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"...For technical brilliance, musical intellect, harmonic sophistication and improvasatory freedom, Von Freeman has few bebop-era peers." Howard Reich, Chicago Tribune  Von Freeman Recently honored by being selected an NEA Jazz Master 2012, Von Freeman is a founder of the "Chicago School" of jazz tenorists, a distinction shared with Gene Ammons, Johnny Griffin, and Clifford Jordan. With his individual sound, at once husky and melodic, he makes every song his own. As the Chicago Tribune has written of him, "For technical brilliance, musical intellect, harmonic sophistication, and improvisatory freedom, Von Freeman has few bebop-era peers." Having celebrated his 89th birthday he shows no sign of slowing down. Come hear Vonski at Adny's Jazz CLub on Friday, November 11th and Saturday, November 12th.
Freeman was surrounded by music in his childhood: his mother sang in the church choir, his father played jazz albums on an early Victrola - on which Freeman first heard the tenor sax - and his maternal grandfather and uncle were guitarists. Initially self-taught, he played saxophone at DuSable High School, landing his first gig with Horace Henderson's Orchestra at the age of 16. Drafted during WWII, he performed with a Navy band while in service. Once back in Chicago, he played with his brothers George (guitar) and Eldridge "Bruz" (drums) in the house band at the Pershing Hotel Ballroom, where jazz musicians such as Charlie Parker and Dizzy Gillespie would stop and sit in when passing through. In the 1950s, Freeman associated himself with various artists, mostly in the Chicago region, including Sun Ra, Andrew Hill, Jimmy Witherspoon, and Al Smith. In the 1960s, he played with Milt Trenier. But it wasn't until 1972 that Freeman recorded an album under his own name, Doin' It Right Now, produced by jazz great Roland Kirk. Since then, Freeman has continued to record, occasionally alongside Chicago artists such as saxophonist Frank Catalano, as well as with his own son Chico, who has himself achieved acclaim as a jazz musician. In 1982, he and Chico teamed up to record the Columbia album, Fathers and Sons, with pianist Ellis Marsalis and his sons Wynton and Branford. Later recordings, such as The Great Divide and Good Forever, featured drummer Jimmy Cobb, pianist Richard Wyands, and bassist John Webber. Freeman has a regular Tuesday night set and jam session at the New Apartment Lounge on Chicago's South Side, and can be heard on select weekends at Andy's Jazz Club. During recent years, Freeman has received acclaim in Europe, particularly in the Netherlands. In June 2010, the University of Chicago awarded Freeman the Rosenberger Medal to "recognize achievement through research, in authorship, in invention, for discovery, for unusual public service or for anything deemed to be on great benefit to humanity." Bio adapted from the NEA Jazz Masters website: http://www.arts.gov/honors/jazz
Andy's Jazz club is located at 11 E. Hubbard St.,Chicago. For more information call 312-642-6805 or visit http://www.andysjazzclub.com. |