Daily Dose Of Jazz…
Robert “Bobby” McFerrin, Jr. was born March 11, 1950 in Manhattan, New York to the late Metropolitan Opera baritone Robert McFerrin and Broadway singer Sara Cooper. He spent his childhood surrounded by jazz, blues, R&B, classical, pop and world music, playing in jazz and cabaret bands until the age of twenty-seven.
Developing a vocal technique that switches rapidly and fluidly between normal and falsetto registers to create polyphonic effects, McFerrin performs both the main melody and the accompanying parts of songs. His use of percussive effects with his voice and tapping on his chest compliments his ability to overtone singing.
In 1984 McFerrin released his first solo album The Voice without accompaniment or overdubbing but he came to worldwide prominence with his 1988 hit “Don’t Worry, Be Happy” that garnered him two Grammys for Song and Record of the Year.
The ten-time Grammy winning vocalist and conductor has collaborated with Chick Corea, Herbie Hancock, Joe Zawinul, Tony Williams and Yo-Yo Ma. In addition he has lent his voice to the Cosby Show, to film and the 1989 Oscar winning documentary Common Threads: Stories from the Quilt in which his ten-person Voicestra was featured.
He is the creative chair of the Saint Paul Chamber Orchestra and has been a guest conductor for symphonies and philharmonics in San Francisco, New York, Chicago, Cleveland, Philadelphia, Los Angeles, Vienna and London. He has performed with comedian Robin Williams, consorted with the Muppets, interpreted Beatles songs and demonstrated with audience participation the power of pentatonic scale that became a viral Internet phenomenon.
Bobby McFerrin defies convention and categorization as he draws from all genres to showcase his matchless improvisational skill with an ability to create new vocabularies on the fly as he continues to explore and discover new territory in music.
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