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Danilo Pérez

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Origin
  
Panama

Name
  
Danilo Perez

Instruments
  
Piano

Role
  
Pianist


Labels
  
Mack Avenue Records

Website
  
daniloperez.com

Genres
  
Jazz

Danilo Perez IMN International Music Network


Born
  
29 December 1965 (age 58) (
1965-12-29
)

Albums
  
Children of the Light, Motherland, Beyond the Sound Barrier, Without a Net, Central Avenue

Profiles


Education
  
Berklee College of Music

Danilo p rez clase magistral


Danilo Pérez (born 29 December 1965) is a Panamanian pianist and composer.

Contents

Danilo p rez john patitucci brian blade children of the light live blue note milano


Music career

Danilo Pérez Danilo Perez Bridging Cultures and Dimensions of Jazz

Pérez was born in Panama in 1965 and started on piano when he was three-years-old. At ten, he studied at the National Conservatory in Panama. He moved to the U.S. to study music, attending Indiana University of Pennsylvania and then switching to the Berklee College of Music in Boston. At Berklee, he worked with Jon Hendricks, Claudio Roditi, and Terence Blanchard.

Danilo Pérez httpsmedianprorgassetsimg20150130danilo

In 1989, Perez became a member of Dizzy Gillespie's United Nations Orchestra. The album Live at the Royal Festival Hall won a Grammy Award. He remained with the band until Gillespie died in 1992. He stated in a press report for the Independent that "one of the things Dizzy taught me was to learn about my own heritage even more than I knew already. He said it was more important for jazz for you to get to what your roots are, than to learn about other things".

Danilo Pérez Danilo Prez Biography Albums Streaming Links AllMusic

For the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta, Perez and Marsalis played together again. He performed as a special guest at President Clinton's Inaugural Ball, played piano on the Bill Cosby TV show theme song, and participated in the Grammy-winning album, Danzon.

Danilo Pérez Danilo Perez Alchetron The Free Social Encyclopedia

In 2000, he joined Wayne Shorter in a quartet with John Patitucci and Brian Blade. He has played concerts with the group extensively since then, and appears on all four of the recordings Shorter has made during this period: Footprints Live! (2002), Alegría (2003), Beyond the Sound Barrier (2005), and Without a Net (2013).

Danilo Pérez IMN International Music Network

Perez was appointed artistic director of the Berklee College of Music Global Jazz Institute, a program for talented jazz students from around the world.

Recording as leader

Danilo Pérez Danilo Perez Alchetron The Free Social Encyclopedia

In 1994, he released his first solo album, Danilo Perez, and then his second, The Journey, in 1995. He performed The Journey in concert with the Panamanian Symphony Orchestra the same year. The album is a musical account of the trip African slaves made across the ocean, beginning with "The Capture", through "The Taking", "Chains", The Voyage", and ending with "Libre Spiritus". David Sanchez and Giovanni Hidalgo play on the album, which was recorded in two days at the Power Station in New York City. The album made it to the top ten jazz lists in The Village Voice, The New York Times, The Boston Globe, and Billboard magazine. It was named one of the best albums of the 1990s by Downbeat magazine.

Danilo Pérez Danilo Prez Panama 500 at Scullers Jon Garelick39s Giant Steps

On his third album, PanaMonk, he paid tribute to Thelonious Monk as well as all the other musicians he had been in contact with up to that point. An almost entirely wordless album, PanaMonk lets the music speak for itself. Perez told JazzTimes magazine, "His (Monk's) music was the epitome of small group playing, the epitome of jazz music. If you really want to know about jazz and swing, he's one of the best to go to."

Danilo Pérez Danilo Perez Alchetron The Free Social Encyclopedia

In 1998 Central Avenue, Perez's fourth album, received a Grammy nomination for Best Jazz Album of the Year. Central Avenue is a blend of blues, folk, and Caribbean and Middle Eastern influences. It was produced by Tommy LiPuma, who worked with Perez on PanaMonk. Perez arranged the ensemble of bassists John Patitucci and Avishai Cohen, and drummer Jeff "Tain" Watts. The songs were done in one take, except for "Panama Blues". For this song, Perez recorded Raul Vital, a Panamanian folk singer, and a chorus of mejorana singers in Panama, then returned with the recording to New York City, where the ensemble contributed. Mejorana is an improvisational style of singing. Perez told Graybow of Billboard, "[I heard] the blues in their voices, much like the blues down in Mississippi," and instantly wanted to record them.

Discography

  • 1993 Danilo Perez (Novus)
  • 1994 The Journey (Novus)
  • 1996 Panamonk (Impulse!/GRP)
  • 1998 Central Avenue (GRP)
  • 2000 The Roy Haynes Trio (Verve)
  • 2000 Motherland (Verve/PolyGram/Universal)
  • 2003 ...Till Then (Universal/Verve)
  • 2005 Live at the Jazz Showcase (ArtistShare)
  • 2006 Panama Suite (ArtistShare)
  • 2008 Across the Crystal Sea (Concord/EmArcy)
  • 2009 Music We Are (Kindred Rhythm)
  • 2010 Providencia (Mack Avenue)
  • 2014 Panama 500 (Mack Avenue)
  • 2015 Children of the Light (Mack Avenue)
  • As sideman

    With Dizzy Gillespie

  • Live at the Royal Festival Hall (Enja, 1989)
  • The Winter in Lisbon (Milan, 1990)
  • To Bird with Love (Telarc, 1992)
  • Bird Songs: The Final Recordings (Telarc, 1992)
  • With Wayne Shorter

  • Footprints Live! (Verve, 2001)
  • Alegría (Verve, 2003)
  • Beyond the Sound Barrier (Verve, 2005)
  • Without a Net (Blue Note, 2013)
  • Songs

    Children of the LightChildren of the Light · 2015
    Panama 500Panama 500 · 2014
    Panama LibreDanilo Perez · 1993

    References

    Danilo Pérez Wikipedia