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“It
is a rare event in jazz where one man can all but reinvent an
instrument, bringing it to a new stage of revolution.” –Leonard
Feather
It’s a rare event to
hear acclaimed clarinetist/saxophonist Eddie Daniels on the stage of
a New York City jazz club. With his highly regarded release Mean
What You Say bringing him renewed attention, Daniels will
celebrate his 65th birthday with a four-night stand at the
Iridium, October 19-22, his first Manhattan club date in over a
decade. Joining the party will be vibes master Joe Locke and, on
opening night only, special guests Paquito D’Rivera, Ken
Peplowski, and Ron Odrich. IPO will record the sessions live for a
future release.
Highly regarded in both
jazz and classical music circles, Daniels has about twenty recordings
to his credit as leader, yet few CDs or public appearances in the
past ten years until the spring 2006 release of Mean What You Say
(IPO). Of the upcoming Iridium gig, Daniels noted that “…I
will be featuring some of the music from my new IPO CD Mean What
You Say, which featured my return to the tenor saxophone after
having made the clarinet my voice for so many years. The sets at the
Iridium will also feature the clarinet and tenor in a new setting
with vibist Joe Locke and pianist Tom Ranier, bassist Dave Finck, and
drummer Joe LaBarbera. For me this group will bring a new sound to
today's jazz, with some of the music remembering the MJQ.....the soft
beautiful lyrical quality…with some hard driving qualities of
today's music. We will perform some of the great standards and some
original material written for this quintet. I am also pleased that
the great alto saxophonist Paquito DeRivera and my fellow
clarinet colleagues Ken Peplowski and Ron Odrich will be joining me
on opening night.”
Raised in the Brighton
Beach neighborhood of Brooklyn, Eddie Daniels was
attracted to jazz in his teens after hearing the instrumentalists
accompanying such stars as Frank Sinatra. He
started out on clarinet at 13 and alto sax (which had been his
father’s instrument) at 15, and performed at the Newport Jazz
Festival’s youth competition. Enrolled at the High School for the
Performing Arts (studying clarinet and tenor sax), he became the
first clarinet in New York’s All City High School Orchestra. Eddie
went on to earn a BA in Music and Education at Brooklyn College and
embarked on high school teaching career in New York City. A few years
later, he enrolled in a Master’s degree program in clarinet and
composition at Julliard.
While playing a gig with
Tony Scott at the Half Note, Thad Jones and Mel Lewis stopped by and
invited Daniels to join their new orchestra as a tenor player, which
began its long tenure at the Village Vanguard in 1966; Daniels
remained with the orchestra through the early 70s. A single solo on
clarinet, recorded for Thad Jones-Mel Lewis Orchestra’s Live at
the Village Vanguard lead to Eddie winning Downbeat's
International Critics New Star on Clarinet Award. Notes Eddie of his
decision to play clarinet on “Little Pixie,” “We each had 32
bars and at the last minute I decided to dive for the clarinet and it
was live and there were no other takes, and so I played that solo on
the clarinet, and for some reason I won the DownBeat “New
Star Clarinet” for those 32 bars.”
Over the years, Daniels
received accolades for both his classical and jazz chops. In 1966, he
won the saxophone prize in the International Competition for Modern
Jazz; in 1989 he won a Grammy Award for his playing
on the Roger Kellaway arrangement of “Memos from Paradise,” just
one of many such awards and nominations. Maestro Leonard Bernstein
noted that, “Eddie Daniels combines elegance and virtuosity
in a way that makes me remember Arthur Rubenstein. He is a thoroughly
well-bred demon.”
The Iridium is located
at 1650 Broadway (at 51st Street) in Manhattan. For
reservations, call 212-582-2121 or go online at
www.iridiumjazzclub.com.
Showtimes at 8:30 and 10:30 pm, with third sets at Midnight on
Friday/Saturday. For a Jazz Police review of
Mean What You Say,
click here! |