Daily Dose Of Jazz…
Ron Escheté was born on August 19, 1948 in Houma, Louisiana and after receiving his first guitar at the age of 14, joined a quartet and was working clubs in Louisiana before he had even graduated from high school. His early influences were jazz masters Jim Hall, Howard Roberts and Wes Montgomery. He attended Loyola University where he majored in classical guitar and minored in flute, and studied with classical guitarist Paul Guma.
Shortly after Escheté left Loyola he was tapped to tour with Buddy Greco and while touring with Greco, he set his sites on the Los Angeles music scene. In 1970 Ron relocated to California, worked and recorded with vibraphonist Dave Pike. In 1975 he joined forces with pianist Gene Harris and quickly establish his reputation as a premier accompanist.
Over the decades, Escheté, who plays a seven-string guitar, has worked with jazz musicians and vocalists such as Ella Fitzgerald, Sarah Vaughn, Diana Krall, Dizzy Gillespie, Milt Jackson, Ray Brown, Bill Cunliffe, Sam Most, Ernestine Anderson, Mort Weiss and many more.
No stranger to television, Escheté has appeared on the Tonight Show, the Merv Griffin Show and the Mike Douglas Show as well as playing nearly every notable jazz venue in Southern California including the Catalina Bar and Grill, The Jazz Bakery, Steamers, Donte’s, Carmelo’s, The Parisian Room and The Lighthouse to name a few.
Guitarist Ron Escheté, quintessential sideman and innovative leader with some 36 albums to his credit, continues to tour, perform and record as he currently heads his own trio with Todd Johnson on bass and Kendall Kay on drums.
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Daily Dose Of Jazz…
Eddie Shu was born on August 18, 1918 in New York City. He learned violin and guitar as a child before picking up saxophone as a teenager. His first professional gigs were as a harmonica-playing ventriloquist. He played in military bands while serving in the Army from 1942 to 1945.
Following his discharge he played with Tadd Dameron in 1947, George Shearing, Johnny Bothwell, Buddy Rich, Les Elgart and Lionel Hampton from 1949–1950. He would play with Charlie Barnet, Chubby Jackson and Gene Krupa through the end of the decade.
In the 1960s Shu moved to Florida, playing locally as well as clarinet with Louis Armstrong’s All-Stars, as well as Hampton and Krupa again. He would freelance around New York City, the Virgin Islands and Florida. Though he only did a few sessions as a leader in 1949, 1954 and 1955, he also recorded frequently with Gene Krupa.
Though he never gained much fame, Eddie Shu, a multi-talented swing and jazz saxophonist, a valued sideman skilled on reeds and brass instruments, passed away on July 4, 1986 in Tampa, Florida.
Daily Dose Of Jazz…
Cecilia Smith was born on August 17th, in Cincinnati, Ohio and raised in Cleveland Heights. She began her musical odyssey at age eight with piano lessons and by age twelve, she had added drums to her repertoire. At fourteen, she was on to mallet percussion, studying in her early teens music theory with graduate students at the Cleveland Music Institute. This led to her discovery that music would be her life’s quest.
Upon graduating from high school, Cecilia attended the Berklee College of Music in Boston, Massachusetts and while there she pursued composing, arranging, film scoring and her instrument of choice, the vibraphone. Earning a Bachelor of Music degree in Professional Music from Berklee, Smith continued in a teaching capacity for four years before moving to New York City.
As a professional composer and recording artist, Cecilia Smith has received numerous commissions and grants. She is an avid midi programmer, is currently one of the leading vibraphonist of the Four-Mallet Technique, the first woman to release material on vibraphone on a national and international level and has performed in concert halls, nightclubs and festivals throughout North and South America, Europe and Asia. Vibraphonist Cecilia Smith has frequently been highlighted on national radio and television broadcasts and she continues to compose, arrange and perform.
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Daily Dose Of Jazz…
Carl Perkins was born August 16, 1928 in Indianapolis, Indiana and as a child suffered with polio. Overcoming a slightly crippled left hand he learned to play piano, holding his arm sideways over the keyboard. His early professional playing came touring with the big bands of Tiny Bradshaw and Big Jay McNeely but then he settled and worked mainly in Los Angeles, becoming a West Coast fixture from 1949 on.
Best known for his performances with the Curtis Counce Quintet, he performed alongside tenor saxophonist Harold Land, trumpeter Jack Sheldon and drummer Frank Butler. In 1954 Carl performed with the Clifford Brown-Max Roach group, and recorded with Frank Morgan in 1955.
Perkins recorded on as a leader for Savoy, Duotone, and Pacific Jazz labels between 1949 and 1957 and for the Boplicity label between 1955-56 titled “Introducing Carl Perkins”. He composed the jazz standard “Grooveyard” that was recorded in a 1958 session led by Harold Land.
Over the course of his short career absent of fame and beleaguered with drug addiction, Perkins recorded with Chet Baker, Art Pepper, Dizzy Gillespie, Jim Hall and Dexter Gordon to name a few.
Carl Perkins, known to be one of the best hard bop pianist of his day, died due to an untimely drug overdose at age 29 on March 17, 1958 in Los Angeles, California.
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From Broadway To 52nd Street
Beginning Saturday, September 1, 2012, Notorious Jazz will present its latest documentary – “From Broadway To 52nd Street” – the history of the compositions written for the musical stages of Broadway that have become jazz standards.
You’ll get historical insight into the era, the composers, the play, the lyricists, the streets, theatres, clubs and the people who made the songs famous on both performance stages. To the present day, the music continues to celebrate perpetual encores through the interpretive talents of great jazz musicians and vocalists.
So join Notorious Jazz on Saturday, September 1st as we present the first installment, and then each successive Saturday for a new series element to the history of this timeless music.
Sponsored By
www.whatissuitetabu.com