Jazz Fusion

Died On This Date (October 26, 2025) Jack DeJohnette / Legendary Jazz Drummer

Jack DeJohnette
August 9, 1942 – October 26, 2025

Photo by Ric Brooks via Wikimedia

Jack DeJohnette, one of jazz’s most inventive and versatile drummers, died on October 26, 2025, at his home in Woodstock, New York. He was 83.

Born in Chicago on August 9, 1942, DeJohnette began his musical life behind a piano before shifting to drums in his teens, developing a rhythmic language that would redefine modern jazz. His playing was as much about melody as timekeeping, a swirl of touch, tone, and texture that spoke with a pianist’s sensitivity and a bandleader’s instinct.

DeJohnette’s rise coincided with a revolution in sound. By the late 1960s he was anchoring Miles Davis’ groundbreaking electric period, his drumming propelling “Bitches Brew,” “Jack Johnson,” and “On the Corner” into uncharted territory. He later became an essential part of Keith Jarrett’s Standards Trio, a partnership that lasted more than three decades and yielded some of the most revered recordings in modern jazz. Along the way he collaborated with giants like Herbie Hancock, Pat Metheny, Sonny Rollins, and Charles Lloyd, while releasing a steady stream of his own albums that showcased his range as a composer and bandleader.

He approached the drum kit as a complete instrument, not just rhythm but color and emotion. “I am hearing orchestrally,” he once said, and that awareness gave his music both depth and space. Whether in free improvisation, straight-ahead swing, or fusion explorations, DeJohnette’s pulse was alive, breathing and responsive.

Honored as a National Endowment for the Arts Jazz Master in 2012, he continued to perform and record well into his later years, always open to new ideas and new players. Offstage, he lived quietly in Woodstock with his wife Lydia, balancing creativity with calm and family life.