Nelson Cascais

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Nelson Cascais is a jazz double bassist, born in Lisbon, Portugal in 1973.

Contents

[edit] Education

Studied at the Hot Club Jazz School with Carlos Barreto, Bernardo Moreira, and Pedro Moreira, while keeping his classical studies at the National Conservatory.

[edit] Jazz Career

In 1994, as a graduate of the Hot Club School, he represented Portugal at the annual IASJ meeting, in New York City, where he studied with Reggie Workman and Dave Liebman, and performing with other students at the JVC Jazz Festival and at Visiones. He attended workshops with Bruce Barth, Phil Markowitz, Ron Jackson, Frank Mobus, and Barrie Harris.

In 1995 he started teaching at the Hot Club Jazz School in Lisbon. Since then he has been playing in and out of Portugal with musicians such as Rick Margitza, Jerome Richardson, Al Singer, Rich Perry, Perico Sambeat, Bernardo Sassetti, The Carlo Morena Trio, Victor de Diego, The Isaac Turienzo Trio, Stefano D'Anna, Llibert Fortuny, Ivan Padduart, Carlos Martins, and others.

He has played jazz festivals in the Portuguese cities of Matosinhos, Loulé, Marinha Grande, and Gulbenkian, in 1998 with Nuno Ferreira. He performed at the Serralves Jazz Festival in 1998 and 2002. He also played at the Guimarães International Jazz Festival with the festival's orchestra conducted by Maria Schneider in 2001.

In 1999 played with the John Ellis Quartet with Aaron Goldberg and Troy Davis. He began to work with his own band and two years later recorded his debut CD as a leader, Ciclope for Tone of a Pitch.

During 2005 he played with Bart Deffort, Andrzej Olejniczac and the Dave O'Higgins Quartet.

[edit] Discography

As leader:

  • Ciclope – NC5tet, 2002
  • Nine Stories – Nelson Cascais, 2005

As sideman:

  • Por minha dama – Ala dos Namorados, 1995
  • Alma – Ala dos Namorados, 1996
  • Con Angel (1999), Isaac Turienzo Trio
  • Spin – Nuno Ferreira & Companhia Dos Sons, 2002
  • Pueblos - Quarteto de Jorge Reis, 2003
  • A Luz – Laurent Filipe, 2004
  • Sound of places - Pedro Madaleno, 2004

[edit] External links