ETIENNE
CHARLES
There
is no use in trying to pigeonhole 2006 National
Trumpet Competition winner Etienne Charles. One
listen to his debut album Culture Shock shows the
depth and breadth of his varied musical heritage.
From the Calypso and Caribbean steel pan grooves
of his native Trinidad, to sophisticated swing firmly
rooted in the jazz tradition, Charles deftly incorporates
a multitude of styles while maintaining continuity,
freshness, and maturity in his sound that is often
lacking in other players of his generation.
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Twenty-three year old Etienne Charles
comes from a rich legacy of musical tradition. His
grandfather was seldom seen without his cuatro or
guitar. His father Francis was a member of Phase
II Pan Groove, one of the world’s top steel
bands and one that Etienne would later join himself.
Music surrounded Charles as a child, emanating from
his father’s record collection, and the sounds
of calypso, steel pan, and African shango and tassa
drumming. These formative years inform Charles’s
playing and are evident in his sound today.
Already Charles is a celebrated
award-winning trumpeter. At Fatima College in Trinidad,
Charles was the first three-time winner of the coveted
French Provincial Cup, and was also the youngest
person to ever receive the award at age 13. In 2002
he began his studies at Florida State University
and in 2006 he graduated as Brautlecht Scholar of
the College of Music, where he studied jazz with
legendary pianist Marcus Roberts. He is currently
pursuing a Masters degree in Jazz Studies at the
Julliard School. Charles has been awarded the IAJE
Award for Outstanding Service to Jazz Education
and a Special Citation for Outstanding Musicianship.
Charles is also an alumnus of the prestigious Henry
Mancini Institute in Los Angeles. He has shared
the stage with Grammy Award winners Roberta Flack
and Ralph MacDonald, jazz piano great Marcus Roberts,
Maria Schneider, Johnny Mandel, Rene Marie, Gerald
Wilson, and a host of others.
For his first album, Culture Shock,
Charles assembled an outstanding and seasoned band
of veteran musicians to help him bring his vision
of jazz fused with Afro-Caribbean rhythms to fruition.
The aforementioned pianist extraordinaire Marcus
Roberts is featured, with Jazz at Lincoln Center
Orchestra trombonist Vincent Gardner, Len “Boogsie”
Sharpe, Ralph MacDonald, vocalist Pam Laws, saxophonist
Dayve Stewart, and the hard swinging and solid rhythm
section of Rodney Jordan and Leon Anderson on bass
and drums respectively. This all-star cast brings
together Charles’s diverse influences and
creates a unified, fresh, and urgent musical presentation
on par with the best jazz being made today. Etienne
Charles is a talented, creative soul with a vision
and the will to bring it to the world.
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