This biographical article is written like a résumé .(November 2023) |
Earl Murray MacDonald | |
---|---|
Background information | |
Born | Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada | July 26, 1970
Genres | Jazz, bebop, hard bop, post-bop, modal jazz, big band, classical, orchestral jazz |
Occupation(s) | Composer, arranger, conductor, musician, university professor |
Instrument | Piano |
Years active | 1995–present |
Labels | Death Defying Records, Sea Breeze Jazz |
Website | earlmacdonald |
Earl MacDonald (born July 26, 1970) [1] is a Canadian pianist, composer, arranger, conductor, recording artist, and educator specializing in jazz. Described as "a magical, musical alchemist of hip hybrids", [2] MacDonald's compositional work frequently draws upon other musical styles, fusing them with jazz. [3] The Winnipeg native has been employed as director of jazz studies at the University of Connecticut since the fall of 2000. [4]
MacDonald was born and raised in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada. [5] His father, Keith MacDonald, is a bagpiper who authored "The Church Piper" book series. [6] MacDonald has one sibling, Janine Mackie, a journalist and freelance writer based in Surrey, British Columbia.
MacDonald began taking music lessons at age five, starting on electronic organ. As a teenager he earned money playing the organ for Winnipeg Jets hockey games (1985-1988). [7] He attended Silver Heights Collegiate Institute, where his high school stage band was nationally recognized, winning "Most Outstanding" and Gold awards at the 1988 MusicFest Canada competition. [8] [9] Also during high school, MacDonald began taking classical piano lessons with Darrel Loewen and Shirley Kwok at the Manitoba Conservatory for Music and Arts. He studied music theory with Francis Sanderson.
MacDonald earned a bachelor of music degree in 1992 from McGill University in Montreal, Quebec, Canada, where he majored in jazz performance. [5] His jazz piano teachers included Fred Henke, Luc Beaugrand and André White. [10] He studied arranging with Christopher Smith, composition with Jan Jarczyk, [11] and improvisation with trumpeter Kevin Dean.
MacDonald's graduate studies spanned 1993 to 1995 at Rutgers University in New Brunswick, New Jersey. [5] He apprenticed with Kenny Barron [12] who recorded MacDonald's composition, "Wanton Spirit" while he was still a graduate student. [13] The song was released as the title track of Barron's Grammy-nominated CD with Roy Haynes and Charlie Haden. [14] At Rutgers, MacDonald studied arranging with Michael Philip Mossman and played in ensembles under the direction of Ralph Bowen.
MacDonald has participated in the BMI Jazz Composers' Workshop under the direction of Jim McNeely, Michael Abene and Mike Holober. [15] He also attended the Summer Jazz Workshop in Banff, Canada in 2001, and has audited conducting courses at UConn with Dr. Jeffrey Renshaw. [16]
MacDonald joined Maynard Ferguson's touring band in 1998, following a one-year teaching appointment at Bowling Green State University. [17] He worked with Ferguson for two years, performing across North America, [18] Europe and Asia. One studio album was recorded during MacDonald's tenure with Ferguson: "Big City Rhythms", a collaboration with singer Michael Feinstein. [19] Video recordings of several concerts have been publicly released, including MacDonald's second performance with the band, which was released on DVD as "Maynard Ferguson - Live from the King Cat Theatre" (in Seattle, WA). [20]
MacDonald's bandmates with Ferguson included:
In 1999, upon the departure of bassist Paul Thompson, Ferguson appointed MacDonald musical director of Big Bop Nouveau. As musical director, MacDonald rehearsed the ensemble, selected performance repertoire, made personnel recommendations and wrote musical arrangements.
In the lineage of Ferguson's pianists, MacDonald succeeded Ron Oswanski. Following MacDonald's departure in 2000, Ferguson hired Bryn Roberts and later Will Bonness, both of whom were MacDonald's former students from Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada. [21]
At the post-secondary level MacDonald has taught at:
At UConn he teaches courses on improvisation and arranging, while also directing student ensembles and administering the jazz program. He was tenured and promoted to Associate Professor in 2005. MacDonald frequently participates as a clinician, guest conductor and teacher at summer camps. In recent years he has taught at the Kincardine Summer Music Festival, [23] Jazz In July at UMASS Amherst [24] and Marshall University's "Jazz-MU-Tazz" camp in West Virginia.
MacDonald has released two albums of his compositions and arrangements for 17-piece jazz orchestra (big band): "UConn Jazz" (2002) and "Re:Visions - Works for Jazz Orchestra" (2010). [37] The latter received a Juno Award nomination for traditional jazz album of the year in 2011. [38] Reviewer, Dan Bilawsky asserted, "Re:Visions goes beyond where most big bands go and the music here establishes Earl MacDonald as a major force in the world of jazz composition." [39]
MacDonald's big band arrangements are published through eJazz Lines. [40]
In 2013 MacDonald released an album with the unorthodox instrumentation of cello, saxophone, percussion and piano. MacDonald said, "This band, the Creative Opportunity Workshop, was formed to serve as a personal playground for experimentation and fusions." The CD, "Mirror of the Mind" received a JUNO award nomination for contemporary jazz album of the year [41] and a garnered many favorable reviews. [42] [43] [44] [45] [46] [47] [48] [49] [50] [51] [52]
MacDonald currently serves as Musical Director and Composer-In-Residence for the Hartford Jazz Society's New Directions Ensemble. The group's instrumentation consists of 2 trumpets, 1 trombone, 1 French horn, 3 saxophones (1 alto, 1 tenor, 1 bari), piano, bass and drums. [53] Owen McNally of the Hartford Courant described the band and outlined its mission, stating "the fresh-sounding New Directions Ensemble taps into the rich lode of area talent, provides a vital forum for original compositions, spreads the good word about contemporary band music in its educational role, and provides a prominent public face for its sponsor, the Hartford Jazz Society. The New Directions Ensemble is set to swing in its own fresh way, generating contemporary band music that lives in the present, independent, cliché-free and untethered to conventional big band nostalgia." [54]
Title | Year | Label | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Schroeder's Tantrum | 1997 | Radioland [55] | ||
UConn Jazz | 2002 | SeaBreeze Vista [56] | ||
The Earl MacDonald 6 | 2005 | SeaBreeze [57] [58] | ||
re:Visions | 2010 | Death Defying Records [59] [60] | ||
Mirror of the Mind | 2013 | Death Defying Records | ||
Yr | Release title | Primary artist(s) | Role | Certifications |
---|---|---|---|---|
1994 | Wanton Spirit | Kenny Barron, Charlie Haden, Roy Haynes | composer of title track | Grammy-nominated [61] [62] |
1998 | Jim Brenan | Jim Brenan | arranger | |
1999 | Big City Rhythms | Michael Feinstein with the Maynard Ferguson Big Band | piano | [19] |
2004 | Treblemakers Jazz It Up | Treblemakers Children's Choir, directed by Dr. Mary Ellen Junda | arranger, piano | Parents’ Choice Award |
2004 | Maynard Ferguson, Live From the King Cat Theatre in Seattle. DVD. | Maynard Ferguson, Big Bop Nouveau | piano | |
2007 | Tom Thorndike Trio | Tom Thorndike | producer | [63] |
Currently, MacDonald lives in Mansfield, CT with his wife, Jana (née Smith). The couple were married in 2003 in South Windsor, CT. Together they have two young children. [64]
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