THE GLOBAL JAZZ NETWORK

a worldwide movement @the destination where great Jazz minds meet

E. J. Decker
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  • New York, NY
  • United States
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E. J. Decker

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Profile Information

What is your profession?
Singer
What Instrument Do you Play?
Voice
Where Are you located?
Manhattan, NY
How did you find out about TGJN?
Tamm E Hunt
About Me:
A baritone from the Eckstine/Hartman/Prysock school of singers, I've been blessed with warm, rich pipes, and have lived through enough life, it seems, to know how to use them.

I've been singing most of my life, and I've also worked as an actor over the years. The son of a big band singer, I was lucky to inherit his pipes. I've sung in most of the rooms in New York, and up and down the West Coast. In my life, I've sung in r&b bands, rock bands and in folk duos & bands. Years ago, I rediscovered my Dad's music, filtered it through everything I'd heard along the way and returned to the jazz I grew up on.

My While The City Sleeps... CD was a Grammy contender a few years ago and is available on CD Baby. The lineup for that album was EJD-vocals, arr.; Randy Sandke-trumpet; Bob Kindred-tenor; Les Kurtz-piano; Dave Hofstra-bass; Tom Melito-drums. A late night album, it's best listened to: loud, after dark, and while enjoying your favorite libation.

I am currently working on the next album, hopefully due out later this summer.

Last year, I was honored to have worked with TGJN site founder Tamm E Hunt, a number of other great singers and a swinging nonet on her Jersey Jazz Giants tribute concert in New Jersey.

I also produce and appear in The Heart of Jazz concert, which is the jazz portion of the annual New York City-wide, multi-genre September Concert for 9/11, which honors those we lost that day, and looks forward in peace and with hope for our shared humanity. Over 150 top jazz artists have appeared with The Heart of Jazz in its first four years. You can see pics and find more info on The September Concert and The Heart of Jazz on my MySpace page.

BTW, "(We're) Strangers Now" on the song list at left is one of my originals. We hope you like it.
-
Website:
http://myspace.com/ejdecker

Comment Wall (4 comments)

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At 5:04pm on March 28, 2009, Dan Ouellette said…
Hi EJ,
Thanks for the appreciation.
Don't know who played the drums, sorry.
Best to you!
Dan
At 11:31am on October 7, 2008, Luiz Santos Music said…
Welcome EJ
Thanks for joining the Global Jazz Network!
Check out my rhythm world!
Be blessed,
Luiz
At 6:56pm on October 3, 2008, THE GLOBAL JAZZ NETWORK said…
E.J.
Please let all your Jazz lovin', Jazz singin', Jazz playin' friends and associates know about our destination.

Tamm E Hunt
publisher/founder
TGJN
At 6:53pm on October 3, 2008, THE GLOBAL JAZZ NETWORK said…
Hey EJ
Thanks for joining TGJN.
Let your voice be heard.

Love & Jazz!
Tamm E Hunt
 
 

MEMBER NOTES


Dear Tamm E:

Just a note to tell you that it is nice to read about you!!!

You share so much great info about others and about the music, but nice to know that you are WAILIN' yourself and getting appreciation!!

Global Jazz Network is a really important way for all of us to keep hooked up and informed and to SLOWLY BUT SURELY SPREAD THE MESSAGE AND THE PHILOSOPHY of what Jazz is in its many different forms and what the styles are/is all about.

Just played for Paquito's honoring and received gold medal

John Faddis, save Brubeck, James moody and a bunch of KILLER YOUNG players and we all played and spoke about Paquito and jazz and all fine music

and Roberta Gamborini, who was excellent.

wish you had been there!

Through you, Donald Harrison hooked me up with Pittsburgh Jazz info and I feel like i am living there just reading about all the great happenings.

As Fall is here, I am back to my normal insane schedule, but wanted to write you back BEFORE The STATUTE OF LIMITATIONS goes into effect. I am my own secretary, so I am dedicated but SLOW!

And I can't fire myself as my own secretary or I might get hit with an Age Discrimination Lawsuit (in case I decided to sue myself for clerical incompetence).

As of this moment, a new documentary film is being made about me, to be released a few months after my 80th birthday, which is coming up next year Nov. 17, 2010. (12 months from now).

The film will end with the videoing of the big 80th birthday bash at Symphony Space in NYC and then have snippets of films from the past, with all kinds of fun stuff from the 50's thru today.
It will be called "David Amram: The First 80 Years"

Fortunately, I don't have to edit the hundreds of hours of footage or do new music the score, since the film maker, Larry Kraman is also the founder of Newport Classics recordings and knows all my symphonic as well as operatic, theater, film and jazz and world music work, so I am in good hands!!

