Past Awardees
2002 Living Legacy Award Winner
Jimmy Heath
Jimmy Heath has long been recognized as a brilliant
instrumentalist and a magnificent composer
and arranger. He has performed with nearly
all the jazz greats of the last 50 years,
from Howard McGhee, Dizzy Gillespie, and Miles
Davis to Wynton Marsalis. In 1948 at the age
of 21, he performed in the First International
Jazz Festival in Paris with McGhee, sharing
the stage with Coleman Hawkins, Slam Stewart,
and Erroll Garner. One of Heath's earliest
big bands (1947-1948) in Philadelphia included
John Coltrane, Benny Golson, Specs Wright,
Cal Massey, Johnny Coles, Ray Bryant, and
Nelson Boyd. Charlie Parker and Max Roach
sat in on one occasion.
During his career,
Jimmy Heath has performed on more than 120
record albums including seven
with The Heath Brothers and twelve as a leader.
Jimmy has also written more than 125 compositions,
many of which have become jazz standards and
have been recorded by other artists including
Art Farmer, Cannonball Adderley, Clark
Terry, Chet Baker, Miles Davis, James Moody,
Milt Jackson, Ahmad Jamal, Ray Charles, Dizzy
Gillespie, J.J Johnson and Dexter Gordon.
Jimmy has also composed extended works - seven
suites and two string quartets - and he premiered
his first symphonic work, "Three
Ears," in 1988 at Queens College (CUNY) with Maurice Peress
conducting.
After having just concluded eleven
years as Professor of Music at the Aaron Copland
School of Music at Queens College, Heath maintains
an extensive performance schedule and continues
to conduct workshop and clinics throughout
the United States, Europe, and Canada. He
has also taught jazz studies at Jazzmobile,
Housatonic College, City College of New York, and The
New School for Social Research. In October
1997, two of his former students, trumpeters
Darren Barrett and Diego Urcola, placed first
and second in the Thelonious Monk Competition.
www.jimmyheath.com |