Gerald
Clayton
@ the Royal Festival Hall
20 November 2009
Click an image to enlarge.
Biography
(Prelude)
A quarter of the age of Jazz, Gerald Clayton stakes his claim in
the history and the present of this vital music with the following
words, “Tradition and innovation can peacefully coexist.”
In libraries and on drawing-boards around the country this statement
might be true, but with Gerald behind the piano this coexistence
is anything but peaceful.
His dynamic and award-winning sound has been praised in print by
the Jazz Times and Los Angeles Times. The New York Times has saluted
his “Oscar-Peterson like style” and “huge, authoritative
presence” and Down Beat Magazine’s 2008 Readers’
Poll named him one of the top up-and-coming pianists to watch. As
a composer, his work has been commissioned by the Jazz Gallery in
New York City and performed overseas by the BBC Orchestra. He has
been honoured with a Level 1 award by the National Foundation for
the Advancement of the Arts (NFAA), the title “Presidential
Scholar in the Arts,” and second place in the Thelonious Monk
Institute Jazz Piano Competition. Dodging early pressures to emerge
as a prodigy, Gerald instead honed his talents and his resolve to
ensure that this next generation is never lacking for intricate,
swinging pieces and performances that are steeped in tradition while
always facing the future.
(Theme)
Born in the Netherlands in 1984, Gerald grew up mainly in Los Angeles
with a musical family that includes his father, bassist/composer
John Clayton, and uncle, saxophonist Jeff Clayton. At the age of
six Gerald began eleven years study of classical piano with Linda
Buck before enrolling in the Jazz Studies program at the University
of Southern California. In college in Los Angeles and a year at
the Manhattan School of Music, Gerald studied piano and composition
under Shelly Berg, Billy Childs, and Kenny Barron.
(Bridge)
Professionally, Gerald has had the honour of performing nationally
and internationally with some of the most established names in Jazz
such as Lewis Nash, Al Foster, Terrell Stafford and Clark Terry.
Duo piano concerts with Gerald have featured artists as celebrated
and diverse as Hank Jones, Benny Green, Kenny Barron, Mulgrew Miller
and Tamir Hendelman. Gerald also relishes playing with Jazz’s
next generation of innovators: Ambrose Akinmusire, Dayna Stephens,
Kendrick Scott and many others.
From 2006-2008, Gerald toured extensively with Roy Hargrove in his
quintet, big band, and funk group and he is currently a member of
the Clayton Brothers Quintet. He can be heard on the Clayton Brothers’
latest release, “Brother to Brother,” as well as Hargrove’s
2008 “Earfood,” and Diana Krall’s “From
This Moment On.”
(Variations)
But it is Gerald’s own trio, based in New York City and comprised
of Justin Brown (drums) and Joe Sanders (bass) that provide him
the most direct opportunity to explore and expand his own thoughts
in music. Following upon their touring in Europe and the U.S., where
they were praised for balancing a “deconstructivist aesthetic”
with “a stronghold on the swing factor,” Gerald and
his trio are set to release their debut album, “Two Shade,”
early this year on the ArtistShare label.
Gerald relishes a sense of open-mindedness:
“I have listened to lots of different
musical styles as long as I can remember. I continue to absorb all
these influences and in doing so create my own voice—by combining
their forces into a harmonic whole…I seek to blend the various
styles and sounds I love into a balanced, tasteful musical language.”
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