Fred Hess

Fred Hess (September 3, 1944, Abington, Pennsylvania – October 27, 2018) was an American jazz tenor saxophonist.

Hess was raised in New Jersey and studied at Trenton State College. His early experiences include studies with saxophonist Phil Woods, a stint with bandleader Fred Waring, and composing music for the world premiere of a Sam Shepard play. As a composer, his influences encompass avant-garde classical sources, as well as Anthony Braxton and the members of the AACM. He moved to Boulder, Colorado, in 1981, where he founded the Boulder Creative Music Ensemble. He then completed further studies at the University of Colorado, Boulder, taking his doctorate in composition in 1991. He recorded his first albums as a leader in the early 1990s. He was the Director of Music Composition at Metro State College in Denver, Colorado.

In addition to his own projects as a leader (BCME and The Fred Hess Group), he was the founding director of Denver's Creative Music Works Orchestra and was a member of drummer Ginger Baker's Denver Jazz Quintet, as well as ensembles led by trumpeter Ron Miles. His most recent performing group was the Fred Hess Big Band.

Hess's playing was influenced by Lester Young, John Coltrane, the Association for the Advancement of Creative Musicians, and Eric Dolphy.[1] Among his releases is Extended Family, issued in 2003 on Tapestry Records.[2]

Discography

  • Sweet Thunder (Capri, 1991)
  • You Know I Care (Capri, 1994)
  • Faith (Cadence Jazz, 2000)
  • Exposed (CIMP, 2001)
  • Right at Home (Tapestry, 2002)
  • Between the Lines (Tapestry, 2003)
  • Ninth Street Park (Tapestry, 2003)
  • Extended Family (Tapestry, 2003)
  • Long and Short of It (Tapestry, 2004)
  • Crossed Paths (Tapestry, 2005)
  • How Bout Now (Tapestry, 2006)
  • In the Grotto (Alison, 2007)
  • Single Moment (Alison, 2008)
  • Hold On Fred Hess Big Band (Dazzle), 2009)
  • Into the Open Fred Hess Big Band (Alison, 2010)
  • Speak Fred Hess Big Band (Alison, 2012)
gollark: Ah yes.
gollark: Make sure to make the button have width 100% or something and be fairly big. Not sure why you're not just making the entire thing clickable as I did.
gollark: I like how you're using a fairly large quantity of accursed javascript features at once.
gollark: Maybe make the rate decrease over repeated viewings?
gollark: Maybe you should make it save an "already dismissed this" state in local storage?

References

  1. Fred Hess at Allmusic
  2. Extended Family Review. NPR, February 11, 2003.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.