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Christian McBride Band at the Kennedy Center
Listen to Part 1
Listen to Part 2
Bassist Christian McBride brings strength to every situation. On September 6, 2006, at the Hollywood Bowl, McBride conducted his hero and the Godfather of Soul, James Brown (1933-2006) and an 18-piece big band in a concert version of a long-out-of-print album, Soul on Top. One month later, Christian put together a tribute to his mentor, bassist Ray Brown, at the Blue Note in New York. Dee Dee Bridgewater was special guest. And this month, he's at Newport with Bruce Hornsby, on the West Coast with Hornsby and with Christian's own band, and on JazzSet.
Immersed in music and sports in his hometown of Philadelphia, young Christian had made a brief stab at the trombone and was playing the electric bass as well as loads of football, and rooting for Dr. J and the Philadelphia 76ers. Then a sharp-eared music teacher steered McBride to the acoustic bass. He studied at the Settlement Music School and the High School for the Creative and Performing Arts (he was a "CAPA Kid"), where hip-hop and neo-soul were already the cutting edge.
Soon, Wynton Marsalis came through town, heard McBride, and took him under his jazz wing.
In 1993, JazzSet featured newcomer McBride in a concert from the Boston
Globe Festival. His bandmates were Joshua Redman on sax and Geoff Keezer
on piano -- no drums. It's still a great set!
Off the bandstand, McBride is the Creative Chair for Jazz with the Los
Angeles Philharmonic, programming four concerts a year at the Walt
Disney Concert Hall. He is Co-Director with tenor saxophonist Loren
Schoenberg of the Jazz Museum in Harlem, raising money for a new
building. He's in charge of the Jazz Academy at Aspen/Snowmass, coaching
lucky young bands in the mountains in the summer. And he teaches there.
He's powerful in the classroom, sharing his knowledge and tracks from
his vast collection of jazz, soul and fusion from 1970s. He teaches from
his iPod.
The McBride Band has been together since the year 2000. Their new album
is Live at Tonic from Rope-a-dope. It's a triple-CD set that documents
three nights with this band and special guests at Tonic on the Lower
East Side of Manhattan.
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MUSIC
"No Blues" (Miles Davis)
"Say Somethin'" (Terreon Gully)
"Aural Oasis" (Wynton Marsalis, arr. McBride)
"Lullaby for a Ladybug" (McBride)
"Sonic Tonic" (Blake)
THE BAND
Christian McBride, acoustic and electric bass
Ron Blake, saxophones and flute
Geoffrey Keezer, piano and keyboards
Terreon Gully, drums
WEB RESOURCES
Christian McBride
Kennedy Center Jazz
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CREDITS
Thanks to Dr. Billy Taylor, Artistic Advisor for Jazz, Manager Kevin Struthers, and the team at the Kennedy Center; also Greg Hartman and Chris Weal of Big Mo Recording.
Ginger Bruner directed host Dee Dee Bridgewater. Duke Markos is our recording and remix engineer and Technical Director. Becca Pulliam is our Producer, Thurston Briscoe III our Executive Producer from Jazz 88, WBGO in Newark, New Jersey.
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Copyright 2007 NPR
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