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Eddie Daniels
is that rarest of rare musicians who is not only equally
at home in both jazz and classical music but excels at
both with breathtaking virtuosity. Expert testimony from
the jazz world comes from the eminent jazz critic
Leonard Feather, who said of Eddie, "It is a rare event
in jazz when one man can all but reinvent an instrument,
bringing it to a new stage of its evolution". From the
classical side Leonard Bernstein says, "Eddie Daniels
combines elegance and virtuosity in a way that makes me
remember Artur Rubenstein. He is a thoroughly well-bred
demon".
Eddie first
came to the attention of the jazz audience as a tenor
saxophonist with the Thad Jones-Mel Lewis Orchestra.
When Thad and Mel first organized their band in 1966 to
play Monday nights at the Village Vanguard in New York (where
it still plays) Eddie was one of the first musician they
called. Later that year he sank $400 in a round-trip
flight to Vienna to enter the International Competition
for Modern Jazz, a contest organized by the pianist
Fredrich Gulda and sponsored by the city of Vienna, and
won first prize on saxophone. He continued working with
Thad and Mel over the next several years and toured
Europe extensively with them.
A single
clarinet solo recorded on a recording with the Thad
Jones/Mel Lewis Orchestra, Live at the Village Vanguard,
garnered sufficient attention in 1968 for him to win
Downbeat Magazine's International Critics New Star on
Clarinet award. This conversion to clarinet was not new,
however, for Eddie began studying clarinet at age 13 and
received his Masters in Clarinet from Juilliard. When he
subsequently began recording as a leader he concentrated
on the clarinet. Jack Elliot, musical director of the
New American Orchestra, was so impressed with Eddie's
playing on an early CBS recording that he commissioned
Jorge Calandrelli to compose a major work for him. The
result was "Concerto for Jazz Clarinet and Orchestra"
which Eddie premiered in Los Angeles in 1984. This work
became the centerpiece of his debut GRP album,
Breakthrough, recorded with the Philharmonia Orchestra
of London. Of this recording, which also includes pieces
by JS Bach and CPE Bach, Quincy Jones said, "Eddie's
debut album for GRP will become the benchmark to judge
all future recordings blending the world of classical
music and jazz."
Upon its
release Breakthrough achieved overwhelming critical
acclaim, with Downbeat magazine referring to Eddie's ".
. perfect synthesis between classical technique and jazz
sensibility" and his".... blinding virtuosity." Eddie
followed it with To Bird With Love, an album dedicated
to Charlie Parker. His third album, Memos From Paradise,
teamed him with pianist Roger Kellaway, a rhythm section,
and a string quartet. All three of these albums earned
Grammy nominations (Bird garnered two) and Memos won a
Grammy.
Eddie
continued his diverse recording pattern with his two
subsequent albums, Blackwood and Nepenthe. On his next
album, This Is Now, Eddie returned to straight ahead
jazz fronting a burning jazz trio led by Billy Childs.
Simultaneously he released The Brahms and Weber Clarinet
Quintets on Reference Records recorded with the
Composers String Quartet.
In 1992 he
began a collaboration with vibist Gary Burton, recording
an album titled Benny Rides Again, devoted to the music
of Benny Goodman and Lionel Hampton. Greeted with
overwhelming critical and popular response they have
toured together playing the music from the album at jazz
festivals and concerts throughout the United States,
Europe, Japan, and Latin America.
Eddie's most
ambitious recording project to date is Vivaldi: The Five
Seasons (Shanachie) released in 1996. Recorded with the
Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra and a jazz rhythm section,
Eddie pushes the envelope of his breathtaking virtuosity
by performing the solo violin part on the clarinet as
Vivaldi wrote it, improvising in the classical style,
and improvising in the jazz style, all of it seamlessly
interwoven in new arrangements by Jorge Calandrelli.
Eddie's latest
recording is Beautiful Love, Intimate Jazz Portraits (Shanachie),
recorded with his longtime friends and associates
guitarist Chuck Loeb and keyboard great Bob James.
Eddie's
personal appearances reflect the diversity of his albums.
He has performed at jazz festivals and jazz clubs with
his quartet, the music from Breakthrough with the
Cincinnati Symphony, the Rochester Philharmonic, and the
Indianapolis Symphony, as well as with the Boston Pops
for Public Television. On a single concert program he
has performed the Mozart Clarinet Quintet, material from
Memos From Paradise, and duo improvisations with Roger
Kellaway. In the classical field he has performed with
orchestras including the London Symphony, the Rotterdam
Philharmonic and the Tokyo Symphony. and the Polish
Chamber Orchestra, as well as the Vermeer, Orlando, Suk,
and Composers String Quartets, in concerts throughout
the United States, Europe, and Japan. |