Drew Gress
Drew Gress | |
---|---|
Background information | |
Born | Trenton, New Jersey | November 20, 1959
Genres | Jazz |
Occupation | Musician |
Instrument | Double bass |
Years active | 1980s–present |
Labels | Enja |
Website | drewgress |
Drew Gress (born November 20, 1959) is an American jazz double-bassist and composer born in Trenton, New Jersey and raised in the Philadelphia area.
Biography
[edit]Gress studied at Towson State University and Manhattan School of Music.[1] In the late 1980s he worked with Phil Haynes, recording several albums with the group Joint Venture.[1]
In 1998, he released his first album as leader, Heyday, with his band Jagged Sky (featuring David Binney, Ben Monder, and Kenny Wollesen).[2] Gress wrote all except two of the compositions.[3] Two years later, he recorded Spin & Drift, on which he also played steel guitar. He recorded material for two further albums – 7 Black Butterflies and The Irrational Numbers – in 2004.[3]
Gress has taught at Peabody Conservatory and Western Connecticut State University. He has also served tenures as artist in residence at University of Colorado-Boulder and at Russia's St. Petersburg Conservatory.[1][2]
Gress has toured Europe, Asia, and South America.[2] Those with whom he has and continues to work include Tim Berne,[4] Uri Caine, Fred Hersch, Don Byron, Dave Douglas, and Erik Friedlander.[2]
Critic John Fordham described a performance by Gress's group as "one of the great jazz performances in Britain in 2002".[5] In 2004, the UK's BBC Radio and London's Guardian selected his quartet's live radio broadcast as Jazz Concert of the Year.[citation needed]
Composition awards include an NEA grant (1990),[2] funding from Meet the Composer (2003).[2]
Playing and composing style
[edit]The DownBeat reviewer of Vesper, a collaboration between Gress and the trio expEAR, wrote that the bassist "has exquisite time and a composer's sense of line, a combination that allows him an insightful level of counterpoint in his playing".[6] The DownBeat reviewer of Gress's The Sky inside wrote that he "favors a focused restraint, a sort of concentrated tension that wrings the maximum inspiration from minimal elements, and which maintains a taut severity even when spare free passages burst into angular swing".[7]
Discography
[edit]As leader
[edit]- Heyday (as Drew Gress's Jagged Sky) (Soul Note, 1998)
- Spin & Drift (Premonition, 2001)
- 7 Black Butterflies (Premonition, 2005)
- The Irrational Numbers (Premonition, 2008)
- And Again with Shims Trio (Deepdig, 2012)
- The Sky Inside (Pirouet, 2013)
As sideman
[edit]With Kenny Werner
- Beauty Secrets (RCA/BMG, 1999)
With John Abercrombie
- Within a Song (ECM, 2012)
- 39 Steps (ECM, 2013)
- Up and Coming (ECM, 2017)
With Tim Berne
- Visitation Rites (Screwgun, 1997)
- Please Advise (Screwgun, 1999)
- Pre-Emptive Denial (Screwgun, 2005)
With Uri Caine
- Wagner e Venezia (Winter & Winter, 1997)
- The Goldberg Variations (Winter & Winter, 2000)
- Uri Caine Ensemble Plays Mozart (Winter & Winter, 2006)
With Joint Venture
- Joint Venture (Enja, 1987)
- Ways (Enja, 1989)
- Mirrors (Enja, 1994)
With Yelena Eckemoff
- In the Shadow of a Cloud (L&H, 2017)
- Better Than Gold and Silver (L&H, 2018)
- I Am a Stranger in This World (L&H, 2022)
With others
- Ralph Alessi, Baida (ECM, 2013)
- Ray Anderson, Big Band Record (Gramavision, 1994)
- Lynne Arriale, With Words Unspoken (DMP, 1996)
- Jon Ballantyne, The Loose (Justin Time, 1994)
- Don Byron, Romance with the Unseen (Blue Note, 1999)
- Marc Copland, Night Whispers (Pirouet, 2009)
- Marc Copland, Better by Far (InnerVoice, 2017)
- Dave Douglas, Five (Soul Note, 1996)
- Dave Douglas, Convergence (Soul Note, 1999)
- Ellery Eskelin, Setting the Standard (Cadence, 1989)
- Erik Friedlander, Chimera (Avant, 1995
- Erik Friedlander, The Watchman (Tzadik, 1996)
- David Kane, Machinery of the Night (Magellan, 2006)
- Tony Malaby, Apparations (Songlines, 2003)
- Liam Noble, Romance Among the Fishes (Basho, 2005)
- Jason Robinson, Tiresian Symmetry (Cuneiform, 2012)
- Samo Salamon, Almost Almond (Sanje, 2011)
- John Surman, Brewster's Rooster (ECM, 2007)
- Tom Varner, Martian Heartache (Soul Note, 1996)
References
[edit]- ^ a b c Kennedy, Gary W (2002). "Gress, Drew". Grove Music Online. doi:10.1093/gmo/9781561592630.article.J581700. Retrieved 12 October 2020.
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(help) - ^ a b c d e f "Drew Gress | Biography & History". AllMusic. Retrieved 2020-10-11.
- ^ a b Cook, Richard; Morton, Brian (2008). The Penguin Guide to Jazz Recordings (9th ed.). Penguin. p. 605. ISBN 978-0-141-03401-0.
- ^ Fordham, John (November 29, 2002). "Drew Gress/ Tim Berne: Vortex, London". The Guardian. Retrieved October 12, 2020.
- ^ Fordham, John (17 October 2003). "Tim Berne's Science Friction, The Sublime And". The Guardian. Retrieved 12 October 2020.
- ^ Considine, J. D. (March 2018). "expEAR & Drew Gress: Vesper". DownBeat. Vol. 85, no. 3. p. 58.
- ^ Brady, Shaun (October 2013). "Drew Gress: The Sky inside". DownBeat. Vol. 80, no. 10. p. 54.
External links
[edit]- Drew Gress at Allmusic
- Joint Venture Discography at Allmusic
- 1959 births
- Living people
- Musicians from Trenton, New Jersey
- Towson University alumni
- 21st-century American double-bassists
- 21st-century American male musicians
- American jazz double-bassists
- Classical Jazz Quartet members
- American male double-bassists
- American male jazz musicians
- Pennsbury High School alumni
- Pirouet Records artists
- Enja Records artists
- Basho Records artists