词条 | Raymond Harry Brown |
释义 |
| name = Raymond Harry Brown | image = | alt = | caption = | image_size = | background = non_vocal_instrumentalist | birth_name = | alias = | birth_date = {{Birth date and age|1946|11|07}} | birth_place = Oceanside, New York | origin = | instrument = Trumpet | genre = Big band jazz | occupation = Composer, arranger, collegiate educator, jazz trumpeter | years_active = | label = | associated_acts = Stan Kenton | website = }}Raymond Harry "Ray" Brown (born November 7, 1946) is an American composer, arranger, trumpet player, and jazz educator.[1] He has performed as trumpet player and arranged music for Stan Kenton (early 1970s), Bill Watrous, Bill Berry, Frank Capp – Nat Pierce (Juggernaut Big Band), and the Full Faith and Credit Big Band.[2] Brown joined Kenton in September 1971, succeeding Gary Lee Pack [b. 1950; Director of Jazz Studies (retired), University of Southern Maine], holding the jazz trumpet chair and serving as an improv clinician. The Kenton trumpet section included Mike Vax,[3] Jay Saunders, and Dennis Noday.[1] Brown also contributed arrangements for Kenton, including "Mi Burrito" and "Neverbird."[3] Brown remained with the Kenton Orchestra until November 1972. Before joining the Kenton Orchestra, Brown had served as arranger and trumpeter with the Studio Band of The United States Army Field Band at Fort Meade, Maryland (1968–71). His tenure with the Army Band and Kenton coincided closely with that of Jay Saunders — trumpet player, and jazz educator, who, while with the Kenton Orchestra, eventually played lead trumpet. Brown also has performed with Mundell Lowe, Leroy Vinnegar, Ray Brown, Thad Jones, Jimmy Heath, Steve Gadd, and Billy Hart. Brown conducted the recording session of the Roy Hargrove Quintet entitled Roy Hargrove with Strings, Moment to Moment, released May 2000 on Verve. He has appeared at the Monterey Jazz Festival frequently as conductor of his wife Susan Cahill Brown's Monterey Jazz Festival Chamber Orchestra in collaboration with Charlie Haden, Kenny Barron, Michael Brecker, Ralph Towner, Gary Burton, and Terence Blanchard. Brown currently leads his own big band, the Great Big Band, which has performed at the Monterey Jazz Festival, the San Jose Jazz Festival, the Santa Cruz Jazz Festival,[2] the Lake Tahoe Music Festival,[3] and jazz venues in the San Francisco Bay area. Ray is currently on the faculty of Cabrillo College in Aptos, California, teaching jazz improvisation, arranging, and jazz ensembles. Formal education
Early career
Musical familyRay's wife, Sue Brown [5] (b. 1949, New York),[12] is a violinist and teacher of strings – violin, viola, chamber music, and orchestra. She holds a Bachelor of Music from Ithaca College (1971) and a Master of Fine Arts from Sarah Lawrence College (1974), where she studied with Dorothy DeLay. She also did post-grad work at the University of Colorado (1975). Ray and Sue were married on August 26, 1973, and together, they have three daughters, one of whom, Karin,[6] is a violinist and is married to cellist Daniel Levitov.[7] Karin earned degrees in music from Oberlin Conservatory of Music (1998) and Juilliard. Daniel is a member of the preparatory faculty at the Peabody Institute. Ray, born 1946 in Oceanside, New York, grew up in Freeport, New York. He has three older brothers, Glenn Edward Brown (1937–2007), Stephen Charles Brown, Roger V. Brown and a younger sister, Jeanne De Martino.
Glenn, Steve, and Ray all earned music degrees from Ithaca College – Steve: Bachelor of Music (1964) and a Master of Music (1968); Ray: Bachelor of Music (1968). Ray's nephew (Steve's son) – Miles Brown[8] – is a jazz bassist, performer, and music educator. Ray's father, Glenn Earl Brown (1914–1965;[16] 1936 graduate of Ithaca College School of Music), was the District Music Supervisor of Public Schools for Long Beach, New York. He was also director of bands at Long Beach Jr. Sr. High School from 1938 to 1965. As a pioneer in jazz education at the scholastic level,[17] he introduced stage bands to Long Beach public schools in 1939.[18] He also ran a music camp — Lake Shore Music Score — at Lake Winnipesaukee, Center Harbor, New Hampshire. Glenn Brown had been, for more than 14 years, a marimba soloist with the Xavier Cugat Orchestra.[19] Ray's mother, Marie Brown ({{linktext|née}} Ward) (1916–2002), taught English at Boardman Junior High School in Oceanside for 28 years, where, before retiring from the Oceanside School District in 1982, she served as curriculum coordinator and English department chairwoman.[20][21] She earned a Bachelor of Music degree from the Ithaca College School of Music in 1935, where she played piano, saxophone, and clarinet. She also held a Masters in English from Hofstra University.[22] Selected compositions/arrangementsCompositions/arrangements for the Stan Kenton Orchestra[23]
{{YouTube|KcEFnBB4kQg|Performed by Mike Vax and the All Star Big Band (Feb 22, 2008?}}Arrangement for the Stan Kenton Orchestra
{{YouTube|G9jst8NGqHY|Silicon Valley Repertory Jazz Orchestra, Recorded Feb 2010}}
Selected discography{{refbegin}}
Selections from a Feb 6, 1972, live audience BBC recording (same band) (Ray is 25 years old in these recordings.)
