By Jocelyn Noveck

American jazz drummer, pianist, and composer Jack DeJohnette performs at the Five Continents Marseille Jazz festival, in Marseille, southern France on July 18, 2018. (AP Photo/Claude Paris, File)
American jazz drummer, pianist, and composer Jack DeJohnette performs at the Five Continents Marseille Jazz festival, in Marseille, southern France on July 18, 2018. (AP Photo/Claude Paris, File)

NEW YORK (AP) โ€” Jack DeJohnette, a celebrated jazz drummer who worked with Miles Davis on his landmark 1970 fusion album and collaborated with Keith Jarrett and a vast array of other jazz greats, has died at 83.

The acclaimed drummer, bandleader and composer died Sunday in Kingston, New York, of congestive heart failure, surrounded by his wife, family and close friends, his assistant, Joan Clancy, told The Associated Press.

A winner ofย two Grammy awards,ย the Chicago-born DeJohnette began his musical life as a classical pianist, starting training at age 4, before taking up the drums with his high school band. He was in demand in his early years as both a pianist and a drummer.

Over the years he collaborated not only with Davis and Jarrett but also with names like John Coltrane, Sun Ra, Thelonious Monk, Stan Getz, Chet Baker, Sonny Rollins, Herbie Hancock, Betty Carter โ€” โ€œvirtually every major jazz figure from the 1960s on,โ€ wrote the National Endowment for the Arts, which honored him in 2012 with a Jazz Master Fellowship.

In an interview for the NEA at the time, DeJohnette described what he felt was the nature of his talent.

โ€œThe best gift that I have is the ability to listen, not only listen audibly but listen with my heart,โ€ he said. โ€œIโ€™ve been fortunate enough to play with a lot of musicians and leaders who allowed me to have that freedom.โ€

He added: โ€œI just never doubted that I would be successful at this because it just feels like somethingโ€™s going through me and lifting me up, and carrying me. All I had to do was acknowledge this gift and put it to use.โ€

In 1968, DeJohnette joined Davis and his group to work on music leading up to Davisโ€™ 1970 influential studio album, โ€œBitches Brew.โ€

In a Sessions Panel interview, DeJohnette spoke of how he heโ€™d been freelancing in New York when the opportunity arose to join Davis in the studio, at a time when experimentation with genres had become โ€œthe new frontier, so to speak.โ€

โ€œMiles was in a creative mood,โ€ DeJohnette said, โ€œa process of utilizing the studio to go in every day and experiment with grooves. A lot of the music is not that structured … it was a matter of grooves, and sometimes a few notes or a few melodies. Youโ€™d turn the tape on and just let it roll.โ€

โ€œDays and days and days of this would go on,โ€ DeJohnette added. โ€œWe never thought about how important these records would be, it was just we knew it was important because Miles was there and he was moving forward with something different.โ€

Rolling Stone, which listed DeJohnette as one of the top 100 drummers of all time (at No. 40), cited the drummerโ€™s โ€œown innate knack for turning a memorable tune.โ€

Born Aug. 9, 1942 in Chicago, DeJohnette grew up in a family that placed great importance on music and its appreciation, according to background material on his website. He studied classical piano as a child privately and then at the Chicago Conservatory of Music. He turned to the drums at age 14, when he joined his school band.

โ€œI listened to opera, country and western music, rhythm and blues, swing, jazz, whatever,โ€ his website quotes him as saying. โ€œTo me, it was all music and all great. Iโ€™ve kept that integrated feeling about music, all types of music, and just carried it with me.โ€

As a sideman on piano and drums and also with his own groups, DeJohnette had become part of the Chicago jazz scene by the mid-1960s. He was active with the Association for the Advancement of Creative Musicians and later drummed alongside Rashied Ali in the John Coltrane Quintet. It was his involvement with Charles Lloydโ€™s quartet, where he first performed with Jarrett, that brought him international recognition.

In 1968, DeJohnette joined Davisโ€™ group ahead of the recording of โ€œBitches Brew,โ€ and remained with him for three years, contributing to further albums while also recording his own as a leader, beginning with the 1969 release โ€œThe DeJohnette Complex.โ€

DeJohnette recorded on various labels during his career but mostly on ECM. In addition to his own many projects and bands, he was a member of the Standards Trio, with Jarrett and Gary Peacock, for more than 25 years.

His two Grammys were for new age album (โ€œPeace Timeโ€) in 2009, a continuous, hourlong piece of music, and for jazz instrumental album (โ€œSkylineโ€) in 2022.

DeJohnette is survived by his wife, Lydia DeJohnette, and two adult daughters, Farah DeJohnette and Minya DeJohnette, Clancy said.