David Baker
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Jazz trombonist and cellist, composer, author, and music educator. He was an important part of the post-bop movement, and as an educator he has helped to shape new generations of jazz performers.
David Baker grew up in Indianapolis, attending a high school that could boast
among its alumni trombonists J. J. Johnson and Slide Hampton along with guitarist
Wes Montgomery. This solid foundation prepared Baker for a career as a jazz
trombonist, and he played with bands led by Stan Kenton, Maynard Ferguson, Lionel
Hampton, and Quincy Jones. He also played with the George Russell Sextet, a
group that included such adventurous musicians as reedman Eric Dolphy and trumpeter
Don Ellis. When an automobile accident in the early 1960s ended his trombone
career, he turned to the cello and was one of the first to use this instrument
in a jazz context. In 1966 he was hired at Indiana University (where he had
received his undergraduate and master's degrees) to teach and lead the
new jazz studies program. The program has become one of the largest and certainly
one of the most prestigious in the world.
Baker also studied composition and has produced more than two thousand works
in various genres. His music draws on a wide range of traditions, from jazz
and spirituals to the atonal and serial traditions of Western art music. He
has been commissioned by a number of organizations, and his honors include the
NEA's Jazz Masters Award and a Pulitzer Prize nomination.
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