This browser does not support basic Web standards, preventing the display of our site's intended design. May we suggest that you upgrade your browser?


Jazz Festival Banner
 

Jazz Festival 2002

Guest Artists


 
 
  To top of page The Dave Holland Jazz Quintet

Artists Series Concert
Kickoff for Jazz Festival
Thursday, March 14, 2002
Zorn Arena, 7:30 p.m.

Dave Holland, Robin Eubanks, Chris Potter, Steve Nelson and Billy Kilson will kick off UW-Eau Claire's Jazz Festival 2002.

Holland_Quintet.jpg (629964 bytes)

“And what can you say about Dave Holland?” wrote Down Beat. “He makes any band he plays in sound superb with his muscular, round tones, his impeccable time, his craft, swinging solos, his uncanny way of offering just what is needed. Some bassists are as good, but no one’s better.” Dave Holland has a long and varied history in jazz, having worked with such jazz greats as Ray Brown, Leroy Vinnegar, James E. Merritt, Miles Davis, Chick Corea, Anthony Braxton, Barry Altschul, Stan Getz and Sam Rivers. Formed in 1997, his current quintet recorded the album Points of View following an extensive European tour. “I don’t know if it’s because I’m a bass player, but I’m very intrigued by group interaction,” Holland says. “The dialogue gives you a chance to really get in there and be involved in more than just the role-playing in the music, but actually be involved in commenting and discussing, having a conversation musically.”


To top of page Dave Holland, Bass & Bandleader

Dave Holland was born in Wolverhampton, England, on October 1, 1946. He was drawn to music at an early age, starting with the ukelele at age 4, moving to the guitar at 10 and then to the bass guitar at 13. Other than a brief period of piano lessons, in these years he was largely self-taught, learning the popular music of the day from song books and the radio. At 13 he and a few friends formed a band and began playing at the local clubs and dances. By the age of 15 he had joined another band, and as that group was starting to work regularly, he decided to leave school and try and earn a living as a musician. It was around this time that in a search to expand his ideas on the bass guitar, he began listening to jazz and heard on records the great bassists Ray Brown and Leroy Vinnegar. This had a profound affect on Dave and he quickly got a double bass and began practicing with the records. Although he was still working as a bass guitarist, he began going to jazz clubs with his double bass and sitting in with the local jazz players. In the summer of 1963, at the age of 17, he was offered a job playing double bass with a dance band that was working at a holiday resort for the summer season. This was followed by a short tour with a big band that was accompanying the singer Johnny Ray, and then came an offer of a job in London playing music in a restaurant.

As soon as he moved to London Dave began studying with James E. Merritt, who was the principal bassist of the London Philharmonic Orchestra and teaching at the Guildhall School of Music & Drama. In the spring of 1964, on Mr. Merritt's recommendation, he applied for admission to a three year program at the Guildhall School and after taking the entrance exam, was admitted in September of that year with a full scholarship.

This began a period of intense musical experiences for Dave. By his second year at the school he was the principle bassist in the school orchestra and was also beginning to work with a wide variety of people in the London jazz community. His early jazz work was with bands that were playing in the early New Orleans' style of King Oliver and Louis Armstrong, but he was soon working with many other groups that ranged in style from swing to modern.

By 1966 he had begun playing with John Surman, John McLaughlin, Evan Parker, Kenny Wheeler, John Taylor, Chris MacGregor and other London based musicians who were being influenced by the contemporary jazz innovations of the times. He was particularly inspired during this period by bassists Charles Mingus, Scott LaFaro, Jimmy Garrison, Ron Carter and Gary Peacock. His studies at school also introduced him to the works of many contemporary classical composers and they also had an important influence on him, particularly the music of Bela Bartok. Other activities during this time included free-lance work with chamber orchestras, and a variety of studio work, recording music for television, film, radio and records.

By 1967 Dave was appearing frequently at Ronnie Scott's with such jazz greats as Coleman Hawkins, Ben Webster and Joe Henderson. It was during an engagement there in July of 1968 that Miles Davis visited the club, heard Dave playing, and asked him to join his band. Dave moved to New York a few weeks later and for the next two years toured and appeared on a number of recordings with Miles including In A Silent Way and Bitches Brew. When not on the road with Miles, he worked with many others in the New York music community.

