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Posted

This guy is from colorado and he is a trumpet player, a cross over from classical, i havent really given it a good listen, but first impresions. well i dont know yet, there's alot of head and not alot of solo, which ok i guess. i'll give'r a good listen and get back

Posted

Interesting record. Yes, short solos.

Darryl's in Lincoln, Nebraska, now. He's teaching trumpet at the university. Nice guy -- I talked to him just the other night. Wonderful player.

He has another album in the works.

Posted

Well i gaver a listen, and its not really my style,

He had a beautiful sound!!!! i really liked his sound

i know alot of my friends like more tune than solo, but not me, i like a longer solo, nad a 30 second tune. For me the solo were two short

the solos didnt really feel like they were very connected, i would really like to know who his jazz influences are, to try and see where his phrasing came from, i liked at lot of his licks but the melodic devlopment of each of them kind of lacked, in toher words he polayed one great lick after another buit but forgot about each one instead of working with it the way joe lovano might.

just my opinion, no intent of offending

Posted

Got to admit, I like the writing better than I like the solos. But the record haunts me anyway.

After a little digging, I found this piece on Darryl, published in The Kansas City Star on July 24 last year:

By JOE KLOPUS

The Kansas City Star

You don’t think of Lincoln, Neb., as a haven for a jazz man.

But it's been good to Darryl White, a forward-thinking trumpet player who says he’s playing more now than when he lived in Chicago.

White, who’s recording a live CD at the Blue Room next week, gets to play jazz now and then at clubs, parties and conferences around Lincoln and Omaha. And he gets plenty of opportunities to play classical music, too.

Both jobs suit him fine, since he teaches classical trumpet at the University of Nebraska.

“I don’t want regular gigs anymore,” White says. “I don’t like being away from home.”

The 40-year-old has had quite a few homes and carries strong connections to each: the Cleveland area, where he grew up; Chicago, where he studied classical trumpet and jammed; Grand Junction, Colo., where he met his wife and learned to ski and mountain bike; Denver, where he played in a classical brass quintet and jazz groups; and now Lincoln.

White has been playing the trumpet since he was 10.

“I could get a good sound on it right away, but I didn’t know what I was doing,” he says. He admits to having been a slow learner of scales and music theory, but his big tone carried him through while he filled those gaps in his knowledge.

The Cleveland scene was a wonderful place to learn jazz, he says. He was listening to one of today’s saxophone titans, Joe Lovano. And he learned from giants such as Woody Shaw, Freddie Hubbard and even Louis Armstrong via records.

White headed for Chicago for grad school, studying with a former Chicago Symphony trumpeter, Vincent Cichowicz. But there was a major setback along the way: White’s roommate’s dog went nuts and attacked him.

“He only took one bite, but he took half my lip with him,” White said.

Plastic surgeons put his lip back together — but White had to relearn his instrument.

“When Cichowicz saw me with my lip messed up he said, ‘This could be an opportunity.’ … It was a chance to break somebody down and start from the beginning, like in the Marines. It was a blessing in disguise,” White says.

But it’s also a worry anytime he gets some little twinge in his lip.

“Don’t think I don’t think about it,” he says.

White’s recording at the Blue Room will be his third jazz album. He also has a classical CD in the works, with pieces by Art Lande, a Denver composer who’s also active as a jazz pianist. (These guys who work both sides of the street hang out together.)

There’s a guest on the Blue Room dates: alto saxophonist Bobby Watson, whom White remembers from a clinic Watson gave at his college years ago.

“I doubt he remembers it,” White says. “But it’s fun to play with some of your musical heroes.”

Friends from Denver and Kansas City will make up the rest of the band: pianist Jeff Jenkins, bassist Kenny Walker and drummer Matt Houston from Denver, plus sax man Gerald Dunn from 18th and Vine. Kansas City drummer Mike Warren will also play on some of the tunes, White says.

“We’ll play mostly originals and probably do some of Jeff Jenkins’ music. We’re planning on doing one or two of Bobby’s pieces. And there’ll be a few standards sprinkled in somewhere.”

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