SOUND PROJECTIONS
ISAIAH COLLIER
(November 26-December 2)
SAVANNAH HARRIS
(December 3-9)
JOSH EVANS
(December 10-16)
ORRIN EVANS
(December 17-23)
MIKE KING
December 24-30)
NASHEET WAITS
(December 31-January 6)
MARCUS SHELBY
(January 7-13)
https://www.allaboutjazz.com/musicians/josh-evans
JOSH EVANS
https://de-m-wikipedia-org.translate.goog/wiki/Josh_Evans_(Trompeter)
Josh Evans
Josh Evans (born 1985 in Hartford, Connecticut) is an American jazz trumpeter .
Evans grew up in Hartford; He came to the trumpet at the age of ten under the influence of the music of Roy Eldridge and Dizzy Gillespie . He had his first lessons with Raymond “Dr. Rackle" Williams, in his Dr. Rackle's Sound Griot Brass Band he played. At age 14, Evans began studying with Jackie McLean . With McLean, he has had opportunities to perform at New York clubs such as the Blue Note and Iridium , the Regattabar in Cambridge, Massachusetts , and the Bushnell Center for the Performing Arts in Hartford. Evans played at the Winard Harper for three years, beginning in 2005Sextet, with whom he toured and made his first recordings ( Make It Happen ). In the following years he worked i.a. with Christian Sands , Rashied Ali , Joris Treepe , Steve Davis , Bob Mover , Paul Brown (bassist) , Joris Teepe , Ralph Peterson , and Orrin Evans ' Captain Black Big Band [1] In 2011 he recorded his debut album Portrait , on which etc. Ralph Peterson contributed and was self-published. In the 2010s he was part of the Joe Chambers Moving Pictures Orchestra and theValery Ponomarev Jazz Big Band, with whom he performed at Lincoln Center ; he recorded the album Live at the Zinc Bar (Jazz Intensity) with the Rashied Ali Tribute Band . He has also worked with Dezron Douglas , Ray McMorrin, Mike DiRubbo , Tyler Mitchell and Greg Murphy . Late 2014 saw the release of his second album, Hope and Despair (Passin' Thru), with Abraham Burton , David Bryant , Rashaan Carter and Eric McPherson. In the field of jazz, he was involved in 32 recording sessions between 2006 and 2018, most recently with Louis Hayes , Jazzmeia Horn , Shamie Royston and Corcoran Holt . [2]
Discographic Notes
- Hope and Despair (2014), starring Abraham Burton , David Bryant , Rashaan Carter , Eric McPherson and Bruce Williams , Lawrence Clark , Kush Abadey respectively
- Christian McBride : Christian McBride's New Jawn (2018)
web links
https://www.joshevansmusic.com/
JOSH EVANS | BIOGRAPHY
JOSH EVANS, born and raised in Hartford, CT, was drawn to the trumpet after hearing a Roy Eldridge and Dizzy Gillespie recording at the age of 10. Josh began studying with Raymond ‘Dr. Rackle’ Williams and within a year he began performing regularly with Dr. Rackle’s Sound Griot Brass Band. By the age of 14 Evans’ musical career began to take shape when he started to study with and be mentored by the celebrated alto saxophonist/composer, and educator Jackie McLean. Studying under McLean who shared the bandstand with Miles Davis, Charlie Parker, and Art Blakey, would be pivotal in Josh's career. The experience would blaze the path for performances with Jackie McLean which included New York based venues known as the Blue Note, Iridium, the Regattabar located in Boston, MA, and the Bushnell Center for Performing Arts in Hartford, CT.
In April 2005 Josh began a Three and a half year stint with the Winard Harper Sextet, touring the United States performing and conducting master classes. The group personnel, at different points, consisted of Billy Taylor, Frank Wess and George Cables, as well as trumpet players Terrell Stafford, Claudio Roditi and Phillip Harper. The group would also record a wonderful album in 2006, entitled ‘Make it Happen’ for Piadrum Records. In April 2007, Josh was invited to perform a two week tour of Siberia with master saxophonist, and composer Benny Golson. It was during this time period that Evans would also start performing with master Drummer Rashied Ali and would become the bands trumpet player for the next two years. The Rashied Ali Quintet toured 18 different countries and recorded one CD Live in Europe. Josh Evans would play with Rashied Ali until the drummer’s untimely death in 2009. In January 2011, Josh Evans recorded and released his debut album ‘Portrait’. This Album shares Evans influential relationships with Rasieid Ali, Jackie McLean, Raymond Williams, Alan Palmer, and Ralph Peterson.