In late 1970 Dave left Miles' band and together with Chick Corea, Anthony Braxton and Barry Altschul founded the group Circle. It was at this time that he started performing on cello as well as bass. After working together for a year Circle disbanded, and early in 1972 Dave joined Stan Getz's group. He also had the opportunity during this period to work briefly with Thelonious Monk, and began what was to be a long musical relationship with Sam Rivers. Later that year he recorded his first album as a leader, the widely acclaimed Conference of the Birds. He also began teaching privately and as a guest teacher at the Creative Music Studio in Woodstock, New York, run by Karl and Ingrid Berger. At the beginning of 1973 Dave left the Getz quartet and began concentrating on working with Anthony Braxton in duo and group situations, and with Sam Rivers in duo and other settings. In 1975 he took part in the formation of Gateway, a trio with John Abercrombie and Jack DeJohnette, a fellow band member from the Miles Davis band. Gateway continues to tour and record up to the present time. After working with Betty Carter for a few months in 1976, Dave spent the remainder of the decade working and recording with Sam Rivers. He also recorded an album of solo bass music in 1977 entitled Emerald Tears and began performing solo concerts.

The 1980's started with Dave continuing to work with Sam Rivers, but in 1981 he left the band so that he could turn his attention to putting together his own group. After recording the solo cello album Life Cycle, he was ready to assemble his first full time working band. The first version of the group was a quintet featuring Kenny Wheeler, Julian Priester, Steve Coleman and Steve Ellington. Later members included Marvin "Smitty" Smith and Robin Eubanks. The group recorded three groundbreaking albums Jumpin' In, Seeds of Time and The Razor's Edge and toured extensively until 1987.

Following the disbanding of the quintet Dave continued working in a trio format, and in 1988 recorded the poll winning album Triplicate with Jack DeJohnette and Steve Coleman. He also performed with Hank Jones and recorded two albums with him, one of them with Billy Higgins.

In 1988 Dave formed a new band, a quartet with Steve Coleman, Kevin Eubanks and Marvin "Smitty" Smith, and in 1989 the group recorded Extensions, an album that was voted album of the year in Downbeat magazine, and received worldwide acclaim.

Dave also continued with his teaching activities throughout the 1980's. In 1983 he was appointed artistic director of the summer jazz workshop at the Banff School in Banff, Canada, a position he held until 1990, and from 1987 to 1990 he was a full time faculty member of the the New England Conservatory of Music in Boston, Massachusetts.

During 1990 Dave was part of a world tour with Jack DeJohnette's Parallel Realities, a group featuring Herbie Hancock and Pat Metheny, and also performed on the Grammy nominated recording, Question and Answer, with Metheny and Roy Haynes. In 1992 Dave began appearing as a regular member of Herbie Hancock's trio and also performed on Joe Henderson's Grammy Award winning recording So Near, So Far.

1993 started with a tour of Europe performing solo concerts, after which Dave recorded his second solo bass album, Ones All. Later that year he took part in an extensive tour with a special project featuring Betty Carter, Geri Allen and Jack DeJohnette. This group was recorded live at the Royal Festival Hall in London and this recording was released in 1994 under the title Feed the Fire .

Early in 1994 Dave formed a new quartet with Steve Nelson, Eric Person and Gene Jackson . The summer was spent touring with Gateway and in December the trio recorded an album for ECM entitled Homecoming. Dave's quartet performed in Europe and America and early in 1995 the band recorded the album Dream of the Elders. The remainder of the year he toured both with his group and as a member of Herbie Hancock's trio with Gene Jackson.

During 1996 Dave took part in a world tour with Herbie Hancock's quartet, and also toured with Gateway and with his own group. He was active in the studio and performed on three grammy nominated albums: Michael Brecker's Tales from the Hudson, Herbie Hancock's The New Standard, and Billy Childs' The Child Within.

In the summer of 1997 Dave formed a new group, a quintet that features Steve Wilson, Robin Eubanks, Steve Nelson and Billy Kilson. After an extensive European tour the band recorded an album entitled Points Of View, which was released by ECM in 1998. He also performed with Herbie Hancock's New Standard group and Michael Brecker's Tales from the Hudson band, and participated in Joe Henderson's Porgy and Bess project.

