Joseph Daley (jazz musician)
Joseph Daley | |
---|---|
Background information | |
Born | Harlem, New York, New York, United States |
Genres | Jazz |
Occupation(s) | Composer, musician, educator |
Instrument(s) | Tuba, Trombone, Euphonium |
Website | jodamusic |
Joseph Peter Daley is an American educator, jazz musician, composer and arranger known for his work with the tuba, trombone and euphonium .
Early life and as educator
Born in Harlem, Daley graduated The High School of Music & Art in 1967. He then continued to the Manhattan School of Music where he earned a bachelor's degree in Performance in 1972 and a master's degree in Music Education in 1973.[1][2]
From 1972- 1976 Joseph worked for the New York City Board of Education as Band Director at Wadleigh JHS 88 Harlem and Associate Director of Manhattan Borough-Wide Band.
From 1976- 2005 he worked for the Englewood New Jersey Board of Education at Janis Dismus Middle School and Dwight Morrow High School.
Listing of various assignments from 1976-2005: Concert Band Director, Marching Band director, Choral Director, Music Appreciation Teacher, Jazz Ensemble Director, Yamaha Electronic Keyboard Lab Teacher, Music Theory and Harmony Teacher, Subject Area Leader.
Performing musician
During his career as an educator, he was also deeply involved in jazz as a composer, arranger and performer, working with a veritable Who's Who of jazz musicians such as Monguito Santamaria, Howard Johnson, Taj Mahal, Gli Evans. Sam Rivers, Jayne Cortez, Carla Bley, Edward Vesala, George Gruntz, Muhal Richard Abrams, Phil Haynes, Bill Cole, Ellery Eskelin, Alan Silva, Assif Tsahar, Dave Douglas, Taylor Ho Bynum, Joe Fonda, Bill Dixon, Reggie Nicholson, Warren Smith, Natalie Merchant, Anthony Braxton, Jason Kao Hwang, Marty Ehrlich and Michael Gregory Jackson.[3] His interest in musicology and music from around the world has resulted in collaborations with the Tuvan throat singers of Huun Huur Tu, Benin, Africa's Gangbe Brass Band, Kronos String Quartet and Natalie Merchant.
Joseph has been a member of ensembles large and small including Howard Johnson and GRAVITY, Liberation Music Orchestra, Ebony Brass Quintet, Far East Side Band and Earth Tones Ensemble.
Joseph tours and records with Hazmat Modine and the improvisational Tuba Trio.[4][5]
Composer
While Joseph has been composing music virtually all of his life,[6] his first major published work was the ambitious and well received The Seven Deadly Sins,[7] published as an album on CD in 2011 along with a tribute to his deceased brother Ballade for the Fallen African Warrior.[8]
In 2013 he followed up with The Seven Heavenly Virtues,[9] then in 2014 Portraits: Wind, Thunder and Love which includes the multimovement suite Wispercussion: Five Portraits of Warren Smith[10] and in 2015, The Tuba Trio Chronicles.[11][12]
Awards and honors
- National Endowment for the Arts Award for Music Composition, NJ Outstanding Teacher Recognition Award, MacDowell Colony Fellow,[13] Geraldine R. Dodge Foundation Fellow, Music Omni Fellow.
- The New York City Jazz Record Magazine (January, 2012) listed Joseph Daley and The Earth Tones Ensemble "Best of 2011" in Debut and Large Ensemble categories for his debut album The Seven Deadly Sins.[14]
Discography
As leader
- The Seven Deadly Sins (Jaro, 2011)
- The Seven Heavenly Virtues (JoDa Music, 2013)
- Portraits: Wind, Thunder and Love (JoDa Music, 2014)
- The Tuba Trio Chronicles (JoDa Music, 2015)
- REISSUE: The Seven Heavenly Virtues/The Seven Deadly Sins (JoDa Music, 2019)
As sideman
With Muhal Richard Abrams
- Blu Blu Blu (Black Saint, 1990)
- Critic Picks, Vol 1 (Black Saint, 1997)
With Carla Bley
- Social Studies ECM (1980)
- I Remember Nino Rota (Hannibal, 1981)
With Anthony Braxton
- Composition #19 (for 100 tubas) (New Braxton House, 2011)
- Composition #46 (Moogie and Stetson) (New Braxton House, 2014)
