David Berkman

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David Berkman (born December 28, 1958), is a Jazz Pianist, Composer, Arranger and Educator. Berkman came of age in Cleveland, Ohio playing in house bands for visiting jazz greats Sonny Stitt, Hank Crawford and Carter Jefferson and local heroes Joe Lovano, Jamey Haddad and Greg Bandy. After moving to New York City in 1985, David Berkman has been involved in the jazz community there.

As a composer, Berkman was awarded the 2000 Doris Duke/Chamber Music America New Works Creation and Presentation Grant.[1] He is a recording artist whose 4 Palmetto recordings have appeared on numerous best records of the year critic's lists: the New York Times (Top 10 Records of 1998), the Village Voice (Top 10 Records of 1998), Downbeat (Best records of the 90s), JazzIz (Top 5 records of 1998), Jazz Times and others. Critic John Stevenson wrote in his 2000 review of Berkman's Leaving Home, "...With Leaving Home, (Berkman) has ascended to a new height of creativity. Tracing the trajectory of mapped out by his earlier CD's we can see a greater level of melodic sophistication and more intense coalescing of compositional elements..."[2] As a jazz clinician. Berkman was awarded the Homer Osborne Award from the Wichita Jazz Society and has performed and taught at numerous jazz camps, universities and conservatories around the United States, South America and Europe.

Berkman published three books with Sher Music Publishing: The Jazz Musician’s Guide to Creative Practicing (2007) and The Jazz Singer's Guidebook (2009) and "The Jazz Harmony Book" (2014)..[3] He has played in many bands including, most importantly, says Scott Yanow of the All Music Guide to Jazz[4] those of Cecil McBee whose 2003 CD "Unspoken" includes Berkman.[5] Berkman has performed with Tom Harrell and the Vanguard Orchestra and has performed with, recorded or arranged for numerous jazz luminaries, including Sonny Stitt, Brian Blade, Joe Lovano, Dave Douglas, Ray Drummond, Billy Hart, Dick Oatts, Tony Malaby, Chris Potter, Scott Wendholt, Lenny White, Scott Colley, Craig Handy, Steven Bernstein, Bill Stewart, Dave Stryker, David "Fathead" Newman, Hank Crawford, and Jane Monheit )[6]

Now appearing more often as a bandleader, Berkman has performed solo and with his quartet, quintet and sextet at festivals and clubs in the United States, Europe and Japan, most recently at the North Sea Festival,[7] the Edinburgh Festival,[8] The Glasgow Festival,[9] the Belfast Festival and the Cork Festival. Recent tours include clubs and concert performances in Germany, Switzerland, Ireland, the United Kingdom, the Netherlands, Austria, Belgium, São Paulo, Japan and around the United States. Recent projects include piano/trumpet duo performances with Dave Douglas, at the 2006 Jazz Composers Symposium in Tampa Florida and the 2005 International Trumpet Guild Convention in Bangkok,[10] and with Tom Harrell in Italy, as well as the cooperatively-led New York Standards Quartet (with Tim Armacost, Yosuke Inoue and Gene Jackson).[11]

Berkman is an associate professor in the Queens College Jazz Masters Program in New York and is a visiting professor at the Prince Claus Conservatory in Groningen, the Netherlands.[12]

See also

  • List of Jazz Arrangers

References

  1. http://www.chamber-music.org/programs/recipients.html#encore[]
  2. John Stevenson, CD Reviews.com "Best CDs of 2000 --Jim Macnie, SonicNet, Providence Register
  3. "Jazz & Latin Music Real Books and Method Books". Sher Music Co. 
  4. Yanow, Scott. Biography of David Berkman at AllMusic. Retrieved 2012-05-08.
  5. "Unspoken". Palmetto Records. Retrieved 2012-05-08. 
  6. Credits for David Berkman at AllMusic. Retrieved 2012-05-08.
  7. "Timetable for Sunday 11 July 2004". North Sea Jazz. 
  8. "Week Zero: Preview Edition". ThreeWeeks in Edinburgh: 22. 2008. 
  9. "David Berkman Quartet and Chris Potter Quartet". News and features (Edinburgh: Scotsman.com). 2002-07-06. 
  10. "ITG 2005". 
  11. New York Standards Quartet
  12. "New York comes to Groningen". Hanze University of Applied Sciences, Groningen. 

External links

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