Dave Holland has attained a new plateau of public popularity and critical acclaim with his current quintet. Both of the quintet's previous albums, for instance, Points of View and Prime Directive, were Grammy-nominated; the band was voted #1 Acoustic Jazz Group of the Year in the Down Beat Critics' Poll, Best Combo of the Year in the Bell Atlantic jazz Awards: the Jazz Journalists Association gave its Live Performance of the Year Award and Best Small Ensemble Award to the Holland Quintet, voted Album of the Year and also gave Holland prizes as Bass Player of the Year (twice) and Musician of the Year. Holland has also been #1 Bass Player in the Down Beat Critics Poll for three consecutive years and in 2000 received an Honorary Doctorate from the Berklee School of Music. In the midst of this 'awards-bonanza', quintet saxophonist Chris Potter became, at 29, the youngest musician ever to win the Danish Jazzpar prize, Europe's highest honour for a jazz player.

The group has made its mark by insisting on being "a group" in an age of all-star projects, and by the time-honored route of going on the road and staying there. Itineraries have taken the unit all over North and South America, Europe and Asia, including a tour of China. Despite the individual members' crowded schedules, each of them makes the quintet a priority. This year, in fact, they've been clocking in thrice with Holland, also appearing as members of his newly formed octet and big band.

"One of the things that's happening to me as I get older," says Holland, now 53, "is that I'm thinking more and more about using the totality of my experience as a player. Something Sam Rivers said a long time ago has stayed with me: 'Don't leave anything out, use it all.' That's become almost a mantra for me over the years as I've tried to find a way to build a vehicle which lets me utilise the full spectrum which includes the tradition, which includes playing the blues, which includes improvising freely. I love all that music, and there's been a desire to reconcile all those areas, to make them relevant, hopefully, in a contemporary context, as one music."


To top of page Robin Eubanks, Trombone

At the age of 8, Robin began playing the trombone and studied theory, harmony and arranging through high school and college. After graduating cum laude from the University of the Arts in Philadelphia, he moved to New York. Since then, Robin has had a wide range of musical experiences including being the Music Director for Art Blakey and the Jazz Messengers, arranging, composing and performing for McCoy Tyner's Big Band, and Slide Hampton's Jazz Masters. Recently, he was a featured soloist, composer and arranger on J.J. Johnson's Brass Orchestra. Robin has toured and recorded with such diverse musicians as the Rolling Stones, Talking Heads and Barbara Streisand on her historic 1994 tour.

He's performed on several television shows and specials including The Tonight Show featuring Jay Leno, Saturday Night Live, the Grammy Awards and Motown at the Apollo and has worked on several projects for Broadway and film. He has recorded 6 CDs as a leader which have received worldwide critical praise, and he leads his own groups which have toured Europe and Japan. Robin was recently appointed Assistant Professor of Jazz Trombone at the Oberlin College Conservatory of Music. He is on the faculty at the Manhattan School of Music and adjunct faculty at the University of Arts in Philadelphia. He teaches privately in New York and has taught and delivered seminars at universities and colleges throughout the world.

 

To top of page Steve Nelson, Vibes

This outstanding vibraphonist and composer was born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. He graduated from Rutgers University with both Masters and Bachelors degrees in music and his teaching activities have included a position at Princeton University. As a resident of the New York area he has performed and recorded with many great musicians including Kenny Barron, Bobby Watson, Mulgrew Miller, David Fathead Newman, Johnny Griffin and Jackie McLean.

He has appeared at concerts and festivals worldwide and has made three recordings as the leader of his own group. His recordings as a leader include Live At Acireale (Red Records), Full Nelson (Sunnyside) and Communications (Criss Cross). Recordings with others include Mulgrew Miller, David "Fathead" Newman, Kenny Barron, Jackie McLean and Johnny Griffin.

 

To top of page Chris Potter, Alto/Soprano Saxophone

Chris Potter was born in Chicago on January 1st 1971. He grew up in Columbia, South Carolina, and began playing saxophone at the age of 10 as a result of music the he had heard from his parent's record collection. In 1989 he moved to New York City and while attending both The New School and Manhattan School of Music, he joined trumpeter Red Rodney's quintet. He played with him until 1993, and this was followed by a brief period with the group "Steely Dan". Since then he has been involved in a wide range of projects including the Mingus Big Band and Paul Motian's "Electric Be-Bop Band."

