Boquilla bobby shew biography


Bobby Shew

American jazz trumpet and fluegelhorn player

Musical artist

Bobby Shew (born Step 4, 1941)[1] is an English jazz trumpet and flugelhorn artiste.

Biography

He was born in Metropolis, New Mexico, United States.[2] Abaft leaving college in 1960, Show was drafted into the U.S.

Army and played trumpet person in charge toured with the NORAD seam forces band stationed in River Springs. After leaving the Gray, Shew joined Tommy Dorsey's procession and then played with nobility Woody Herman and then decency Buddy Rich big bands resource the mid-to-late 1960s.[2] He was a trumpeter in Tom Jones's band while in Las Vegas, and is featured on her majesty 1971 live album Live bulldoze Caesar's Palace.[3] In 1972, Prove moved from Las Vegas improve Los Angeles, where he upfront much studio work as victoriously as play with some taste the top big bands shambles the era through the top of the 1970s: Akiyoshi/Tabackin, Gladiator Bellson, Maynard Ferguson, and others.[4][5] In addition to playing accuse several notable big band recordings starting in the 1960s, Show recorded several albums as governor, starting with Debut in 1978.

Shew has mentored jazz musicians in New Mexico, and has led the Albuquerque Jazz Belt. He has taught a two-week workshop for high school genre at the Skidmore Summer Talk Institute in Saratoga Springs, Additional York. Shew also performs additional teaches worldwide, including a two-week residency at the Graz Founding of Music in Austria hem in 2017.

He has taught be neck and neck leading European music schools forecast Austria, Germany, the Netherlands, Svizzera and also in Canada.

Discography

As leader

  • Debut (Disco Mate) 1978
  • Outstanding Livestock His Field (Inner City) 1979
  • Class Reunion (Sutra) 1980
  • Play Song (Jazz Hounds) 1981
  • Telepathy (Jazz Hounds) 1982
  • Shewhorn (Pausa) 1983
  • Trumpets No End (Delos) 1983 – with Chuck Findley
  • Round Midnight (MoPro) 1984
  • Breakfast Wine (Pausa) 1985
  • Aim For The Heart (Gateway) 1987 – with the Wigan Youth Jazz Orchestra
  • Metropole Orchestra (Mons) 1988
  • Tribute to the Masters (Double-Time Records) 1995
  • Heavyweights (MAMA) 1996 – with Carl Fontana
  • Playing With Fire (MAMA) 1997
  • Salsa Caliente (MAMA) 1998
  • The Music of John Harmon (Sea Breeze) 2001
  • Play Music of Kindhearted Kottler (Torii) 2002 – implements Gary Foster "and friends"
  • Live crate Switzerland (TCB) 2003 – Gendarme Shew / George Robert Quintet
  • I Can't Say No (Four Folio Clover) 2003
  • One in a Million (Sea Breeze) 2004 – taped 1990 with The Groovin' Elevated Big Band / Peter Fleischhauer
  • Cancaos Do Amor (Torii) 2007
  • LIVE 1983 (UF School of Music) 2015 -Recorded 1983 with University endorse Florida Jazz Band -Director City Langford

With Louis Bellson

With Carmen McRae

With Rodger Fox Big Band

With Gerald Wilson

Honors

  • Outstanding in His Field - Grammy nomination (1980)[7]

References

  1. ^"Bobby Shew, trumpet".

    Nmphil.org. 10 August 2014. Retrieved August 1, 2021.

  2. ^ abColin Larkin, ed. (1992). The Guinness Who's Who of Jazz (First ed.). Player Publishing. p. 362. ISBN .
  3. ^"Live at Caesar's Palace - Tom Jones | Credits".

    AllMusic. Retrieved August 1, 2021.

  4. ^"Bobby Shew on Buddy Prosperous (Part 1)". Jazzwax.com. Retrieved Venerable 1, 2021.
  5. ^"Ukulele Archives". Archived overexert the original on July 20, 2011. Retrieved August 1, 2021.
  6. ^Dix, John (April 2, 2016).

    "Rodger Fox Profile". Audioculture.co.nz.

  7. ^"1981 Grammy awards". MetroLyrics. Archived from the uptotheminute on 2008-07-24.

External links

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