The music on album is composed and arranged entirely by Ray Brown
Recorded from 1976 to 1990, at Alley Cat Bistro, Culver City, CA; Coast Records, San Francisco; Concord Summer Festival, Concord Pavilion, Concord, CA; Fujitsu-Concord Jazz Festival, Tokyo; Mad Hatter Recording Studios, Los Angeles; Ocean Way Recording Studios, Hollywood, CA
"For Heaven's Sake", comp Donald Meyer, Elise Bretton, & Sherman Edwards, arr Ray Brown "Die Autobahn 500", arr Ray Brown "Magic Morning", comp by Dan Haerle, arr Ray Brown
with Charlie Haden, Michael Brecker, & Kenny Barron a. "The Night" (composer/arranger unknown) b. "American Dreams" (Charlie Haden) c. "Trends" (composer/arranger unknown) (possibly titled Travels by Pat Metheny & Lyle Mays) d. "Prism" (Keith Jarrett) e. "No Lonely Nights" (Keith Jarrett) f. "Ron's Place" (Brad Mehldau) g. "Nightfall" (Charlie Haden) h. "Bird Food" (Ornette Coleman) i. "America the Beautiful" (Samuel A. Ward, Katharine Lee Bates) Ray Brown (Raymond Harry Brown) conducts the Festival Orchestra on b, e, f, & i{{refend}} Other published works
Selected film- and videoography
Production director: Stanley Dorfman
Mike Vax, Dennis Noday, Jay Saunders, Ray Brown, Joe Marcinkiewicz, trumpet; Dick Shearer, Mike Jamieson, Fred Carter, Mike Wallace, Phil Herring, trombone; Quin Davis, Richard Torres, Kim Frizell, Willie Maiden, Chuck Carter, reeds; Stan Kenton, piano; John Worster, acoustic double bass; John Von Ohlen, drums; Ramon Lopez, Latin percussion
Count Basie and his Orchestra: Sonny Cohn, Pete Minger, Ray Brown, Nolan Smith (aka Nolan Shaheed)[9] trumpet, fluegel horn; Melvin Wanzo, Booty Wood, Dennis Wilson, trombone; Bill Hughes, bass trombone; Bobby Plater, Danny Turner, Eric Dixon, Kenny Hing, reeds; Charlie Fowlkes, baritone sax; Count Basie, Paul Smith, piano; Freddie Green, guitar; John Clayton, acoustic double bass; Butch Miles, drums; Ella Fitzgerald, Dennis Roland, vocal[25]
Music by: Patrick Williams; music orchestrated by: Billy May, Michael Moores, Jack Hayes; soundtrack personnel: Conte Candoli, Bob Findley, Dick Hurwitz, Ray Brown, Bill Berry, trumpet; Alan Kaplan, George Bohanon, Buster Cooper, trombone; Marshal Royal, Lanny Morgan, alto sax; Pete Christlieb, Bill Green, tenor sax; Jimmy Rowles, piano; John Pisano, guitar; Monty Budwig, acoustic double bass; Frank Capp, drums
Personnel: Harry "Sweets" Edison, Joe Newman, Snooky Young, Al Aarons, Ray Brown, trumpet; Al Grey, Benny Powell, Grover Mitchell, Michael Grey, trombone; Marshal Royal, Curtis Peagler, alto sax; Frank Wess, tenor sax, flute; Billy Mitchell, tenor sax; Bill Ramsay, baritone sax; Ronnell Bright, piano; Ted Dunbar, guitar; Eddie Jones, acoustic double bass; Gregg Fields, drums.