The same people at Newport Classics Recordings are also making a Spoken Word series for I-Tunes, with me reading from my three books Vibrations, Offbeat: Collaborating with Kerouac and Upbeat: Nine Lives of a Musical Cat.

And they are also recording some of my chamber music compositions and a new jazz record,
Next Spring my opera "12th Night", with libretto by Joe Papp (all words of Shakespeare), is having its eighth production and being FILMED!! Even most dead composers aren't that lucky!!!

This last five weeks I have appeared all over the country at concerts of my music, conducting and playing, doing spoken word with music, jazz, folk and world music festivals, film festivals and readings from my books.

Just the first week of October, I played Lowell Celebrates Kerouac festival in Lowell Mass, then the at midnight , following my last concert there , drove all night to Lagaurda Airport to catch the early Sunday mornng flight for the annual Farm Aid Concert in St Louis, where i played with Willie Nelson's band. The next morning (Monday the 5th , I flew bck to NYC in tme for my monthly concert at Cornelia Street in Greenwich Village.

The next night (Tuesday the 6th) the memorial at Symphony Space for Frank Mccourt, and the next day Wednesday the 7th) the celebration of the new authorized biography of Thelonious Monk with members of his family and musicians I have known since I first arrived in NYC in 1955!!

The 11th i flew off to Abu Dhabi in the United Arab Emirates,( i got at least get a few hours sleep) and tried to catch up on over 200 e-mails during the 13 hour flight, before arriving there and performing a concert of global music in conjunction with the score I composed for Teri McLuhan's new documentary feature film The Frontier Ghandi.

Then back in the USA in time to do programs centered around a performance of my Saxophone concerto Ode to Lord Buckley, in Loudoun Virginia ..

Then I went off to Toronto Nov 1st for a concert and appearance at the Diaspora Film Festival .

Now i am back at home hiding out composing and writing!

I am starting my fourth book "David Amram: The First 80 Years", (the same name as the new doc film being made about me), which will be finished at the end of next year and will end, like the film, with the monstro birthday bash concert for my Big 80... 12 months from now....(Nov 17 2010) in New York.

And every day, still finding time to continue composing a new orchestral work, having been doing it while on the run, and now every minute when I can hide out at the Farm in between travels.

And performing whenever possible with my three kids, each of whom have their own bands.

So as the BIG 80 approaches twelve months from now, (2010) while I may be still shy, I am not yet the retiring type.

Most of my ever-changing my schedule info. when i can get my elderly secretary (unfortunately myself) to type it up, is posted on my web page www.davidamram.com under Upcoming Events.

And my e-mail amramdavid@aol.com is always the best way to reach me as I carry my laptop with me everywhere, and Facebook, MySpace, etc., is hard to deal with and not always reliable!

You might find it fun to access an old performance of my 1971 Rondo a la Turca on the Internet for FREE!!!

The person who is conducting the Chicago Symphony and playing the middle eastern flute (who looks like my grandson) is actually a much younger looking me in 1977, recording for a PBS network TV show about my music. Pepper Adams and Jerry Dodgion are also playing.

In 1977, most of members of the Chicago Symphony who appear on the recording of this performance had never heard, much less ever played, very much music from the Middle East, and since I write everything out on paper accurately to indicate the way it should be played, that's what they were playing, and they actually began to sound like the Radio Beirut Orchestra, and suddenly as the piece went on, they started feeling something different than they had ever felt before, as they played.

It is really fun to watch their faces as they started getting ingo the old time magical groove that Middle eastern music creates and takes you into.

During the first few minutes of the piece, you can see the musicians all playing up a storm but looking as if they were thinking that I was an alien from another planet in outer space, and had brought some extra terrestrial music with me for them to play.

And then as the piece progresses, you can see, as well as hear, that by the end of the piece, the idiom of this music got them excited enough to be actually enjoying playing it!!

And playing it really well!

That's what music, like film, novels, poetry, painting, dance, language and good HOME COOKING does for all of us.

It takes you to that place from where it comes, and makes you feel that you now have a new home in a new part of the world.

I send cheers from that endless road and wish you joy and energy for all you do

David

Hi Tamm E!

I was just saying that you knocked this out of the park with TGJN. We have needed something like this for so long and I am telling my friends about this. I said that it is sort of like a myspace for jazz but it is actually so much more. This is real. The people here truly love jazz and we know people like that are not your average people.

I have felt for a long time that straight-ahead jazz has been slipping away from us. I have hope now that there will be a resurgence (or shall I say an insurgency:-) to bring this baby back full force!

You just knocked it out of the park. Thanks again.

xoxo,
Janie

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