Avery Sharpe Trio @ Brooklyn Conservatory, May 9, 8pm

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Brooklyn Conservatory of Music proudly present
Avery Sharpe Trio
Saturday, May 9, 2009

“Even in these times of extraordinary bass players, Sharpe stands out.”
—Leonard Feather, Los Angeles Times

“Long-time bassist for McCoy Tyner, Sharpe excels on his instrument and shows
creative composing and arranging skills as well.”
—Sunsh Stein, JazzTimes

Who: Avery Sharpe Trio featuring Avery Sharpe (bass), Onaje Allan Gumbs (piano) & Winard Harper (drums)
What: Brooklyn Conservatory of Music “Jazz at the Conservatory” series
When: Saturday, May 9, 2009 at 8:00 PM
Where: Brooklyn Conservatory Concert Hall, 58 7th avenue, Brooklyn
(Q/B train to 7th Ave, 2/3 train to Grand Army Plaza)
Cost: $25/15 – call Zerve ticket services at 212.209.3370 or visit www.bqcm.org

Brooklyn Conservatory of Music “Jazz at the Conservatory” series presents the Avery Sharpe Trio featuring Avery Sharpe (bass), Onaje Allan Gumbs (piano) and Winard Harper (drums), Saturday, May 9 at 8pm.

Avery Sharpe was born in Valdosta, Georgia, on August 23, 1954. His first instrument was the piano. “I started playing when I was eight years old,” he recalls. “My mother was a piano player in the Church of God in Christ, and she gave lessons to everybody in the family — I’m the sixth of eight children — but it didn’t stick until it got to me.” He moved on to accordion and then switched to electric bass in high school.
In 1972, Sharpe enrolled at the University of Massachusetts, where he majored in Economics and minored in music, and continued to play electric bass in gospel, funk, and rock groups. While at UMass, he met the jazz bassist Reggie Workman, who encouraged him to learn the acoustic bass. Sharpe adapted quickly to the big instrument, and within a few years he was performing with such notables as Archie Shepp and Art Blakey. Shepp and Max Roach, his professors at the time, had a major influence on him. Sharpe also performed in orchestra and chamber groups at UMASS, and completed one year of graduate school in Music Performance. In 1980, he auditioned with McCoy Tyner and won a spot in the pianist’s group. He has worked with Tyner almost continuously since then, playing hundreds of live gigs and appearing on more than 20 records with him.
Sharpe’s credits also include sideman stints with many other jazz greats, from Dizzy Gillespie to Pat Metheny, as well as leading his own groups. His first recording as a leader was the 1988 album Unspoken Words on Sunnyside Records, which was praised by critic Jim Roberts as “a diverse, challenging record that rewards repeated listening.” In 1994, he recorded Extended Family, the first CD of a trilogy that includes Extended Family II: Thoughts of My Ancestors (1995) and Extended Family III: Family Values (2001). All three were released on Sharpe’s own label, JKNM Records.
The Brooklyn-Queens Conservatory of Music has been serving the community for over a century promoting individual, professional and community growth through music, and making music accessible to people of all ages, backgrounds and skill levels. One of the ways we fulfill our mission is by holding remarkable events such as this at affordable prices. Our commitment to the community and our world-class faculty makes these events a reality.

Please join us for what promises to be an unforgettable Jazz at the Conservatory concert event, and check out The Brooklyn-Queens Conservatory of Music’s other great concerts, programs, classes and much more at www.BQCM.org

 
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