Personnel: Ray Brown, Pete Minger, Joe Newman, Snooky Young, trumpet; Arthur Baron, Grover Mitchell, Dennis Wilson, Douglas Purviance, trombone; Bill Ramsay, Curtis Peagler, alto sax; Frank Wess, tenor sax, flute; Billy Mitchell, tenor sax; Babe Clarke, baritone sax; Tee Curson, piano; Ted Dunbar, guitar; Eddie Jones, acoustic double bass; Dennis Mackrel, drums, Mel Torme, vocal, drums.[25] Honors and awardsIthaca College School of MusicBrown family who studied at the Ithaca College School of Music: As part of the Ithaca College School of Music expansion (2001), a chamber jazz room was added as a gift from Steve McCluski ’74 and Kim Joslyn McCluski ’74 in honor of the Brown family. A plaque there honors seven members of the Brown family who graduated from Ithaca College: 1) Glenn Brown (1914 – 1965) — Ithaca College School of Music (IC) 1936 (Ray's father) 2) Marie Brown ({{linktext|née}} Ward; 1916 – 2002) — IC 1935 (Ray's mother) 3) Stephen Charles Brown — Ithaca College (IC) Bachelor of Music 1964; Master of Music 1968 (Ray's second oldest brother) 4) Barbara Katz Brown — IC 1974; 1975 (Steve's wife) 5) Ray Brown — IC 1968 6) Sue Brown — IC 1971 (Ray's wife) 14th Annual Gail Rich Awards — Cultural Council Associates (of the Santa Cruz County arts community) (Jan 26, 2010)7) Glenn Edward Brown — IC 1959 (Ray's oldest brother)
{{YouTube|id=rooZnwsChWs#t=4m13s|title=Video clip of Sue and Ray speaking at the awards ceremony}} (fast forward to 4:13) See also
External links
ReferencesNotes1. ^Dennis Noday Inline citations{{Reflist|30em|refs=[10][11][12][13][14][15][16][17][18][19][20][21][22][23][24][25]2. ^Santa Cruz Jazz Festival 3. ^Lake Tahoe Music Festival 4. ^Rayburn Wright 5. ^Sue Brown 6. ^Karin Brown 7. ^Daniel Levitov 8. ^Miles Brown 9. ^Nolan Smith (aka Nolan Shaheed) 10. ^1 The Heritage Encyclopedia of Band Music: Composers and Their Music (Brown is in Vol. 1 of 3), by William Harold Rehrig (born 1939), Paul E. Bierley (ed.), Westerville, OH: Integrity Press (1991); {{OCLC|24606813}} 11. ^1 The ASCAP Biographical Dictionary, American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers {{Space|4}}4th ed. (1980); {{OCLC|7065938|10721505}} 12. ^1 2 Stan Kenton: This is an Orchestra!, by Michael Spark, University of North Texas Press (2010), pg. 239; {{OCLC|681766080}} 13. ^1 Biographical Dictionary of Jazz: "Raymond H. Brown", by Charles Eugene Claghorn (1911–2005), Prentice-Hall (1982); {{OCLC|8626853}} 14. ^1 Annual Report of the National Endowment for the Arts and the National Council on the Arts, pg. 69, June 30, 1975; {{OCLC|645099240}} 15. ^1 Who's Who in Entertainment, 3rd ed., Marquis (1997) 16. ^1 Obituary, New York Times, March 11, 1965 17. ^1 "Swing in Schooltime Pays: Klever Kids Kill Kats With Kapable Kombo", Down Beat, July 1, 1946 18. ^1 The Encyclopedia of Jazz in the Seventies: "Raymond H. Brown", by Leonard Feather & Ira Gitler (1976) 19. ^1 Portsmouth Herald (Portsmouth, New Hampshire), col. 1, pg. 8, August 8, 1964 20. ^1 "Barbara Katz Bride of Stephen Brown," New York Times, July 12, 1976 21. ^1 "Obituaries: Marie W. Brown, 85, Taught in Oceanside District", by Betty Ommerman, Newsday, pg. A-39, May 8, 2002 22. ^1 "Jazz Legend’s Legacy: Steve Brown ’64, M.S. ’68", Ithaca College Quarterly, Vol. 2 (2002) 23. ^1 Catalog of Kenton Arrangers, compiled by Terry F. Vosbein (born 1957), University of North Texas, Music Library, Special Collections 24. ^1 2 3 [https://www.loc.gov/item/ihas.200028021/ David Meeker, MBE, Jazz on the Screen: A Jazz & Blues Filmography,] 5th ed., Library of Congress (April 2014) {{space|4}}Kenton, No. 4778: pg. 1460 {{space|4}}Kenton, No. 17677: pg. 1477 {{space|4}}Basie, No. 8898: pg. 1617 {{space|4}}Montreux, No. 11467, pg. 387 {{space|4}}Montreux, No. 11453, pg. 493 {{space|4}}Fujitsu Concord Jazz Festival, No. 8844: pg. 433 25. ^1 Wallace Baine, "2010 Gail Rich Award Winners: Rat & Sue Brown", Santa Cruz Sentinel, January 3, 2010 }}{{Authority control}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Brown, Raymond Harry}} 17 : 1946 births|Living people|American jazz trumpeters|American male trumpeters|Swing trumpeters|American jazz composers|Male jazz composers|American music arrangers|Jazz arrangers|American jazz bandleaders|American jazz educators|Jazz educators|People from Oceanside, New York|Jazz musicians from New York (state)|21st-century trumpeters|Educators from New York (state)|21st-century male musicians |
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