Stańko has performed across Europe, the United States and Asia, performing with excellent musicians such as Cecil Taylor, John Surman, Gary Peacock, Arild Andersen, Daniel Humair, Dave Holland, Don Cherry, Dino Saluzzi, Albert Mangelsdorff, Eddie Gomez, Jan Garbarek, Jack De Johnette, Palle Daniellson, Krzysztof Komeda, Adam Makowicz, Janusz Muniak, Zbigniew Seifert, Michał Urbaniak and Tomasz Szukalski. He has won numerous Polish and international music awards, and was the first winner of the European Jazz Award in 2003.
ECM
He has recorded with the famous ECM Records label, making such albums as Balladyna, Litania, Soul of Things and Lontano, among others. He also composed the soundtracks of Dziury w ziemi, Trąd and Pożegnanie z Marią, as well as for the theatre performances Wyzwolenie and Balladyna. Critic Paweł Baranowski called Stańko's1998 album From the Green Hill:
A record of wonderful charm. The exceptional beauty of his album is a result of the smoothly played trumpet, baritone saxophone, bass clarinet, violin, bandoneon, double bass and percussion in the rhythm section. You can just imagine the sound of this band. It is unbelievably smooth and delicate.
The album reinforced his growing international reputation, receiving the prestigious German Critics Prize (Deutscher Schallplattenpreis) for album of the year in 2000. In 2002 he won the first European Jazz Prize. His 2002 Soul of Things album also enjoyed enormous commercial success, which led to prestigious tours of Europe and the United States. Stuart Nicholson illustrates Stańko's important role in Poland's jazz music scene in the July/August 2002 issue of Jazztimes magazine and his foray onto the world stage:
Indeed, Stankoʼs standing in Polish jazz is impossible to overestimate. He has picked up so many awards honoring him as his countryʼs top jazz musician he has given up counting. He has spent his entire career as a professional jazz trumpeter, and most of that was at a time when Poland was behind the Iron Curtain, making it difficult for outsiders to follow his career. In recent years, however, Stanko has renewed his link with Manfred Eicherʼs ECM label in Munich - he first recorded on the label in 1975 with Balladyna - bringing him long overdue international recognition as one of the great individual voices in jazz.
Cooperation with Komeda
Tomasz Stańko graduated from the State Higher Music School in Kraków, where he studied violin, piano and trumpet. Inspite of his classical education, he was always interested in jazz, and when he was in secondary school he and Wacław Kisielewski founded a quartet. He often appeared as a guest at jam sessions at the Pod Jaszczurami club. In 1962 Stańko formed the group Jazz Darings ( with Adam Matyszkowicz on piano, Jacek Ostaszewski on double bass and Wiktor Perelemutter on drums), and with them he won first prize both for the band and as an individual musician at the Amateur Jazz Band Competition of Southern Poland. In 1963 he was invited to work with the famous composer and pianist Krzysztof Komeda.
Stańko played in Komeda's legendary quintet for four years, taking part in the recording of the album Astigmatic(1965). Komeda's music, although far from free jazz, was extremely modern and had a significant impact on young Stańko, especially in terms of melodic pattern. 1967 saw the formation of the famous Tomasz Stańko Quartet, with Janusz Muniak on saxophone and flute, Jan Gonciarczyk and Bronisław Suchanek on bass, and Janusz Stefański on drums. The following year the group was joined by Zbigniew Seifert on saxophone and violin, and the quartet was transformed into the Tomasz Stanko Quintet. The band recorded three albums: Music for K. (1970), Jazz Message from Poland (1972) and Purple Sun (1973). Depending on the period, the group played everything from full improvisation to pieces in which a strictly defined theme set the stage for instrumental solo performances.
Electronic inspirations
In 1973 Stańko recorded Fish Face with drummers Stu Martin and Tomasz Szukalski, making him one of the first jazz musicians to experiment with electronics. Until the mid-1980s Stańko was not a member of any group, although he played with various musicians and recorded with saxophonist Tomasz Szukalski and drummer Edward Vesala, producing albums like Twet (with Peter Warren on bass) and Balladyna (with Dave Holland on bass). While it was often hard for him to travel outside of Poland, he made several trips to the United States, Stańko recorded with Cecil Taylor and Gary Peacock, and in India he made a solo recording inside the Taj Mahal. In 1985 he set up the group Freelectronic, experimenting with synthetic sounds.
Return to the acoustic music
He returned to acoustic music in the 1990s, working with Jon Christensen and Arild Andersen (on Bluish), Bobo Stenson, and Anders Jormin and Tony Oxley (on Bosonossa and Other Ballads). For almost ten years, Stańko has been giving concerts and recording for ECM Records along with several young musicians from the Simple Acoustic Trio (Marcin Wasilewski on piano, Sławomir Kurkiewicz on bass and Michał Miśkiewicz on drums).