 Cyrus Chestnut From Tuesday, February 20th through Sunday, February 25th the Cyrus Chestnut Quartet will perform with vocalist Carla Cook at Dizzy's at Jazz at Lincoln Center in New York. Cyrus Chestnut was born in Baltimore, Maryland, USA, on January 17, 1963. He first received musical training from his father, McDonald Chestnut, at age five. Cyrus first started playing music publicly at Mount Calvary Star Baptist Church, aged seven. He received further musical training at the Peabody Preparatory Conservatory in Baltimore, where he obtained a Certificate in Piano and Musical Theory. Between 1981 and 1985 Cyrus attended the Berklee College of Music in Boston, where he was awarded the Eubie Blake Fellowship in 1982, the Oscar Peterson Scholarship in 1983 and the Quincy Jones Scholarship in 1984, later graduating with a degree in Jazz composition and arranging. Cyrus began his professional career working with John Hendricks (1986-88), Terence Blanchard and Donald Harrison (1988-1990), and Wynton Marsalis (1991). In September 1991 he became Betty Carter's pianist, staying with her until 1993. During this early years he also worked occasionally with Freddie Hubbard, Brandford Marsalis, Larry Coryell, Courtney Pine, Chico Freeman, George Adams, Michael Carvin, Chick Corea, Joe Williams and Dizzy Gillespie.
Highlights of his recording career as a sideman include Crystal Stair and Black Pearl for CBS, with The Harrison-Blanchard Quintet (1987/1988), For Art's sake and Indian Blues for Candid, with Donald Harrison (1990/1991) and It's not about the melody for Verve, with Betty Carter (1992). In recent times, Cyrus has worked and recorded with Roy Hargrove (The tenors of our time , Verve, 1994), Christian McBride (Getting to it, Verve, 1995) and singer Kathleen Battle (sSo many Stars , Sony, 1995). Cyrus Chestnut's recording career as a leader started in 1989 with the self-produced Gospel album There's a brighter day comin' , followed by Japanese Alfa recordings The Nutman speaks and The Nutman Speaks again (1993). His last recording for Alfa was Another Direction (1994), which received the Golden award by the prestigious Japanese magazine Swing Journal. This same year Cyrus signed with Atlantic Records: his first album for them was Celebration, followed by The dark before the dawn (1995), Earth Stories (1996), and Cyrus Chestnut (1998). In 2000, Chestnut collaborated with Vanessa Williams, Brian McKnight, The Manhattan Transfer, and The Boys’ Choir Of Harlem on a updated version of Vince Guaraldi's seasonal classic, A Charlie Brown Christmas. All his recordings have received excellent reviews and accolades all over the world. His latest (2006) CD is his Telarc debut, Genuine Chestnut. [Click here for a Jazz Police review].  Carla Cook Carla Cook was born and raised in Detroit where, from the age of 5, music was just apart of growing up. If she wasn't signing in the Angelic Choir of the Christian Methodist Episcopal Church, she was dancing to Motown. In her teen years, she would expand that musical knowledge by studying voice, private piano, and string bass. European classical music was also a strong part of Carla's development and a serious focus for a period in her life. But it is jazz where Carla has made a successful career - creating music for the pure attraction to improvisation. "Since I've been influenced as much by instrumentalists as singers, it never dawned on me that I didn't have that same freedom." After Detroit, Carla moved to Boston, where she earned a degree in Speech Communication. She now lives in New York, where her presence had afforded her continuous opportunities to work with gifted musicians. The variety of her work reflects her range as she has worked on projects with ESP, the Lionel Hampton Orchestra, as well as trombonist Craig Harris in The Nation of Imagination. You can even hear her as a character in the Sony Playstation game, "Parappa the Rapper II." She performs worldwide with European touring as a major part of her musical career. From 1993-94, Carla served as a guest vocal and ensemble instructor at the Jazzschule in Basel, Switzerland, and Jazz and Rock Schule in Freiburg, Germany. You can hear Cyrus Chestnut Quartet with Carla Cook from Tuesday, February 20th through Sunday, February 25th at Dizzy's in New York. Cynthia Scott replaces Carla Cook on vocals Thursday night only. For reservations call: 212 258-9595 or -9795. Seating is available on a first-come first-served basis either at tables or at the bar. For more information visit www.jalc.org/dccc |