The
Monterey Jazz Festival’s Artist-In-Residence
works year-round with young musicians in performances
and clinics at our Next Generation Festival,
Summer Jazz Camp, and at the Monterey Jazz Festival.
This year’s Artist-In-Residence, Christian
McBride, joins jazz luminaries and past
Artists-In-Residence Branford Marsalis, Regina
Carter, Kurt Elling and Terence Blanchard in
this important and vital role.
Mr. McBride will act as a clinician and performer
during the Next Generation Festival, including
MJF's 38th Annual National High School Jazz Competition,
April 3-6, 2008. He will mentor students at the
MJF Summer Jazz Camp in June 2008 and perform
with the Next Generation Jazz Orchestra at the
Monterey Jazz Festival presented by Verizon,
September 19-21, 2008.
Christian McBride is a devoted jazz educator
and mentor. He is the Artistic Director at the
Jazz Aspen Snowmass summer program, the Co-Director
of The Jazz Museum in Harlem, and is Creative
Chair for the Los Angeles Philharmonic. Past
Artistic Director and residency positions include
stints at the Henry Mancini and Brubeck Institutes,
the Berklee College of Music, and Stanford Jazz
Workshop.
ABOUT CHRISTIAN MCBRIDE
The Grammy Award winning bassist has been at
the forefront of jazz since he emerged as part
of the talented generation of players that
took the genre by storm in the early 1990s.
Born in 1972 in Philadelphia, Christian began
playing electric bass at age 9, mentored by
his father and great uncle. After studying
both jazz and classical music at Philadelphia’s
High School for the Creative and Performing
Arts, Christian was awarded a partial scholarship
to attend the Juilliard School in New York
City in 1989. Almost immediately upon his arrival
in New York, McBride began working with saxophonist
Bobby Watson's Horizon and started
working at clubs with John Hicks, Kenny Barron,
Larry Willis and Gary Bartz. After one year
at Juilliard, McBride decided to leave school
to tour with trumpeter Roy Hargrove. From that
moment, McBride began a remarkable ascent to
the top ranks of the music industry; many top
jazz artists recognized his virtuoso status,
such as trumpeter Freddie Hubbard, Superbass
(with Ray Brown and John Clayton), Pat Metheny,
Joshua Redman and many others.
During the 1990s, Christian recorded close to
150 albums as a sideman for such artists as Joe
Henderson, Betty Carter, Roy Haynes, Benny Green,
Kathleen Battle, Diana Krall, Dave Brubeck, Jimmy
Smith, Joe Lovano, McCoy Tyner, George Duke,
and many more, as well as appearing onscreen
in Robert Altman's 1940s period film, Kansas
City. Signed to Verve in 1994, McBride released
four records as a leader, including Gettin'
to It, Number Two Express, A Family Affair and SCI-FI.
In the new century, McBride
continued to expand his scope of live and recorded
performances with Sting, George Duke, Chick
Corea, Chris Botti, John Scofield, Jim Hall,
and dozens more. In 2004, he won a Grammy Award
for his participation on McCoy Tyner’s Illuminations,
and he undertook his first pop Musical Directorship
for Carly Simon’s Christmas show featuring
gospel royalty BeBe Winans. In 2006, McBride
performed with the Godfather of Soul, James Brown
at the Hollywood Bowl, and in 2007, he recorded
with and acted as Musical Director for Queen
Latifah, presented Charles Mingus’ “Epitaph” in
Los Angeles, Chicago and New York, and performed
with Sonny Rollins and Roy Haynes at a 50th Anniversary
concert at Carnegie Hall.
Confounding the purists
by embracing the funky and electrified sounds
of his youth, McBride has also pushed the boundaries
of jazz with the Philadelphia Experiment (with
The Roots’ drummer
and high school classmate ?uestlove, Uri Caine
and Pat Martino) and has released two recordings, Vertical
Vision and Live at Tonic with his
own group, the Christian McBride Band. Christian
has also cultivated new sounds with his eclectic,
anything-goes-electro-acoustic Christian McBride
Situation, which can include DJs as well as traditional
instruments.
McBride is also a talented
composer/arranger and has written dozens of
tunes and has received commissions from such
entities as Jazz at Lincoln Center ("Bluesin' in Alphabet City," performed
by Wynton Marsalis with the Lincoln Center Jazz
Orchestra) and the National Endowment for the
Arts (“The Movement, Revisited,” a
dramatic musical portrait of the civil rights
struggle of the 1960s written and arranged for
quartet and a 30-piece gospel choir.)
Beginning in 1994, Christian
has performed at the Monterey Jazz Festival
five times: with Ray Brown, Pat Metheny, the
Brubeck Institute, the Christian McBride Situation,
the Christian McBride Quintet, and with Dave
Brubeck in 2002, celebrating the 40th Anniversary
of the “Real Ambassadors.”

 
For other giving options (credit
card by phone, stock donation, planned giving),
please contact the Monterey Jazz Festival at
831.373.3366 or e-mail jazzinfo@montereyjazzfestival.org. |