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Eddie
Henderson - Trumpet, Flugelhorn
Jazz
trumpeter extraordinaire Eddie Henderson had his first informal
lesson on the trumpet at the age of 9 from Louis Armstrong. As a
teenager he studied trumpet at the San Francisco Conservatory of
Music and performed with the San Francisco Conservatory Symphony
Orchestra. In 1957, Eddie met Miles Davis for the first time. Davis,
a family friend, admired the strikingly beautiful tone and musicality
of Henderson's trumpet playing and encouraged him to pursue a career
in music. As a family friend, Miles Davis has been a major musical
influence on Eddie throughout his life. That culminated in May of
2002 with the recording of So What, a tribute to Davis that features
songs associated with the legend. As Henderson puts it, "Miles
is so very special to me because when I was in high school he stayed
in my parents' house when he came through San Francisco. I was going
to the conservatory then studying classical music. I saw him do
all these songs live that I recorded on the tribute album."
Eddie had the good fortune of meeting many famous musicians growing
up - including getting early tips from Satchmo - because his parents
were both entertainers. His mother was a dancer at the original
Cotton Club and his father a member of the popular singing group
Billy Williams and the Charioteers. His stepfather was a doctor
to people like Miles and Coltrane and Duke Ellington, so the association
with musicians continued. Eddie studied hard in school and in addition
to excelling on his instrument, he excelled academically enough
to go to medical school and become a doctor. Dr. Henderson practiced
as a physician part-time for many years, in addition to playing
gigs and learning directly from two of his other main trumpet influences
- Lee Morgan and Freddie Hubbard. In addition to his stint with
Herbie Hancock, Henderson has performed with such notables as Art
Blakey, Dexter Gordon, Roy Haynes, Jackie McLean, Joe Henderson,
Elvin Jones, Johnny Griffin, Slide Hampton, Benny Golson, Max Roach
and McCoy Tyner. In addition to his European Tours, Eddie performs
in the Mingus Big Band and tours with the Eddie Henderson Quartet.
****
It must be something in the genes. Born in New York
City on October 26, 1940, Eddie Henderson speaks with enormous pride
of his childhood. "I have a pretty imposing show business heritage.
My mother was one of the dancers in the original Cotton Club. She
had a twin sister, and they were called The Brown Twins, and they
used to dance with Bill 'Bojangles' Robinson and the Nicholas Brothers.
That film of Fats Waller doing 'Ain't Misbehavin' where the lady
sits on the piano and he sings to her? That's my mother. And my
father sang with Bill Williams and the Charioteers, who were like
the number one black singing group in the nation-over and above
the Ink Spots and the Mills Brothers.
"My real father died when I was nine, and my
mother remarried a doctor in San Francisco, and so I guess that
influenced me to pursue medicine as well. But I never stopped the
music ever since I was nine years old. Louis Armstrong was literally
my first trumpet teacher, in person, because my mother knew all
of these people. Duke Ellington. Count Basie. Billie Holiday was
my mother's roommate. Sarah Vaughan was my mother's roommate. She
knew Dizzy Gillespie from her days dancing in the chorus line in
front of Cab Calloway's big band, when Dizzy was just starting out
in the section. All these people used to come over to the house,
and to me they were just average people. Little did I know,"
he laughs.
The family moved to San Francisco in 1954, and there,
from 1954 to 1957, Eddie studied trumpet, flugelhorn, and music
theory at the San Francisco Conservatory of Music. After three years
in the Air Force, Henderson enrolled at U.C. Berkeley, graduating
with a B.S. in zoology in 1964. He then studied medicine at Howard
University in Washington, DC, graduating in 1968. Though he did
his residency in psychiatry, he only practiced general medicine.
During this period, he performed occasionally with John Handy, Joe
Henderson, Big Black, and Philly Joe Jones.
From 1968 until the late Eighties, Henderson mixed
music and medicine, and received his first major musical exposure
as a member of Herbie Hancock s trailblazing sextet, an ensemble
that also included young innovators such as Bennie Maupin, Julian
Priester, Buster Williams, and Billy Hart. From 1960 through 1973
they recorded Mwandishi and Crossings for Warner Bros. and Sextant
for Columbia. His experiences with Hancock exerted a profound influence
on Henderson, as reflected in the music on his first two solo albums,
Realization and Inside Out, recorded in 1972 and 1973 for Capricorn
Records.
After leaving Hancock, the trumpeter worked extensively
with Pharoah Sanders, Norman Connors, and Art Blakey's Jazz Messengers,
returning to the San Francisco Bay Area in 1975 where he joined
the Latin-jazz group Azteca, and fronted his own bands. The expressive
rhythmic thrust of Henderson's jazz/fusion experiences manifested
itself on his Blue Note recordings Sunburst and Heritage, and in
1977, he broke through with a single on the Billboard charts, "Prance
On" (from the album Comin' Through).
