John Doheny

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John Doheny
John Doheny at the Vancouver Jazz Festival '07. Photo by Raquel Dennett
John Doheny at the Vancouver Jazz Festival '07. Photo by Raquel Dennett
Background information
Born December 17, 1953 (1953-12-17) (age 54)
Seattle, Washington, United States
Genre(s) Jazz
Instrument(s) Saxophones, Flute, Clarinet

John Steven "Pip" Doheny (born December 17, 1953), is a jazz tenor saxophonist and band leader, who also plays flute, clarinet, and alto saxophone.

Born in Seattle, Washington, Doheny spent his early career in the 1970s primarily in Vancouver, Canada, playing in local rhythm and blues bands and strip clubs, as well as spending large parts of each year on exhaustive road trips to taverns throughout rural British Columbia and Alberta. By the 1980s he was appearing as a sideman with artists such as the Coasters, the Platters, the Temptations, and Buddy Knox. In the late 1980s he relocated to Toronto, Canada, and then New York City, working with the bands of Lloyd Williams, Danny B, and Kenny Margolis.

He released his first CD as a leader One Up, Two Back in 2002, featuring his band the John Doheny Quintet, and vocalist Colleen Savage.

Doheny is noted as a colorful raconteur(no small accomplishment in a city like New Orleans). A 2002 interview with him can be found here, courtesy of smoothjazz.com, which includes an explanation of how he came to acquire the middle name "Pip", and an account of his early days as a struggling musician.

Doheny is also a jazz historian, and historian.He has written articles on Jelly Roll Morton, and also achieved notoriety for transcribing the music of Charles Mingus from audio form into written musical scores. Having transcribed the music of Mingus, he adapted the scores to a series of performances entitled 'Mingus Mania,' parts of which appeared on the Bravo television network in the early 1990s as musical interludes. Doheny also composed and performed source music for the soundtrack for the 1998 Bruce Sweeney film Dirty, as well as appearing with his band in the 1997 Brian Dennehy TV movie A Father's Betrayal.

He is now a resident of New Orleans, Louisiana, where he is professor of practice at Tulane University. While many New Orleans residents were displaced by Hurricane Katrina, Doheny was one of the first to return after the flood waters subsided, and is one of the most enthusiastic and vocal advocates for the rebuilding of New Orleans to its original form, history, and traditions. He is currently dedicating his efforts to rebuilding the jazz culture in New Orleans, including the creation of a jazz performance program at Tulane University.

[edit] Discography

As Leader:

John Doheny and The Professors of Pleasure: Tulane University Faculty Quintet-Independent-2007

John Doheny (tenor and alto sax) Fredrick Sanders (piano, Fender Rhodes electric piano, Hammond B-3 organ) John Dobry (guitar) Jim Markway (electric and acoustic bass) Kevin O'Day (drums)

Jackson Square Padrino Cottontail Your Majesty The Rainbow People A Greasy One Halifax Big G's Love


One Up, Two Back - JDQ Records CD618551 - 2002 John Doheny (tenor sax) Norm Quinn (trumpet and flugelhorn) Ridley Vinson or Tony Foster (piano) Al Johnston (bass) Stan Taylor (drums) Colleen Savage (vocals)

One Up, Two Back We Knew Attack of the Killer Chalmations Player's Inn Dindi Killer Chalmations . . Slight Return Time After Time Once in a While Perdido

Appears on the following recordings:

Hot Air Volume 3. CBC Radio Compilation. CBC Records. HACD0052 (2002) Martin Ferr - Dubious - Independent Cassette - 001 (1995) Terraced Garden - Within - Melody And Menace Records LP - CT - 1960 (1988) Downtown Kenny Brown and the Pervaders - Willin' and Ready - Razor Records/Blue Wave Records LP - 017 (1982) Albert Collins - When The Welfare Turns Its Back On You - Sonnet Records - LP - 14107 (1979) Douglas College Night Band - It's Just Talk-CD- DC 1007 (1998) VCC Jazz Orchestra - Revelation-Cassette (1995) VCC Jazz Orchestra - Let Me Off Uptown-Cassette (1993)

Original compositions, "If I Only Had A Brain" and "Uncle Jim's Blues", to the soundtrack of the 1998 Bruce Sweeney film Dirty

[edit] External links