In addition to recording 6 CD's as a leader, he has played in "Trio 2000" with Paul Motian and Steve Swallow, and in groups led by musicians such as Jim Hall, Billy Hart, Dave Douglas, Al Foster, John Patitucci, Mike Manieri and others.

 

To top of page Billy Kilson, Drums

Since becoming a professional musician Billy Kilson has added his warm and individual style to a large variety of musical settings. In his early years he lived in Boston, studying at the Berklee College of Music, and with the great Alan Dawson, who also taught Tony Williams, one of Billy's drum heros. Since then he has appeared on many records with such artists as Bob James, Dianne Reeves, Terence Blanchard, Greg Osby, Tim Hagens and Billy Childs to name a few. He also played on the Terance Blanchard soundtrack for the Spike Lee film Malcolm X. Concert appearances include performances with Ahmad Jamal, Walter Davis Jr., Mark Whitfield, Cassandra Wilson, Al Jarreau, Donald Byrd and many others.

To top of page Chris Botti

Botti.jpg (33140 bytes)

The evocative, atmospheric improvisations of trumpeter Chris Botti have created, over the course of his extraordinary career, a virtual genre-of-one in the realm of contemporary jazz.

Now, on Night Sessions, his sensational new Columbia Records release, Botti seamlessly blends scintillating sounds to the smoky, late night ambience of Europe's current Cafe Del Mar scene to create music that is, at once, languid and intense, atmospheric and focused, relaxed and rigorous. In short, Chris Botti has introduced a unique sensual touch unlike any other known to contemporary instrumental music.

Matching his prodigious talent with soft-spoken charisma, abundant sex appeal and striking good looks (brilliantly captured by famed fashion photographer Fabrizio Ferri for the cover of Night Sessions) Botti has become, in fact, one of the most popular and promising new arrivals of any musical genre. Little wonder that, after nearly two solid years on the road with Sting as featured soloist for the Brand New Day band, Botti has accumulated an impressive scrapbook of critical raves
to go with his quickly growing fan base. Add to that the roster of studio and stage work with Paul Simon, Joni Mitchell, Natalie Merchant and scores of others, and Botti's credentials as a musician's musician speak, loudly and clearly, for themselves.

Over the course of four acclaimed solo albums, this young, Oregon-bred composer and performer has stepped out from the sideman shadows to assume his rightful place in the spotlight. His 1995 debut, First Wish, followed by Midnight Without You and Slowing Down The World have done much, not simply to define the expressive potential of contemporary jazz, but to expand its boundaries into a wide array of musical arenas. Botti further demonstrated his talents in his score for the Robert M. Young film, "Caught." In his review of the film, critic Rex Reed wrote that Botti is "the sexiest trumpeter since Chet Baker." Anchored to a peerless musical education that included intensive study with such trumpet masters as Dave Friesen, David Baker and the great Woody Shaw, Botti's original compositions and unerring improvisational instincts have enriched all manner of pop, rock, R&B and even orchestral excursions.

All of which has led to the exemplary artistry on display with the twelve selections that comprise Night Sessions. "The album's title is a literal description of the recording process," Botti explains. "I rented a house way up in the Hollywood Hills, with a panoramic view of the city and we'd cut most of the tracks late in the evening to get that after-hours feel. The setting had a lot to do with the sound that emerged."

So, too, did Grammy-winning producer, multi-instrumentalist and key man Kipper, who worked closely with Botti from the inception of Night Sessions. "Kipper and I became friends on the road, during Sting's Brand New Day tour, and discovered we had a lot of the same musical passions. When it came time to record my album, he was my first choice for producer."

Time was another key factor in the creation of Night Sessions. "We didn't have a lot of it," Botti explains. "Basically, the entire project was written and recorded during a two and a-half month hiatus from the Sting tour."

"It really helped me focus," Botti continues. "Since I was already fully energized and in top form from all that road work, I was able to roll right into a studio setting. And, since we were on a tight schedule, it became necessary for me to focus totally on my trumpet playing and leave everything else to Kipper and the other musicians. As a result, I was able to open up and explore some new directions. I took a lot of chances and was more harmonically adventurous. But at the same time, I knew exactly what I was going for, which allowed me to work within a predetermined frame."

