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Dubbed as “one of the most important
young artists in jazz” by the Los Angeles Times, 31-year-old
vibist/marimbist Stefon Harris brings his hot ensemble, Blackout, to
the Iridum for six nights, September 7-12.
 Photo by Andrea Canter
A native of Albany, New York, Harris
began playing piano at six and ultimately gained proficiency on more
than a dozen instruments, attaining the principal percussionist chair
with the Empire State Youth Orchestra as a high school student and
going on to graduate from the Manhattan School of Music with a BA in
classical music and an MA in jazz performance. Harris has received
wide recognition through 3 Grammy nominations (including 2003 for his
recording, “Grand Unification Theory”); has been named “Best
Mallet Player” for the past 5 years by the Jazz Journalists
Association, and has received various awards from Jazz Times,
Downbeat, Jazziz, Newsweek, and more. His diverse
resumé
includes performances with the Chamber Music Society of Lincoln
Center and Dutch Metropole Orchestra, and at the North Sea and Umbria
Jazz Festivals, as well as tours of South Africa, Brazil, and Europe.
Among his recording credits include partnerships with Max Roach,
Wynton Marsalis, Cassandra Wilson, Buster Williams, Charlie Hunter,
and many other top jazz artists. Additionally he is committed to jazz
education and conducts numerous clinics and workshops at schools and
universities throughout the country.
Unlike his last
project, “Grand Unification Theory,” an eleven-movement
composition tinged with Latin, African, classical, and jazz involving
12 musicians, Harris’ band “Blackout” features a quintet that
merges acoustic and electronic music. Noted one recent critic,
Blackout is “soulful ensemble jazz on a melodic R&B tip laced
with a grooved down hip-hop backbeat.” Explains Harris, "We’re
looking to find a way of letting go and taking ownership of our music
without letting anyone else define it. We grew up listening to music
that thumped. We love jazz and respect it and we think jazz should
thump."
Joining Harris
in Blackout are four musicians with their own solid credentials: Marc
Cary is a well-established keyboardist with diverse tastes
ranging from post bop to Afro-Cuban to electric funk. Early in his
career he worked with Roy Hargrove, Betty Carter, and with Abby
Lincoln as pianist and arrantger. Harris describes Cary as “an
immensely imaginative musician with his own sound and has an uncanny
ability to make an electric keyboard sound acoustically organic.”
Sax man Casey Benjamin—who can also play the Fender
Rhodes, began playing professionally at age 12, and has worked with
Buster Williams, Betty Carter, Wynton Marsalis, and Chick Corea. Says
Harris, “Casey Benjamin has a vocal tone filled with soul, passion
and fire.” On bass is Darryl Hall, winner of the 1995
Thelonious Monk International Jazz Competition and a recent member of
Regina Carter’s quartet who, according to Harris, “can take an
upright bass and make it bump like an electric.” The drum kit will
be well served by Terreon Gully who has worked with
such master bandleaders as Christian McBride and Bobby Watson, and
with vocalists Dianne Reeves and Abby Lincoln. A highly versatile
performer and composer, Gully has performed with many contemporary
jazz and hiphop stars and is respected as a composer and arranger as
well as dynamic timekeeper.
Stefon Harris
and Blackout will bring to the Iridium a highly creative,
exhilarating take on contemporary jazz. Of his performance in
Columbus, Ohio last year, reviewer Chris Hoven noted that, “With
both a set of vibes and a marimba placed side by side, Harris bounded
back and forth between each instrument with the dexterity of an
acrobat, meanwhile never missing a note and using the space in his
lines brilliantly.” Expect hip arrangements of covers from Gershwin
to Milt Jackson as well as sizzling new compositions from one of
jazz’s most original young voices.
Stefon Harris
and Blackout perform September 7-12 at the Iridium in Manhattan at
1650 Broadway (at 51st). Sets at 8 and 10 pm on weekdays,
and at 8, 10 and 11:30 pm on Friday and Saturday nights. Reservations
and information at
www.iridiumjazzclub.com.
More on Stefon Harris at
www.stefonharris.com |