John Fedchock
John William Fedchock (born September 18, 1957 in Cleveland, Ohio) is an American jazz trombonist, bandleader, and arranger.
Fedchock studied at Ohio State University and the Eastman School of Music. He worked for several years in the Woody Herman Orchestra in the 1980s and was noted for his arrangements.[1] He also worked with Gerry Mulligan, Louie Bellson, Bob Belden, Rosemary Clooney, and Susannah McCorkle. He recorded his first album as a leader in 1992 with the New York Big Band, which was active into the late 2000s.[2]
Discography
- New York Big Band (Reservoir, 1992)
- On the Edge (Reservoir, 1998)
- Hit the Bricks (Reservoir, 2000)
- No Nonsense (Reservoir, 2002)
- Up and Running (Reservoir, 2007)
- Like It Is (MAMA, 2015)
gollark: Secondly, the disk in the server *does* have an OS? If you're booting it off a disk drive, make sure that's valid, and is connected.
gollark: So, firstly, is your terminal server connected to the, er, server, in the rack GUI?
gollark: Well, maybe not that slow, I don't know the exact details of OC networking, but at least would make latency a bit higher, and stress any relays you use.
gollark: 4 drives to a server would allow... 12MB? each, which is much more than you can do now, and would give each node a decent amount of computation power (especially with data cards), but splitting everything across the network would be sloooow.
gollark: You could possibly make some sort of storage clustering thing - servers can have 4 drives each, after all, and use all of them for remote-accessible storage if they network-boot with an EEPROM.
References
- Scott Yanow, John Fedchock at Allmusic
- Cheerful Syncopation, Served with Spit-and-Polish Precision. New York Times, July 4, 2007.
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