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Mark Taylor
  • Male
  • New York, NY
  • United States
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Profile Information

What is your profession?
Musician
What Instrument Do you Play?
French Horn/Mellophone
Where Are you located?
Harlem, NY
How did you find out about TGJN?
link from Facebook
About Me:
I'm a composer/french hornist primarily focused on jazz and improvised music and music for the media, especially film and theatre. Most recently I've discovered an interest in sound design and begun a a quest to return the mellophone to jazz as a lead instrument. I've also begun playing the trumpet and am having a ball!

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Here's the "official" bio:

Mark Taylor is one of a handful of talented performers carrying on the improvisational tradition pioneered by the great (french) hornist, Julius Watkins, and is currently the only artist on the international jazz scene bringing new life to the long forgotten mellophone as a solo jazz instrument.

Taylor's sound has been described as "rapturous" and "golden" (Coda Magazine); "as fluid and limpid as (the) flute, and as gnarly as (the) alto." (JazzTimes). His innovative style has won him recognition by such legendary artists as Max Roach, who said, "Mark Taylor is a virtuoso instrumentalist...there is no one dealing with the french horn or the music the way he is."

A native of Chattanooga, TN, Mark's broad musical background includes performing, composing and arranging. Mark has performed and recorded with an array of modern giants including: Max Roach, McCoy Tyner, Abdullah Ibrahim, Muhal Richard Abrams, Lester Bowie, and Basie bandleader Grover Mitchell.

As a featured soloist with Henry Threadgill's Very Very Circus, Mark has toured throughout the United States, Europe and in Asia. As a member of George Schuller's post-modern big band, Orange Then Blue, he participated in a State Department tour of Turkey, Cyprus and Syria., and as leader of his own groups he has performed at the Tampere Jazz Happening in Tampere, Finland, Ljubljana and Maribor, Slovenia, and at a number of clubs in Germany, Austria, Canada and New York City, including Birdland, the Zinc Bar and the Knitting Factory.

As a composer, Mark has written for Max Roach, the Ebony Brass Quintet, pianist Larry Willis and was a member/arranger for Max Roach’s So What Brass Quintet. He has also been commissioned to compose for theatre, dance, CD-ROM, placed two songs in the Dollface Productions independent feature film "The Girl", scored Camille Billops' documentary, "A String of Pearls" and, most recently, completed the score for “9/11: The Forgotten Underdogs”, a new documentary about the difficulties faced by the deaf and hard of hearing during emergency situations, and done music, sound design and audio post for “Zero Down O.A.C.”, a dark comedy by Canadian filmmaker Aaron Moseson about the adventures of two used car salesmen in rural Alberta.
Website:
http://www.marktaylormusic.net

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At 10:57am on January 8, 2009, Patricia Fernández Miranda, Pafermi. said…
Hi Mark!.
I invited to you look at my artwork.

At 5:40pm on January 5, 2009, THE GLOBAL JAZZ NETWORK said…
Thank you for joining the movement @ TGJN.
We welcome you Mark to our Global Jazz Family!
Please spread the word and invite all of your Jazz
loving friends and others to the destination where
great Jazz minds meet.

Many in mind and body.
ONE in JAZZ!

Tamm E Hunt
publisher/founder
TGJN

Mark Taylor's Blog

Mark Taylor

Mark Taylor Launches the At What Age Project at Kickstarter.com

Here's the latest news! I'm finishing off my third CD. A project titled "At What Age". It features my new quartet with some special guests contributing poetry and other instruments and lots of new music by yours trul...y. I'm even bringing out the Mellophone on a couple of pieces! You know you don't want to miss that!

To make this happen, I'm partnering with Kickstarter.com, a great website that makes funding the project surprisingly easy and painless (I get 100% of the money raised, minus the… Continue

Posted on October 16, 2009 at 10:30pm —

 
 

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Member Quotes About TGJN

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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