Dave Holland, Norma Winstone, Kenny Wheeler & London Vocal Project


Biography Dave Holland, Norma Winstone, Kenny Wheeler & London Vocal Project



Norma Winstone
is a British jazz singer and educator. As a scholarship holder of London's Trinity College of Music, Norma Winstone studied piano and organ for three years. In 1971, she was named best jazz singer by Melody Maker, which led to her recording her first album under her own name. In 1977, together with John Taylor and trumpeter Kenny Wheeler, she founded the group Azimuth, which was described by the London Times as the most imaginative and interesting chamber jazz group in the world. Over the course of her long and impressive career she has worked with Kenny Wheeler, Steve Swallow, John Abercrombie, Dave Holland, Peter Erskine, John Taylor, Fred Hersch, John Surman, Jimmy Rowles, the NDR Big Band and more. She is also a jazz educator at the Royal Academy of Music. In 2001 Norma Winstone won the title “Best Vocalist” at the BBC Jazz Awards. In 2009 she was awarded the Jazzahead Skoda Award 2009. Her album Distances, recorded in 2007 together with Glauco Venier and Klaus Giesing, was nominated for a Grammy in 2009.

David Holland
Dave Holland is a renowned bassist, composer and bandleader whose passion for musical expression of all styles and dedication to creating consistently innovative ensembles has propelled a professional career of more than 50 years. A guiding light on acoustic and electric bass, Holland has earned top honors in his field, including multiple Grammy Awards and nominations and the title of NEA Jazz Master in 2017. The bassist’s virtuosic technique and rhythmic feel, informed by an open-eared respect of a formidable spread of styles and sounds, is widely revered and remains much in demand. His playing can be heard on hundreds of recordings, including more than thirty as a leader.

Holland first rose to prominence in groundbreaking groups led by such legends as Miles Davis, Stan Getz, Sam Rivers, Betty Carter, Herbie Hancock and Anthony Braxton—as well as collaborations with the likes of Chick Corea, Gary Burton, Jack DeJohnette, and John McLaughlin. He carries that enviable history with little fanfare and extreme humility; to him what matters most is the immediate musical project at hand. Fittingly, he is today more celebrated for the bands that he continues to assemble, record and perform with—ensembles which range from duos and trios to big bands, and often feature musicians like Steve Coleman, Robin and Kevin Eubanks, Jason Moran, Chris Potter, Eric Harland, Craig Taborn, among many others.

Holland’s recent releases include Without Deception, which reunites him with longtime collaborator Kenny Barron in a trio setting with drummer Johnathan Blake; Good Hope, as the adventurous Crosscurrents Trio with Chris Potter and Zakir Hussain; Uncharted Territories, an expansive and exploratory improvised session with Evan Parker, Craig Taborn and Ches Smith; and most recently Another Land, a trio with Kevin Eubanks and Obed Calvaire.

A Fellow of the Guildhall School of Music & Drama in London, where he studied from 1965-68, Holland has received honorary doctorates from Birmingham Conservatoire in England and both Boston’s Berklee College of Music and New England Conservatory and this year from the Royal Academy of Music in London. He served as artistic director for the Banff Centre Jazz Workshop in Alberta, Canada for seven years in the 1980s and is currently an artist in residence at the Royal Academy of Music and New England Conservatory. Recently, Holland was made an Honorary Member of the Royal Academy of Music —a rare honor, as membership is limited to 300 living musicians.

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