Greg Bandy - Drums, Vocals
A Charles Mingus discovery at age 20, Greg Bandy
has played with many prominent jazz artists over the last thirty-plus
years: Joe Henderson, Betty Carter, Pharoah Sanders, Freddie Hubbard,
Olu Dara, Curtis Fuller, Jack McDuff, Leon Thomas, Lee Morgan, Freddie
Hubbard, Stanley Turrentine, George Benson, Yusef Lateef and many
more, securing his status as a living legend. The New Yorker, commenting
on one of Gary Bartz Quartet's recent Village Vanguard appearances,
wrote of Greg, "…one of those rare old-school drummers who remind
you what the art of jazz percussion is all about, adds class as
well as rhythmic friction to Bartz's band." Mr. Bandy's 1997 debut
CD "Lightning in a Bottle" garnered two Grammy nominations. He produces
"Bandy Does Blakey," a tribute to one of his mentors, the late Art
Blakey, and reunites former members of Blakey's Jazz Messengers.
An inspiring educator, many prominent musicians in jazz today credit
his mentoring and tutelage for their success. This percussion virtuoso
conducts his seminar explaining the African migration with music.
Beginning with African rhythms, he plays his way through South America,
the Caribbean and continues the trip to New Orleans up the Mississippi
River and across America. Whether at Lincoln Center, the Smithsonian
or a corner bar, Greg's playing is an anthology of all the great
drummers. His playing is progressive, not nostalgic, employing music
from all over the globe (and beyond?). A regular at the Jazz Standard,
Village Vanguard in New York and St. Nick's Pub in Harlem (he is
known as "The Mayor of Harlem"), he is a staple at jazz festivals
the world over.
Roger Friedman - Piano, Electric Piano, Synthesizer
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Roger Friedman has been performing music for over 30
years. Primarily self-taught, he began playing the piano by ear when
he was 4 years old. His formal music instruction was in percussion
and he played the conga drums with the Ohio University Jazz Ensemble.
Roger studied piano at the Berklee College of Music in Boston under
the be-bop pianist Ray Santisi. He continued with his percussion studies
under Les Lumley, percussionist with Miles Davis and also studied
the Indian tabla drums. While in Boston, he formed an electric fusion
group with drummer Steve McCraven (drummer for Archie Shepp and Marion
Brown) and the guitarist Michael Gregory. He also began performing
in small jazz groups with talented musicians around Amherst, Massachusetts
such as Avery Sharpe (bassist with McCoy Tyner). In the late 70's
Roger moved back to his hometown of Cleveland and became a regular
fixture as a keyboardist on the Cleveland Jazz scene. He played in
several groups including those with drummer Jamey Haddad and bassist
Kip Reed. In 2000, the legendary drummer Greg Bandy asked Roger to
join him and bassist David Certain to form the Greg Bandy Trio, performing
throughout Cleveland as well as backing notables such as Terrance
Blanchard, Mario Rivera, Dave Valentin and many others. In addition
to his current role touring in the Eddie Henderson - Greg Bandy Quartet,
Roger performs with the Dave Sterner Quintet, the Cleveland-based
group One Wish, as well as with his own duo and trio. Like Eddie Henderson,
Roger also trained as a physician.
David Certain - Acoustic and Electric Bass
David Certain's innovative bass style employing swing,
funk and Latin elements is inspired by Buster Williams, Jaco Pastorius,
Art Davis and Alex Blake: old school sees tomorrow. A bassist for
33 years, David Certain studied with Kenny Davis of the Oberlin
Conservatory. He toured and recorded with legendary, Grammy-nominated
drummer and "Mayor of Harlem" Greg Bandy for five years
before moving to San Francisco in May 2004. David has performed
with Miles Davis alumnus and Downbeat Readers' Poll winner, saxophonist
Gary Bartz, free jazz pioneer and pianist Bobby Few, organ master
Jimmy McGriff, saxophonist and Grammy-winning arranger Willie Smith,
singer "Little" Jimmy Scott, and many others. In San Francisco,
David worked with saxophonist Vincent Herring, trumpeter Eddie Henderson,
drummer/percussionist Babatunde Lea, vocalist Paula West and many
other fine musicians. He currently resides in St. Louis performing
with vocalist Kim Massey's band and the Eddie Henderson - Greg Bandy
Quartet and others. Equally at home on acoustic and electric basses,
he also sings, plays guitar, six-string piccolo bass, drums, lap
steel guitar and keyboard synthesizer on "Compositions,"
his CD of original music.
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