 Dave Douglas © Andrea Canter
SFJAZZ, the leading non-profit jazz
organization on
the West Coast and the presenter of the San Francisco Jazz Festival,
has announced the Spring
2007 touring line-up of its all-star octet, the SFJAZZ Collective.
Named “Rising Star Jazz
Band of the Year” in DownBeat’s 2006 International Critics Poll, the
Collective returns in 2007
with seven of the eight band members from 2006: tenor saxophonist and
artistic director
Joshua Redman; vibraphonist and jazz living legend Bobby Hutcherson;
alto saxophonist
Miguel Zenón; trombonist Andre Hayward; pianist Renee Rosnes;
bassist Matt Penman;
and drummer Eric Harland. Debuting in the trumpet chair in 2007,
replacing Nicholas Payton,
is the celebrated instrumentalist and composer Dave Douglas, the
DownBeat poll’s 2006
“Trumpeter of the Year” and a past “Jazz Artist of the Year.”
In its repertoire, the Collective is devoted to exploring jazz’s
modern expressions—from
roughly the mid–20th century to the present day. For the 2007 season,
the group will divide its
repertoire between all-new compositions by the band members themselves
(commissioned by
SFJAZZ) and the works of one of jazz’s quintessential modernists: the
iconic pianist, composer,
and bebop pioneer Thelonious Monk.
 Thelonious Monk
“This new season promises to bring some of our greatest musical
challenges and rewards to
date,” Redman noted. “Thelonious Monk is the earliest of the
20th-century jazz masters whose
compositions we have performed thus far. And yet, there is such an
innate sense of modernism
in his works, something invariably fresh and compelling—melodies that
are deceptively simple
on first hearing, framed by harmonies that are so rich and complex, and
driven by rhythms that
are so compelling and infectious. To rehearse and premiere our own
originals in the context of
Monk’s music is sure to inspire exciting new directions in the
Collective’s sound.”
The addition of trumpeter Dave Douglas also promises to contribute
new accents to the overall
group sound. Widely renowned for his formidable horn technique and his
prowess as a band
leader and composer, Douglas is also admired as one of the most
eclectic musicians in jazz
today. From his ongoing work with John Zorn’s Masada to the many
ensembles he himself has
led over the years, Douglas has embraced influences as wide-ranging as
post-bop, Miles
Davis–inspired electric jazz, Middle Eastern and Balkan folk musics,
contemporary chamber
music, and electronica. His past collaborators have included artists as
diverse as Joe Lovano, Bill
Frisell, Don Byron, Trisha Brown, Tom Waits, Andy Bey, Suzanne Vega,
and pop group Cibo
Matto. His awards and honors include fellowships from the National
Endowment for the Arts
and Meet the Composer, along with multiple wins for jazz artist,
trumpeter, composer, and
album of the year from top jazz organizations and magazines such as the
New York Jazz
Awards, DownBeat, Jazz Times, Jazziz, and the Italian Jazz Critics'
Society. The Artistic Director of
the Banff International Workshop in Jazz and Creative Music, Douglas
has also given master
classes and workshops at prestigious universities and colleges
worldwide, including Harvard
College, University of North Texas, Eastman College, and New York
University.
The SFJAZZ Collective launches its 2007 season in February with its
fourth annual residency in
San Francisco, followed by its first-ever tour of Asia and the Pacific
Islands, with stops in Seoul,
Tokyo, Hong Kong, and Jakarta. In March, the ensemble returns to San
Francisco to perform
two concerts as part of the SFJAZZ Spring Season. March also finds the
group hitting the road
for its fourth annual stateside tour, with stops to date booked for the
West Coast, the Southwest,
Texas, and the Midwest, and more destinations soon to be announced. |