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Jeff Kaye

Jeff Kaye was born in the Bronx in 1951. At a young age, his family moved to the Washington DC area, shuffling back and forth between DC and the Bronx for thirteen years and finally settling in DC, which today is still Kaye’s hometown.

Kaye started playing piano at the age of 10. While in high school he played in a local rock and roll band, “The Immortals.” The band got a chance to perform at the Steel Pier where Kaye was able to see Gene Krupa play live in a venue adjacent to their performing area. This was his first exposure to jazz. When he expressed an interest in jazz, his father took him to a local jazz venue in DC, “The Villa Rosa” to see Jimmy Smith. “I couldn’t believe what I was hearing and seeing” says Jeff, “Jimmy Smith’s playing was so smooth, yet so intense!” The next concert his father took him to was at “Constitution Hall” to see Cannonball Adderley and Wes Montgomery. After hearing both those giants (and Joe Zawinul), jazz was permanently in his blood.

Kaye was a piano major at the University of Maryland and later went back to NY to study with Joanne Brackeen for two years. He then studied locally for two years with Stanley Cowell. Playing the DC Jazz scene while raising a family of three boys was a struggle, but truly a memorable time in Kaye’s life, members of his group included great players such as; Paul Carr, Ron Holloway and Art Cobb. During this time, Kaye was a member of a 150 piece Jazz band including Herbie Hancock, Buster Williams, Larry Coryell and other great musicians that performed at Madison Square Garden in 1976. In 1990 Kaye started a non-profit organization called Arts & Education in Concert (AEIC) to help youth stay drug free through their experiences in music. Reaching over 100,000 students he met and inspired many talented kids. One girl in particular, Abigail Kiser, spurred Kaye to start a “for” profit Indie Record Label called New Indie Artists, to help fund AEIC. Jeff‘s group “35 Days in May” is one of six artists that comprise the artist roster.

Kaye’s second CD, Bobo Bazinsky in the Bronx, showcases Kaye’s love of music and his influences, ranging from, the Headhunters, Weather Report, Miles Davis to James Brown and the Beatles are all evident in this offering. This diversification is the cornerstone of blended creativity displayed in this unique listening experience.

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288
Album Review

35 Days in May: Bo Bo Bazinsky In the Bronx

Read "Bo Bo Bazinsky In the Bronx" reviewed by C. Michael Bailey


One of the most attractive things about jazz in the 21st Century is its polyglot nature. No longer is it the music of the classic trumpet-tenor saxophone quintet playing transmogrified blues and show tunes. Today, influences as disparate at Eastern Indian drones and Karl Stockhausen electronica, are tossed into the beaker on the stir plate with the rate at 1000 rpm. It's rare to find anyone who takes greater glee in shattering the jazz status quo than pianist Jeff Kaye, ...

241
Album Review

Jeff Kaye: Just Like Me

Read "Just Like Me" reviewed by Jack Bowers


This breezy, boppish blowing session by Los Angeles-based trumpeter Jeff Kaye's quintet calls to mind Blue Note dates from the '50s and '60s featuring the likes of Lee Morgan, Horace Silver, Wynton Kelly, Freddie Hubbard, McCoy Tyner, Cedar Walton, Wayne Shorter, Tommy Flanagan, and so many others. It's most likely not destined to become a classic, as some of those earlier albums were, but is nonetheless bright and agreeable on its own terms.

As was often the case with the ...

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Recordings: As Leader | As Sideperson

Bo Bo Bazinsky In the...

New Indie Artists
2007

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Bobo Bazinsky in the...

New Indie Artists
2007

buy

Just Like Me

Jazzed Media
2005

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