With Bill Cole
- Untempered Trio (Shadrack, 1992)
- Duets & Solos Volume 2 (Boxholder, 1999)
- Live in Greenfield Massachusetts (Boxholder, 1999)
- Seasoning the Greens (Boxholder, 2002)
- Proverbs for Sam (Boxholder, 2008)
- Politics Tribute to Jayne Cortez (Shadrack, 2013)
- Trayvon Martin Suite (Jodamusic, 2014)
- Sunsum (2014)
- Music for Yoruba Proverbs (2019)
With Ellery Eskelin
- Figure of Speech (Soul Note, 1993)
- Ramifications (Hathut, 2000)
With Gil Evans
- Svengali (Atlantic, 1973)
- There Comes a Time (RCA, 1975)
With George Gruntz
- First Prize (Enja, 1989)
- 25 Years (TCB, 1996)
With Taylor Ho Bynum
- Other Stories (Three Suites) (482 Music, 2005)
- Madeline's Dreams (Firehouse 12, 2009)
With Howard Johnson
- Gravity!!! (Verve, 1995)
- Right Now (Verve, 1997)
- Testimony (Tuscarora, 2017)
With Liberation Music Orchestra
- The Montreal Tapes (Verve, 1989)
- Dream keeper (Blue Note, 1990)
- Not in Our Name (Verve, 2005)
- Time/Life (Impulse, 2017)
With Hazmat Modine
- Bahamut (Jaro, 2006)
- Cicada (Jaro, 2011)
- Live (Jaro, 2014)
- Extra-Deluxe-Supreme (Jaro, 2015)
- Box Of Breath (Jaro, 2019)
With Sam Rivers
- Crystals (Impulse!, 1974)
- Tuba Trio Volumes 1, 2 and 3 (Circle, 1976)
- Waves (Tomato, 1978)
- Inspiration (BMG/RCA, 1999)
- Culmination (BMG/RCA, 2000)
With Taj Mahal
- Happy Just to be Like I Am (Columbia, 1971)
- The Real Thing (Columbia, 1972)
- In Progress & in Motion 1965–1998 (Columbia, 1998)
- Hidden Treasures 1969–1973 (Columbia, 2012)
With others
- Jayne Cortez – Unsubmissive Blues (Bola Press, 1979)
- Bill Dixon – 17 Musicians in Search of a Sound (AUM Fidelity, 2008)
- Dave Douglas – Witness (RCA, 2001)
- Ebony Brass Quintet – A Brand New Bag (Mapleshade, 1995)
- Marty Ehrlich – A Trumpet in the Morning (New World, 2013)
- Far East Side Band – Urban Archaeology (Victo, 1995)
- Joe Fonda – Loaded Bases (CIMP, 2006)
- Rachelle Garniez – Who's Counting (Jaro, 2015)
- Michael Gregory Jackson – Endogeny & Exogamy (Ethnicity Against Error, 2015)
- Phil Haynes – 4 Horns & What? (Open Mind, 1991)
- Jelly's Last Jam Sound Track Jelly's Last Jam (Mercury. 1992)
- Jason Kao Hwang – Burning Bridge (Innova, 2012)
- Jason Kao Hwang – Blood (Jason Kao Hwang, 2019)
- Natalie Merchant – Leave Your Sleep (Nonesuch, 2010)
- Reggie Nicholson – Surreal Feel (Abstract, 2009)
- Paradigm Shift – The Raw Field Recordings (Tautology, 1999)
- Monguito Santamaria – Hey Sister (Fania, 1968)
- Santana – Supernatural (Legacy, 1999)
- Alan Silva & The Sound Visions Orchestra (Eremite, 1999)
- Warren Smith – Old News Borrowed Blues (Engineer, 2009)
- Assif Tsahar The Hallow World (Hopscotch, 1999)
- Edward Vesala – Heavy Life (Leo, 1980)
References
- ^ "Joseph Daley Trio". NMSU Department of Music.
- ^ "Aperitivo in Concerto - Joseph Daley Tuba Trio". La Provincia di Cremona.
- ^ Meek, Julia. "The Tuba Chronicles Highlight Fort Wayne Jazz Scene". WBOI.
- ^ Netsky, Ron. "JAZZ | Joseph Daley Tuba Trio". City Newspaper.
- ^ Lee, Trevor Hodgkins, Derrick. "Dry River Jazz: The Boundless Joseph Daley". KRWG.
{{cite news}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ "Joseph Daley: Tuba Maestro!". All About Jazz.
- ^ "CD: Joseph Daley". ArtsJournal. 29 June 2011.
- ^ Rose, Raul d'Gama. "Joseph Daley Earth Tones Ensemble: The Seven Deadly Sins". All About Jazz.
- ^ "Joseph Daley—The Seven Heavenly Virtues". Jazz da Gama. 20 December 2013.
- ^ Attarian, Hrayr. "Joseph Daley: Portraits: Wind, Thunder and Love". All About Jazz.
- ^ \. "Joseph Daley: The Tuba Trio Chronicles". All About Jazz.
{{cite web}}
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has numeric name (help) - ^ "7 hidden gems at the D.C. Jazz Festival". Washington Post.
- ^ "Index of MacDowell Fellows". The MacDowell Colony.
- ^ "New York City Jazz Record - January 2012 issue" (PDF). The New York City Jazz Record.