Evans has performed in the bands of:
Jackie McLean
Cedar Walton
Rashied Ali
Oliver Lake
Benny Golson
Freddie Redd
Billy Harper
Charles Tolliver
Rene McLean
Curtis Fuller
Grachan Moncur III
Rufus Reid
Christian McBride
Bobby Watson
Charlie Persip
Muhal Richard Abrams
David Murray
Ralph Peterson
"Kuumba" Frank Lacy
Joe Chambers
Bob Mover
Roy Hargrove
Jimmy Greene
Winard Harper
Jesse Davis
Harold Mabern
David Schnitter
Warren Smith
Gregory Porter
Shelia Jordan
T.S. Monk
Sam Newsome
Vincent Herring
And Has Recorded with
Rashied Ali
Kenny Barron
Abraham Burton
George Cables
Bob Cranshaw
Joe Chambers
Ed Cherry
Don Braden
Dwayne Burno
Steve Davis
Mike DiRubbo
Wayne Escoffery
Wycliffe Gordon
Bill Evans (sax)
Orrin Evans
Calvin Hill
Craig Handy
Winard Harper
Willie Jones
Victor Lewis
Curtis Lundy
Brian Lynch
Gracchan Moncur III
Bob Mover
Eric McPherson
Tyler Mitchell
Lewis Nash
Sheila Jordan
Victor Jones
Mark Turner
Dave Shnitter
Steve Williams
Rudy Walker
Anthony Wonsey
Welcome to JOSH EVANS' Official Website
Trumpeter, Composer, Arranger, and Educator
New 3cd set
https://nbjp.org/seven-questions-with-trumpeter-josh-evans/
Bringing Great Jazz to Central Jersey
Seven Questions with Trumpeter Josh Evans
1) If you could only own one CD, what would it be?
Absolutely Art Blakey “Free for All”, the intensity on this recording is beyond belief. All I have to say about this is Art Blakey, Wayne Shorter, Freddie Hubbard, Curtis Fuller, Cedar Walton, And Reggie Workman WOOOOOO!!! It’s also interesting that this band recorded a few other tunes on that day that never got released, some with a singer. It would be amazing to hear that.
In all honesty it’s not fair to ask me to name just one recording, I’m a dedicated student of this music and for sure have checked out just about every single musician you could ever possibly name, current and classic.
So that being said there are quite a bit of recordings that are very special to me. Jackie McLean “Bout Soul” features the absolute two biggest influences on my playing, Jackie McLean and Rashied Ali. I knew Mr. Mclean since I was a little kid, even before I really played the trumpet, and I was very fortunate to perform with him quite a bit and to get a lot of lessons with him. Rashied was a good friend and I played in his band the last 3+ years of his life. He took me to 20 or so countries and before one of these tours (probably 2008) he smiled at me and said “josh, I have something for you that you are going like” he went back in his building and emerged with a cd. “Bout Soul”, I listened to this recording all the way to wherever it was in Europe we were going first. It really messed my head up!! I remember going past his seat with my headphones on and saying to Rashied, What the @$&! Is this, this is amazing. Rashied, Jackie, and another guy who gave me quite a bit of work when I was in need of it, Grachaan Moncur!! Wow!! Such an amazing record, so open. There’s much more to this story but I don’t think there is enough space here to tell it.
And one more, In this time of violence, hostility, gigs that don’t pay ANY money and crowded, noisy subways, musicians are in need of tranquillity and peace. And the record that gives me the most peace, (actually I’m listening to this as I write this) is Shirley Horn’s “May the music never end” absolutely the most beautiful recording I have ever heard. Nothing can calm me down as much as this does. Such and elegant lady, her phrasing is a very big influence on my playing.
2) What’s your favorite non-jazz tune?
“A Change is Gonna Come,” the Sam Cooke version.
3) What would you want to be if you weren’t a musician?
Anything where I would be rich! I could really use two, tree million dollars.
4) What would you NOT want to be?
Broke, homeless, sick and alone
5) If you were about to have your last meal, what would it be?
If it was my last meal I don’t think it would really matter. Anything really, I’d probably drink a bottle of Lagavulin with a side order of Heineken and fade away into the abyss
6) What living musician do you admire most? Why?
Mccoy Tyner, he changed the concept of the piano when he was still very young. But he did it the right way. He was a childhood friend of Richie Powell who was Bud Powell’s younger brother. To me, the modern music of today comes through Bud and Monk and their associates like Elmo Hope, Sadik Hakim and Tadd Dameron. and then through people like Sonny Clark Walter Davis Jr. and Bobby Timmons. Mccoy was very schooled in that type of playing so much that he changed it up completely with those open chords, those strong left handed Root-fifth bombs and moving chords around in anyway he saw fit to create and release tension. One of my greatest musical experiences was playing “Fly With The Wind” with Mccoy and Gary Bartz. I still have yet to hear that sound come out of any piano or player. When he hit that first chord, the heavens opened up!!
7) What’s the last book you read?
The last book I finished was “Seize the Time” by Bobby Seale. I have read the majority of other books for research on different topics since then but haven’t finished them
Josh Evans
Hope and Despair (PT41233)
Passin´ Thru
616892320746
PLW 147769
PT41233
JAZZ
1
Josh
Evans, whose playing makes one always want to hear more of him,
releases his third albums as a leader. The trumpet player, which can be
regularly heard at Small Jazz Club, one of the temples of the young and
bursting jazz scene in New York, puts on a showcase of his compositional
capabilities.
PERSONNEL:
JOSH EVANS, trumpet
BRUCE WILLIAMS, alto sax, tenor sax
DAVID BRYANT, piano
RASHAAN CARTER, bass
ERIC McPHERSON, KUSH ABADEY, drums
TRACKS:
01. Steps
02. Lake Superior
03. Bad Dream
04. Prayer for the Innocent
05. Good Mornin
06. So Long Sterling
07. Hope and Despair
08. Clark Street
09. Chronic Mistakes
10. Gone but Not Forgotten
11. 1984
12. Nji Lule