitar
- Dennis Chambers - drums
- Sheila E. - percussion
- Stu Hamm - electric bass
- Mark Isham - trumpet and cornet
- Tim Landers - electric and acoustic bass
- Tommy Coster - Producer
References
[edit]- ^ Wiseman, Rich (May 6, 1976). "Carlos Santana Comes Home". Rolling Stone. Retrieved February 22, 2024.
External links
[edit]- 1941 births
- Living people
- American jazz organists
- American male organists
- Santana (band) members
- Keytarists
- Musicians from Detroit
- Jazz musicians from Michigan
- 21st-century American organists
- American male jazz musicians
- 21st-century American keyboardists
- Vital Information members
- 20th-century American keyboardists
- Fantasy Records artists
- JVC Records artists
- United States Air Force Band musicians
- United States military musicians