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[[Category:New Zealand jazz musicians]]
[[Category:Australian jazz saxophonists]]
[[Category:Year of birth missing (living people)]]
[[Category:Year of birth missing (living people)]]
[[Category:Living people]]
[[Category:Living people]]
[[Category:Australian jazz musicians]]
[[Category:Australian jazz saxophonists]]
[[Category:Sydney Conservatorium of Music alumni]]
[[Category:Sydney Conservatorium of Music alumni]]

Revision as of 20:13, 4 August 2010

Tim Hopkins, (born in Auckland, New Zealand) is an Australian jazz musician.

Career

Growing up in Brisbane, Australia, Hopkins was heading for a career in graphic arts when he picked up the saxophone on a whim at age 15. Something clicked and just a few years later he graduated from the Sydney Conservatorium of Music and was coming to the attention of Australian jazz icons Vince Jones, Paul Grabowsky, Mike Nock, James Morrison, Don Burrows, top kiwi musicians Kim Patterson, Kevin Field, Frank Gibson Jnr, Nathan Haines, Mark de Clive Lowe, Andy Browne, Roger Fox, King Kapisi and Gray Bartlett. Other credits include You Am I, Kate Ceberano, Ed Kuepper, Doug Williams, Midnight Oil, Jackie Orszaczky, and many others, not to mention a brief jam with Sting.

Hopkins has also developed his skills as a composer and band leader, his debut in 1993 Good Heavens coincided with winning the National Jazz Award at the Wangaratta Festival of Jazz in Australia. By the end of the 1990s he had recorded another four CDs, toured South East Asia, Canada and Europe and performed at Jazz Festivals from Montreal to Melbourne, Waiheke to Wellington.

In 1999, on an Australia Arts Council grant, he packed up his horn and headed to jazz mecca New York City where he studied with saxophonist George Garzone. Whilst there, he played with Jim Black and Seamus Blake and wrote/arranged/performed with an adventurous ensemble called Phydia featuring a string quartet with a standard jazz quartet line up. It was from the creative intensity of NYC that ideas for a new album began to grow.

In 2000, Hopkins moved back to New Zealand and began recording and compiling his 6th solo CD Hear Now After. The first single Loophole features TV presenter Russell Harrison on vocals, rapper King Kapisi, percussionist Miguel Fuentes and Hopkins on an assortment of instruments. Loophole was included on a NZ On Air compilation disc and features a black and white video directed by the NZ Independent Film Company.

Always searching for new and exciting ways to present his music and ideas, Hopkins is helping to set new standards in the developing DJ/Live Music movement. He was instrumental in starting the Heineken Green Room Sessions across New Zealand with DJ Clarke and The Gordon Bennett Project. GBP have also played at the Heineken Open, headlined in Malaysia and Singapore at several big events and released a double CD recorded at Millton Vineyards & Winery in Gisborne.

Hear Now After, which was released in March 2008, features many of the musicians listed above and other top players from New Zealand and Australia, including appearances by drumming legend—and father—Tony Hopkins, Mike Nock, Max Stowers, Dixon Nacey, Aaron Coddel, Jonathan Zwartz and Sean Wayland.

Hopkins recently returned to Sydney where he is performing/producing music, and designing websites.

Discography

  • Good Heavens! (1993)
  • Pandora's Box (1994)
  • Funkenstein (1995)
  • Upon My Camel (1996)
  • Popcorn (1997)
  • Hear Now After (2008)

Sideman credits

  • The Aints – Ascension (1992)
  • The Aints – Autocannibalism (1992)
  • Australian Art Orchestra – Ringing The Bell Backwards
  • D.I.G. (Directions In Groove) – Deeper (1994)
  • Lily Dior – Invitation (1998)
  • Paul Grabowsky – Viva Viva (1994)
  • Vince Jones – Here's To The Miracles (1996)
  • Ed Kuepper – Black Ticket Day (1992)
  • Barney McAll – Exit (1996)
  • James Muller Trio – All Out (1999)
  • Mike Nock Quartet – Dark and Curious (1991)
  • Jackie Orszaczky Budget Orchestra – Deep Down and Out (1998)
  • Niko Schauble's Tibetan Dixie – Ya It Ma Thing
  • Sean Wayland – South Pacific Soul (2002)