Saturday, December 31, 2011

SF Jazz Festival Listening Party and Wine Tasting Featuring Robin Eubanks, trombonist for SF Jazz Collective

Robin Eubanks, courtesy of google images
 
Triple Crown master performer, Robin Eubanks took audience on a journey through the history of the trombone at SF Jazz Listening Party and Wine Tasting on November 9th.
The event was held at Yerba Buena Center for the Arts, in San Francisco. The event packed a full house.
Spinning recordings from legends and innovators of the trombone, Eubanks shared his insights and demonstrated trombone techniques with educators, students, and jazz enthusiasts.
“As an athlete has to warms up with stretches before an event, you must first warm up with the Trombone,” said Robin Eubanks.
Vintage Berkeley featured acclaimed selections of small-production wines from around the world.
On stage with Eubanks for the discussion was Randall Kline, Executive Artistic Director and founder of SF Jazz, followed by a question and answer session.
 “It’s a chance for the audience to get to know the artist,” said Kline.
Eubanks appeared on the jazz scene in 1980, performing with Slide Hampton, Sun Ra, and Stevie Wonder.
He came from an exceptional musical family.  His mother was a piano player who played the organ at church and gave music lessons to young students while his brothers, Kevin and Duane played the guitar and trumpet, respectively. His cousins Ray Bryant and Tommy Bryant were also musicians.
Eubanks got early exposure to the music while still in the womb, his mother played piano while pregnant with him with her belly rubbing against the piano.
At age 8, while his mother was giving piano lessons, Eubanks’ curiosity was cause for him to pick up the trombone.
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“I was trying to figure out how to play an instrument just moving your arms,” said Eubanks.
Eubanks has appeared on television numerous times, often playing with brother Kevin and doing fill-ins with the “Tonight Show” band, as well as for the bay area’s own Steve Turre on “Saturday Night” Live in New York.
“A musical instrument from the brass family, the trombone is a 15th century instrument originally designed after an Old English instrument called the sackbut. It is a symphonic horn characterized by a telescopic slide in which the player varies the length of the tube to change pitches, it uses three valves like those on a trumpet.

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There are 7 positions of the trombone, you get different overtones series, B flat, F and D,” says Eubanks, before playing a Calvary bugle song on his horn. “There is a physical awkwardness because of the slide. F to G, you move about a foot. That’s a physical problem with the trombone.”


According to Eubanks, “Kid Ory from the 1920s in New Orleans was one of the most influential trombonists in early jazz. During the tail gate parties where bands rode around in the back of a truck, Ory was known for having his trombone hanging off the side of the truck while playing due to the awkwardness of the horn.”
A tenured professor at Oberlin College, Eubanks talked early jazz history of trombone players who were the biggest names in Jazz and helped the trombone to become well known.
From the small bands that included Kid Ory, King Oliver, who played along with Louis Armstrong, to Jack Teagarden, to the big bands like Duke Ellington Band.
“It is said that it is the closest sound to the human voice,” says Eubanks, while spinning a recording of Ellington’s band on a cut where Joe Tricky Sam Norton has his trombone making sounds like someone saying ya ya ya ya ya.
“I loved how his letter flutter did a harmony with his notes,” said Joe Stritchy, a junior at Delmar High School in San Jose who is the only trombone player at his school.
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After taking a journey with Eubanks through the Big Band era during WW II with J.J. Johnson, whom he calls the godfather of modern trombone in the 40s and known for his film scores, Eubanks credits him as the most important influence because he recommended him for his teaching position at Oberlin College.
“I was so indebted to J.J., I saw it as him passing the torch on to me and I will always be indebted to him and his memory, said Eubanks.

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