Guitarist
Al di Meola first rose to prominence as a blazing jazz fusion player before his playing matured and he began to conquer other styles, such as acoustic Latin music. Born on July 22, 1954, in Jersey City, NJ,
di Meola briefly studied at the Berklee School of Music in Boston during the early '70s before accepting a job replacing guitarist
Bill Connors in fusion trailblazers
Return to Forever (a group that included such monster instrumentalists as keyboardist
Chick Corea and bassist
Stanley Clarke) in 1974. It was with
di Meola that
Return to Forever enjoyed their greatest commercial success, as such releases as 1974's
Where Have I Known Before, 1975's
No Mystery, and 1976's
Romantic Warrior cracked the U.S. Top 40 before
di Meola jumped ship to launch a solo career.
What followed remains some of the finest jazz fusion guitar-based recordings ever: 1976's
Land of the Midnight Sun, 1977's
Elegant Gypsy (which would eventually earn gold certification in the U.S.), and
Casino, plus 1979's
Splendido Hotel, before uniting with fellow guitar greats
John McLaughlin and
Paco de Lucía for 1980's
Friday Night in San Francisco. Throughout the '80s and '90s,
di Meola racked up numerous accolades (including earning yearly top honors in Guitar Player Magazine polls), kept on issuing solo releases on a regular basis, and played with others, including releases by
Stomu Yamash'ta,
Paul Simon,
Stanley Jordan, and
David Matthews, as well as further work with such former bandmates as
Corea,
Clarke,
de Lucía, and
McLaughlin. During the '90s,
di Meola turned his back almost entirely on fusion to concentrate more on acoustic-based world music, as evidenced by such releases as
World Sinfonia,
Di Meola Plays Piazzolla, and
Heart of the Immigrants, among others. Since that time,
Di Meola has continued this eclectic approach with releases like 2003's
Revisited, 2006's
Consequence of Chaos, and 2007's Diabolic Inventions and Seduction for Solo Guitar, Vol. 1: Music of Astor Piazzolla. ~ Greg Prato, All Music Guide