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Brian Culbertson & Eric Darius
@ Pizza on the Park
19 May 2010
Click an image to enlarge.
Desert Island Discs
Which 2 albums would you take with you to a
desert island?
Brian Culbertson
John Coltrane – Blue Train
John Mayer - Continuum
Eric Darius
Miles Davis – Kind of Blue
Stevie Wonder – Songs in the Key of Life
Brian Culbertson biography
Brian Culbertson began his quest in music at the
age of 8 on piano, adding drums at 9, trombone at 10 then bass at
12. He grew up loving genre-crossing jazz-pop artists such as Chicago,
Blood Sweat & Tears, Tower of Power, The Brecker Brothers, David
Sanborn, Yellowjackets, Earth, Wind & Fire and Maynard Ferguson.
So passionate and naturally gifted was Brian that his 7th grade
piano recital consisted of all original pieces. He flourished in
high school bands with his father, Jim Culbertson, as the school’s
award-winning jazz band director, then spent two years at DePaul
University before going on to compose commercial jingles for clients
such as United Airlines, Oldsmobile, Sears and McDonald’s
in Chicago’s competitive advertising community.
In 1994 - at age 20 - Culbertson self-produced his debut, “Long
Night Out”, followed in short order by “Modern Life”
(1995 - his first album to top R&R and Gavin’s Contemporary
Jazz charts, driven by the hit single “Come To Me”)
and After Hours (1996). With 1997’s Secrets, the hits kept
comin’ with “So Good” and “On My Mind”.
His 1999 follow-up Somethin’ Bout Love also sat high among
the CJ Top 20 for nearly a year with the two #1 singles “Back
In The Day” and “Do You Really Love Me?”
In 2001 Culbertson released Nice & Slow (featuring
special guest trumpeter Herb Alpert and singer/songwriter Kenny
Lattimore), which spent six weeks at #1 on Billboard’s Contemporary
Jazz Chart thanks to the #1 singles “Get It On” and
“All About You.” Then came Come On Up (2003), highlighted
by a blazing cover of Earth Wind & Fire’s “Serpentine
Fire” and the beautiful “Our Love.” 2005's It's
On Tonight found him making the switch from Warner Bros. to GRP/Verve
for a sensual leaning project featuring two more #1 singles "Hooking
Up" and "Let's Get Started," as well as special guests
Patti Austin, Will Downing, Ledisi, Kirk Whalum, Boney James and
Chris Botti. The 2006 holiday album A Soulful Christmas swiftly
followed.
2008 found him blasting back after two years with
the all-star blowout Bringing Back the Funk, a salute to '70s soul
music that he co-produced with the legendary Maurice White, and
featured William "Bootsy" Collins and Phelps "Catfish"
Collins plus members of the Rubber Band and the Horny Horns (all
out of Parliament-Funkadelic), Larry Graham (of Sly & The Family
Stone and his own Graham Central Station), Larry Dunn (of Earth
Wind & Fire), Greg Adams (from Tower of Power), Tony Maiden
and Bobby Watson (of Rufus), Michael Bland, Cora Dunham and Rhonda
Smith (from Prince's bands), Maceo Parker & Fred Wesley (from
James Brown's JB’s band), solo stars David T. Walker, Ronnie
Laws, Gerald Albright, Tom Scott, Paul Jackson Jr., Perri and many
more L.A. session greats. This was an unprecedented assemblage of
music royalty that graced the CD including the churchy standout
“The House of Music” (which Brian co-wrote with Larry
Graham) and his tenth chart-topper as a solo artist “Always
Remember.”
Eric Darius biography
“I want my music to be a vehicle for
change and to transcend boundaries from age to race. I believe my
music can make a difference in the world,” states the
commanding and strikingly handsome 20-something musician, composer,
and performer, known for his dynamic and exhilarating live shows.
Darius’ explosive arrival on the contemporary jazz scene at
age 17 caused frenzy. This was not a surprise as the ambitious saxophonist,
who has shared the stage with everyone from Prince, Carlos Santana,
Wynton Marsalis, Wyclef Jean, George Benson, and Brian McKnight,
had just released an auspicious recording debut and several years
prior had already made an appearance at the famed Montreux Jazz
Festival in Switzerland. Garnering accolades from critics, musicians
and fans alike, there seemed to be a consensus that this young man
was bringing a sense of history but yet a youthful and forward-thinking
approach to the genre. Eric Darius, who has scored a #1 on Billboard’s
Contemporary Jazz Charts and several top ten hits, has steadily
proven to be anything but your typical ‘smooth jazz guy.’
The savvy business school grad whose iPod features a mix of everyone
from John Coltrane and Bob Marley to Jay-Z , the Rolling Stones
and Alicia Keys, confesses, “Contemporary jazz is the
genre that has embraced my music, but I see myself as a musician
first. I play every style of music from Jazz, R&B, Pop, Reggae,
Hip-hop, Rock to Gospel. As I continue to evolve and grow musically,
it’s the journey to explore new things that keeps me excited
and hungry to do what I do.”
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