Theo Croker

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Theo Croker
Theo Croker by Bryant Norman.jpg
Theo Croker in 2016
Background information
Birth nameTheodore Lee Croker
Born (1985-07-18) July 18, 1985 (age 40)
Leesburg, Florida, U.S.
Genres
Occupation(s)Musician, trumpeter, composer, record producer, vocalist
Instrument Trumpet
Years active2000–present
Labels Sony, Okeh, Arbors
Website theocroker.com

Theodore Lee Croker (born July 18, 1985) is an American jazz trumpeter, composer, producer and vocalist. He is a Grammy Award nominee, three-time Echo Award nominee, as well as a Theodore Presser Award recipient.

Contents

Croker has released over seven studio albums, including Fundamentals (2006), In the Tradition (2009), Afro Physicist (2014), Escape Velocity (2016), Star People Nation (2019), BLK2Life / A Future Past (2021), and Love Quantum (2022). He has also been featured on J. Cole's 4 Your Eyez Only (2016), Common's Black America Again (2016), and Ari Lennox's debut album, Shea Butter Baby (2019).

Early life

Croker was born July 18, 1985, in Leesburg, Florida, and is the second son of William Henry Croker, a civil rights activist, high school principal, and farmer, and Alicia Cheatham, a guidance counselor and daughter of Grammy Award-winning trumpeter Doc Cheatham. Croker began playing trumpet at age 11, inspired by his grandfather. By his teens, he was studying music at the Douglas Anderson School of the Arts in Jacksonville.

Croker attended the Oberlin Conservatory of Music, where he graduated with a degree in jazz studies. While there, he was mentored by trumpeter and educator Donald Byrd. [1]

Career

2007–2013: Asia

Croker held a five-month residency at Shanghai's House of Blues & Jazz. [2] Soon after, he was hired as the house band for Asia Uncut Star Network, a late-night television show modeled on The Tonight Show , where he served as music director, bandleader, and in-house composer until mid-2010. [3]

In July 2010, Croker became the first artist in residence at Shanghai's Peace Hotel Jazz Bar, the oldest and longest-running music club in China. [4] (Both the Jazz Bar and the hotel, now the Fairmont Peace Hotel, date back to the 1920s when it was known as the Cathay Hotel.)

It was also in 2010 that Croker met and performed for the first time with vocalist Dee Dee Bridgewater. Over the next two years, Bridgewater and Croker kept in touch, exchanging musical ideas. In 2014, Bridgewater produced with him his third studio album, Afro Physicist, which featured herself as vocalist on three tracks, guest appearances by vibraphonist Stefon Harris on an interpretation of Stevie Wonder's "Visions", and fellow trumpeter Roy Hargrove singing on his own composition, "Roy Allen", arranged by Croker. The rhythm section included Karriem Riggins on drums and keyboardist Sullivan Fortner, who had played on Croker's first two albums, backing the reed and brass sections that performed Croker's lavish arrangements.

In 2013, Croker returned to the United States after a seven-year stay in Shanghai, China, where he broadened his concept of jazz to encompass other genres such as salsa, fusion-rock, R&B, hip-hop, and blues.

2016–2019: "The Messenger", Star People Nation

On March 1, the first single off of Star People Nation was released, titled "The Messenger", which pays homage to jazz drummer Elvin Jones. This track featured guest pianist Eric Lewis. Croker stated in an article from Earmilk, "How we swing our quarter note is the basis of all black music. It's the beat, and this song was made to reflect the power in that swing." "The Messenger" was arranged and recorded in Brooklyn, New York. It was mixed and mastered by Grammy Award-winning engineer, producer, and arranger Bob Power. On April 11, Croker's second lead single was premiered by Afropunk. This track is titled "Understand Yourself" and featured Jamaican reggae artist Chronixx. [5] Qwest TV by Quincy Jones interviewed the composer about Star People Nation, which released on May 17. A music review by Floriane Esnault from Qwest TV stated, contrary to the political accents that are perhaps contained within the title Star People Nation, Croker refused to enter into this easy "hype" that he sees many musicians devoting themselves to according to. Croker then responded by saying, "I know that many people use jazz to spice up their music, politically, but don't give back to it because they don't learn it and don't respect the masters or their ancestors." [6] [7]

2019-2025: The Feierabendhaus der BASF; orchestra debut

In 2019, Croker, China Moses, and the DVRK Funk band, under the direction of Fawzi Haimor  [ de ], double headlined in Ludwigshafen, Germany at the Feierabendhaus der BASF  [ de ]. [8] In 2025 he released the album Dream Manifest. [9]

Discography

Source: [10]

YearTitleFormatRecord LabelGenre
2006The FundamentalsAlbumLeft SidedJazz
2009In the TraditionAlbum Arbors Jazz
2014Afro PhysicistAlbumDDB Records, Sony Masterworks, Okeh Records Jazz, Experimental
2015DVRKFUNK EP DDB Records, Sony Masterworks, Okeh RecordsJazz, Experimental, Pop
2016Escape VelocityAlbumDDB Records, Sony Masterworks, Okeh RecordsJazz, Experimental, Pop
2019Star People NationAlbumDDB Records, Sony Masterworks, Okeh RecordsJazz, Experimental, Pop
2020Understand YourselfEPDDB Records, Sony Masterworks, Okeh RecordsJazz, Experimental, Soundtrack
2021Blk2Life/A Future PastAlbumSony MasterworksJazz
2022Love QuantumAlbumSony MasterworksJazz
2022Jazz at Berlin Philharmonic XII: Sketches of MilesAlbum ACT Jazz
2025Dream ManifestAlbumDom RecsJazz, soul, hip-hop, R&B

References

  1. "Oberlin Alumni Magazine: Winter 2005–06". Oberlin.edu. Retrieved March 1, 2017.
  2. "Theo Croker Quintet at House of Blues & Jazz in Shanghai". AllAboutJazz.com. Retrieved March 1, 2017.
  3. "Jazz Theocracy: Theo Croker – Talk Magazine – The Authority on Shanghai Life". TalkMagazines.cn. Retrieved March 1, 2017.
  4. "The Jazz Bar". Asia-City.com. January 2, 2011. Retrieved March 1, 2017.
  5. "Premiere: Theo Croker & Chronixx, "Understand Yourself"". Afropunk.com. April 11, 2019. Retrieved May 22, 2019.
  6. "Qwest Tv by Quincy Jones". Qwest.tv.
  7. "Theo Croker honors Elvin Jones with new single "The Messenger" [Premiere]". Earmilk. March 1, 2019. Retrieved April 10, 2019.
  8. "Cooler Jazz und heiße Disco-Nummern". Rheinpfalz.de (in German). January 22, 2019. Retrieved April 10, 2019.
  9. Jones, Stephanie (June 10, 2025). "Theo Croker's Dream … Manifested!". Downbeat. Retrieved August 7, 2025.
  10. "Theo Croker Albums and Discography". AllMusic . Retrieved August 11, 2022.