That frame can best be described as richly textured improvisation, intertwined like smoke rings through the shadows of a candle-lit rendezvous. "I was really inspired by the music coming out of the European club scene," Botti explains. "Places like the Cafe Del Mar in Ibiza and the Buddha Bar in Paris have created their own distinctive sound--very sensual and laid-back. I was excited by the idea of using that setting to show case the intensity of extemporaneous jazz."

With a distinguished cast of supporting players, including renowned bassist Christian McBride, drummers Vinnie Colaiuta and Abe Laboriel, Jr. electric bassist Jimmy Johnson, along with keyboard contributions from Billy Childs, Jeff Lorber, and Kipper, Botti brought these seemingly disparate elements into perfect harmony. Famed guitarist Dominic Miller also played a key role in the proceedings. "I think the sound of my trumpet up against his nylon strings exactly expresses the mood of this album" says Botti. "It's mellow and relaxed, but you can still hear the energy in the interplay." Another guest of honor is Grammy-winning vocalist (and Columbia labelmate) Shawn Colvin, who performed a previously unrecorded Sting original, "All Would Envy," for the album. "I'm a huge fan," Botti avows. "I'm thrilled she joined us."

"At its best, jazz is a musical snapshot of individuals, gathered together in one place at a specific moment in time," Botti explains. "For this album, that time and place was late at night, high above the bright lights of the big city. That's a very romantic, very sensual place to be."

Within the breathtaking music of Night Sessions, Chris Botti creates that very special place with his own evocative and irresistible touch.

 

To top of page Christian McBride

McBride.jpg (32356 bytes)

Christian McBride (bass) was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania in 1972. Mr. McBride started out playing the electric bass when he was eight years old. He was inspired by his father, Lee Smith, who played with some of the major R&B acts of the 1970's, including Billy Paul, Blue Magic, Major Harris, and the Delfonics. Mr. McBride's great uncle played acoustic bass with avant-garde musicians such as Sunny Murray, Khan Jamal, and Byard Lancaster.

Mr. McBride studied classical bass at Philadelphia's High School for Creative and Performing Arts. He also took lessons from Neil Courtney, a bassist with the Philadelphia Orchestra. While in the 11th grade Mr. McBride met Wynton Marsalis at a workshop. Mr. Marsalis later surprised him by calling him up on stage to sit in with him during his performance.

In 1989, Mr. McBride was awarded a scholarship to attend Juilliard. However, Mr. McBride's growing reputation had preceded him, as he was soon in hot demand from some of jazz music's leading lights. Saxophonist Bobby Watson immediately hired Mr. McBride for his working band.

Since that time, Mr. McBride has performed on more than 70 albums with the likes of Joe Henderson, Etta Jones, Betty Carter, Wynton Marsalis, Bruce Hornsby, Pat Metheny, Cyrus Chestnut, Freddie Hubbard, Kathleen Battle, Joey DeFrancesco, Benny Green, and Joshua Redman, among others.

Mr. McBride also toured regularly with pianist Benny Green and saxophonist Joshua Redman. In June, 1994, the city of Philadelphia honored Mr. McBride by establishing a "Christian McBride Day" during the Mellon Jazz Festival. Over 20 musicians came out to pay tribute to the then 22-year-old bassist.

Recently, Mr. McBride made his debut as a leader with his album, Gettin' To It. The album features Joshua Redman, Roy Hargrove, Cyrus Chestnut, Lewis Nash, and Steve Turre. The album also features a special bass trio rendition of Neal Hefti's "Splanky," played by three generations of the history of the jazz bass: Milt Hinton, Ray Brown, and Mr. McBride.

Mr. McBride first performed at Jazz at Lincoln Center for the "Coltrane Serenade" concert in August, 1991. In March, 1992 he played in the Freddie Hubbard/Joe Henderson Big Band concert. Mr. McBride also anchored the "Battle Royale: Trumpets and Tenors" concert in August, 1993. In April 1998, he joined Wayne Shorter on stage at Alice Tully Hall in "Speak No Evil: The Music of Wayne Shorter."
To top of page



Excellence. Our Measure. Our Motto. Our Goal.