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Woodwind & Brasswind
Chris Potter and Company Print E-mail
Written by Andrea Canter, Contributing Editor   
Saturday, 29 May 2004
ImageWhen you consider Chris Potter’s resumé, it’s hard to remember he is only 33: Winner of the IAJE Young Talent award for saxophone at age 12, a protégé of Marian McPartland by 15, a member of the Red Rodney band while still in his teens, and with a long list of recordings as both leader and sideman while still in his 20s, Potter is one prodigy who has lived up to his early billing. Seen most recently with the Dave Douglas Quintet last February at the Dakota, and familiar to Twin Cities’ audiences through his performances with Dave Holland, Chris Potter returns for two sets on June 3rd with his own quartet, featuring homegrown Craig Taborn on keyboards. One night is hardly enough to savor the eclectic and creative drive of this group.

Born in Chicago and raised in Columbia, South Carolina, Potter was introduced to music early, first studying piano and then switching to the saxophone after hearing Paul Desmond’s "Take Five." He studied jazz and played in the University of South Carolina band as a middle school and high school student. Named by Down Beat Magazine as the top high school jazz instrumentalist at 18, he then moved to New York, first studying with Kenny Werner at the New School for Social Research and later enrolling at the Manhattan School of Music. In 1991 he was a finalist in the Thelonious Monk Tenor Sax competition, along with Eric Alexander and winner Joshua Redman. Over the next few years Potter recorded his first sessions as a leader, with Criss Cross and particularly with Concord; he was in high demand as a sideman and would appear on as many as 20 recordings a year, including a live date at Maybeck with mentor Kenny Werner. Throughout the late 1980s and 1990s, he toured and recorded with Jim Hall, Ray Brown, James Moody, Steve Swallow, Larry Carlton, Paul Motian and Steely Dan, among many others.

Potter’s career as been equally meteoric in the past five years, highlighted by a 1999 Grammy nomination for his tenor solo “In Vogue” (on Joanne Brackeen’s Pink Elephant Magic), and winning Denmark’s 2000 Jazzpar prize as its youngest-ever recipient. Today Potter is probably best known for his outstanding collaborations with Dave Holland and Dave Douglas, but his own work with this quartet and other projects speaks volumes about his virtuosity on a variety of reeds and his individuality as a composer. His style is his own, with some echoes of Sonny Rollins and self-identified influences of Coltrane, Parker, Shorter, and Ornette Coleman.



 
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