“Will
his well of inspiration never run dry?” –Paul Olson, All About
Jazz
 Photo by Jimmy Katz
One of the most prolific
artists in jazz today, trumpeter/composer Dave Douglas at 43 has
already generated an incredible legacy of music, recording over
twenty CDs (2 Grammy nominations), performing with ten different
ensembles, and now launching his own label. Somehow Douglas has time
to tour with his ferocious quintet, featuring Donny McCaslin, Uri Caine, James Genus, and Clarence Penn. Dougals and company will perform at the Jazz Standard in New York City, December 5th - 12th.
Growing up in the New
York
metro area, Dave Douglas started out on piano at age
five and progressed to trombone before finding his destiny in the
trumpet at age nine. Introduced to jazz in high school, he first
seriously studied improvisation while living in Barcelona as an
exchange student. In the early 1980s, he studied at Berklee and the
New England Conservatory of Music, then moved to NYU where he studied
trumpet and began playing around town with jazz, funk, and
experimental music ensembles. In the late 80s, Douglas toured around
the world with such artists as Horace Silver, Vincent Herring, Tim
Berne, Don Byron, Dr. Nerve, and the Bread and Puppet Theater.
 Photo by Suzannah P. Kincannon
Since 1990, Dave Douglas
has concentrated on composing and leading a wide range of ensembles,
including the Tiny Bell Trio, Charms of the Night Sky, Witness,
Parallel Worlds, Sanctuary, Nomad, and his quartet, quintet, and
sextet (Keystone). Since 1993, Dave has released 23 albums of his
original music, and has appeared on over one hundred recordings. At
one time or another he has been named Trumpeter of the Year by Down
Beat critics, Jazz Times readers, and the Jazz
Journalists Association, Artist of the Year by Jazz Times and
the Italian Jazz Critics Society, Composer of the Year by Down
Beat, and has issued numerous “best of the year” recordings.
Dave has composed numerous commissioned works for music ensembles,
ballet companies, and individual artistis such as Andy Bey. In
addition to his role as leader, Douglas has been a member of John
Zorn’s Masada, serves as artistic director of the Banff
International Jazz Workshop, and is co-curator of the Festival of New
Trumpet Music. A 2005 Guggenheim Fellow, Douglas recently launched
his own record label, Greenleaf Music.
This month, Dave Douglas
is releasing Meaning and Mystery with his current quintet,
featuring Donny McCaslin, Uri Caine, James Genus, and Clarence Penn.
Tenor saxophonist Donny
McCaslin, son of a jazz pianist/vibist, grew up in Santa
Cruz. He began sax studies at 12, eventually enrolling at Berklee
where he first impressed Gary Burton, with whom he toured for four
years. After moving to New York, McCaslin worked with Eddie Gomez
before joining Mike Manieri and Steps Ahead. In addition to his work
with Dave Douglas, McCaslin has performed with Pat Metheny, Brian
Blade, Tom Harrell, John Pattitucci, Billy Hart, Bebel Gilberto, New
York Voices, Gil Evans Orchestra, Mingus Big Band, Dave Binney, and
the Vanguard Jazz Orchestra. He also appears regularly with his own
band at New York City’s 55 Bar.  Uri Caine, Photo by Bill Douthart
Keyboard
titan Uri Caine grew up in Philadelphia, where he
played in bands lead by Philly Joe Jones, Hank
Mobley, Johnny Coles, Mickey Roker, Odean Pope, Jymmie Merritt,
Bootsie Barnes and Grover Washington. After studying music compostion
at the University of Pennsylvania, he moved to New York where he has
combined jazz and classical music, rearranging Mahler, Wagner,
Schumann and Beethoven. In addition to composing and recording, Caine
has performed with Don Byron, Clark Terry, Rashid Ali, Sam
Rivers, the Woody Herman Band, Annie Ross, and the Master Musicians
of Jajouka, anong others, and has received grants from the
Pennsylvania Council on the Arts, the National Endowment for the
Arts, and the Pew Foundation.
James
Genus is a native of Hampton, Virginia. He started bass
studies at 13, and played with Ellis Marsalis while still a student
at Virginia Commonwealth University. On both acoustic and electric
bass, Genus has performed with The Brecker Brothers, Roy
Haynes, Horace Silver, Branford
Marsalis, Greg Osby, David Sanborn, Don Pullen, Nat Adderley, Bob
Berg, Bob James, and Steps Ahead, where he met Donny McCaslin.
 Clarence Penn, photo by Alex Solca Clarence
Penn started playing drums as a third grader growing up in
Detroit. By 15 he was touring as a semi-professional, and soon
became one of the most sought-after drummers of his generation. He
received a National Endowment for the Arts grant to study with late
drum legend Alan Dawson in 1989, toured with the Ellis Marsalis Trio,
and served as drummer for Betty Carter for several years. Penn has
performed and/or recorded with Ellis Marsalis, Wynton Marsalis, Jacky
Terrasson, Roberta Flack, Dizzy Gilespie, Dianne Reeves, Stanley
Clarke, Cyrus Chestnut, Stephen Scott, Steps Ahead, Mike Stern, and
Rachel Z.
Catch this amazing group
of improvisers at a jazz club near you this winter!
“Trumpet player Dave
Douglas is a phenomenon - not so much part of a new wave as an entire
movement by himself.”—John Walters, The Guardian
The Dave Douglas
Quintet will perform at the Jazz Standard, December 5th-12th.
The Jazz Standard is located at 116 East 27th Street New York, 212-576-2232. |