chop-stride piano, sleek-cut trombone, and a screamin’ trumpet backs up a wild woman and her blues. drink up a cup with miss ida and celebrate the summer heat as we roll out the nights wage.
“Jim Fryer began his career as age 16 in the Boston area. In the more than 3 decades since, he has toured internationally; recorded as a bandleader and sideman; and played television, radio, theaters, jazz clubs, and concert halls in a variety of musical settings. First and foremost an exceptional jazz trombonist at ease in any style, he has become especially noted as one of the foremost traditional jazz exponents on the scene today”...
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chop-stride piano, sleek-cut trombone, and a screamin’ trumpet backs up a wild woman and her blues. drink up a cup with miss ida and celebrate the summer heat as we roll out the nights wage.
“Jim Fryer began his career as age 16 in the Boston area. In the more than 3 decades since, he has toured internationally; recorded as a bandleader and sideman; and played television, radio, theaters, jazz clubs, and concert halls in a variety of musical settings. First and foremost an exceptional jazz trombonist at ease in any style, he has become especially noted as one of the foremost traditional jazz exponents on the scene today”
At twenty-one years old, trumpeter Mike Davis has a voice beyond his years on his instrument. His playing is imbued with the sounds of prohibition-era speakeasies,
Hoovervilles of the depression, and glittering jazz palaces of the swing era, creating a timeless cocktail of American music. He appears regularly around New York City with
Dandy Wellington and his band, Gordon Webster, Emily Asher’s Garden Party, Gelber and Manning, The Astor Boys, and many other traditional jazz and swing bands. He is a student of Laurie Frink at the Manhattan School of Music.
At twenty-one years old, trumpeter Mike Davis has a voice beyond his years on his instrument. His playing is imbued with the sounds of prohibition-era speakeasies, Hoovervilles of the depression, and glittering jazz palaces of the swing era, creating a timeless cocktail of American music. He appears regularly around New York City with Dandy Wellington and his band, Gordon Webster, Emily Asher’s Garden Party, Gelber and Manning, The Astor Boys, and many other traditional jazz and swing bands. He is a student of Laurie Frink at the Manhattan School of Music.
Pronounced "Prodigious" by the late Leonard Feather of the L.A. Times, and "A Monster" by Tootie Heath, Adam Platt began playing the piano at the age of four. The recipient of several awards growing up including DownBeat Magazine's student music awards, and winning the High School Jazz Piano division at the Lionel Hampton Jazz Festival (first when he was 10 years old, the youngest winner ever). Adam has since attended New England Conservatory as well as Berklee College of Music studying with, Joanne Brackeen, Michael Cain, Bob Moses, and many others.
Dave Brubeck said once of Adam: "He has everything he needs and more. I can't imagine he won't soon be recognized as one of the greatest."
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