by NPR STAFF
May 20, 2014 5:06 PM ET
Photo: Thomas Brodin/Courtesy of the artist
Jazz composer and trumpeter Theo Croker opens his new album, AfroPhysicist, with an ode to his grandfather: New Orleans jazz great Doc Cheatham. The thing is, Croker didn't grow up in New Orleans or any other jazz hub. He's from Jacksonville, Fla., and he was just a child when his grandfather died in 1997. It wasn't until his grandfather's memorial services — attended by jazz legends — that he decided to join the legacy.
"I didn't understand what a legacy was," he tells NPR's Audie Cornish. "I just wanted to play the trumpet 'cause it was loud. I was a 12-year-old going to jazz concerts and listening to jazz CDs. It was very strange."
Croker went on to study at the prestigious Oberlin Conservatory. One of his early gigs out of school took him down an unexpected path — to Shanghai, and a new approach.
"For the longest time I was a jazz purist," Croker says. "When I left the United States and I would see how people started to react to different kinds of music, then I started to become influenced by other kinds of music."
Read more: http://www.npr.org/2014/05/20/314250596/heir-to-a-jazz-legacy-a-trumpeter-finds-his-own-way?ft=1&f=10002
Wednesday, May 21, 2014
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