Nubya Garcia

Last updated

Nubya Garcia
Nubya Garcia INNtone 01.jpg
Garcia at INNtöne Jazzfestival 2019
Background information
Birth nameNubya Nyasha Garcia
Born1991 (age 3132)
Camden Town, London, England
Genres Jazz
Instruments Tenor saxophone
Labels
Website nubyagarcia.com

Nubya Nyasha Garcia (born 1991) is an English jazz musician, saxophonist, composer and bandleader.

Contents

Early life and education

Garcia was born in 1991 in Camden Town, London, the youngest of four siblings, to a Guyanese mother, a former civil servant, and a British Trinidadian filmmaker father. [1]

Garcia followed her three older siblings to the local Camden Saturday Music Centre at the age of five, where she first learned the violin and later played the viola in the London Schools Symphony Orchestra (LSSO). Garcia's upbringing by her stepdad, a brass player, [2] and music loving mother, coupled with the music activities at Camden School for Girls, [3] meant she was exposed to multiple genres of music. [4] [5] [6]

Garcia began learning the saxophone at the age of 10, [5] with Vicky Wright. Garcia became a member of the Camden Jazz Band, directed by jazz pianist Nikki Yeoh, before joining the junior jazz programme at the Royal Academy of Music. She attended the youth music workshops at the Roundhouse in Camden and also with Tomorrow's Warriors under the direction of Gary Crosby. While still in high school, she received a scholarship for a five-week summer programme at the Berklee College of Music in Boston. During her gap year, she studied with former Jazz Messengers member Jean Toussaint. In 2016, Garcia graduated with honours from the Trinity Laban Conservatoire of Music and Dance, in Jazz Performance. [1] [7] [8] Among her graduating class were Joe Armon-Jones and Moses Boyd. [9] [10]

Career

In 2017, Garcia released her debut EP Nubya's 5ive via the label Jazz re:freshed. [11] That year, her band was an opening act at Gilles Peterson's Worldwide Festival in Sète; [12] the following year she played at the NYC Winter Jazz Festival [13] and the JazzFest Berlin.

In her 2018 EP When We Are, Garcia explored how electronics can be used in a live jazz environment; the EP was created with the support of the Steve Reid InNOVAtion Award, a development project between PRS Foundation and Steve Reid Foundation. [14] She is also a member of the collective Nérija [15] [16] [17] and the Afro-jazz ensemble Maisha. [18] [19]

Garcia has performed at festivals in the UK including Love Supreme Jazz Festival [12] [20] and NN North Sea Jazz Festival. [21] She has headlined sell-out shows at Ronnie Scott's Jazz Club. [22] Since November 2017 Garcia has held monthly radio residency as a DJ on NTS Radio. [23]

Garcia was supposed to perform at the 2020 Glastonbury Festival, [24] which had to be cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic. [25] In June 2022, Garcia debuted her band on the West Holt stage at Glastonbury. [26]

Garcia released her debut studio album Source in August 2020 [27] on the Concord Jazz label. The album was listed on several end of 2020 top album lists. In July 2021, Garcia's album Source was shortlisted for the 2021 Hyundai Mercury Prize. [28]

Nubya Garcia debuted her band on 18 August at the 2021 BBC Proms held in London's Royal Albert Hall. The Daily Telegraph gave the performance a five-star review. [29] [30]

In December 2020, Garcia joined a band of British jazz musicians called London Brew to play on the Bitches Brew -inspired self-titled album, which was announced for release on 31 March 2023 by Concord Jazz. [31]

Musical influences

Nubya Garcia has cited the prominent jazz saxophonists Dexter Gordon, Sonny Rollins and John Coltrane, as well as trumpeter Miles Davis and pianist-composer Mary Lou Williams, as her "musical heroes". [32] [33] She included Steel Pulse, a UK based reggae band from Birmingham amongst her musical inspirations. [34]

Charitable work

Nubya Garcia is a patron of the Camden Music Trust. [35]

Discography

Albums

Singles & EPs

Awards and nominations

YearOrganisation/AwardCategoryResultRef
2017PRS FoundationSteve Reid Innovation AwardWon [40]
British Jazz AwardsRising StarNominated [41]
Jazz FM Awards UK Breakthrough ActNominated [42]
2018 Jazz FM Awards UK Breakthrough ActWon [43]
South Bank Sky Arts Award Times Breakthrough ActWon [44]
British Jazz AwardsRising StarNominated [45]
2019 Jazz FM Awards UK Jazz Act of the YearWon [46]
Jazz FM Awards EFG London Jazz Festival Live Experience of the YearNominated [47]
2020 Parliamentary Jazz Awards Jazz Instrumentalist of the YearNominated [48]
Urban Music Awards Best Jazz ActNominated [49]
2021 Parliamentary Jazz Awards Jazz Instrumentalist of the YearWon [50]
Parliamentary Jazz Awards Jazz Album of the YearNominated [51]
Urban Music Awards Best Jazz ActNominated [52]
Jazz FM Awards Album of the yearNominated [53]
Mercury Prize Album of the YearNominated [54]
JTI AWARD JTI Trier Jazz AwardWon [55]

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References

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