James E. Pugh
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James Pugh | |
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File:PughFormall.jpg
James Pugh, trombonist
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Background information | |
Birth name | James Edward Pugh |
Also known as | Jim Pugh |
Born | Camden, NJ |
November 12, 1950
Occupation(s) | Trombonist, composer |
Instruments | Trombone |
James Edward Pugh (born November 12, 1950) is a trombonist, composer, and educator. He is noted as the lead trombonist with Woody Herman's Thundering Herd (1972–1976) and Chick Corea's Return to Forever Band (1977–1978). For 25 years, he worked as a freelance trombonist in New York City. In recent years, he toured and recorded with the rock group Steely Dan, is a founding member of the Graham Ashton Brass Ensemble, and is on faculty as Distinguished Professor of Jazz Trombone at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
Contents
Early years
Born in Camden, New Jersey and raised in Butler, Pennsylvania, Pugh began studying piano at age five and trombone at age ten. Before attending the Eastman School of Music, he studied trombone with Matty Shiner of Duquesne University in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. While at Eastman, Pugh studied with Emory Remington, Donald Knaub, Chuck Mangione, Ray Wright, and was awarded Eastman's coveted Performer's Certificate. After graduating from the Eastman School of Music, Pugh toured with the Woody Herman Band and with Chick Corea before settling to New York City, where he remained for 25 years.
As a performer and recording artist
Since the 1980s, Pugh became New York's top-call freelance trombonist for film scores, records, and music for television and radio advertising. He can be heard on more than four thousand recording sessions.
His trombone is heard in collaboration with classical and popular artists and orchestras such as Yo-Yo Ma, Steely Dan, Eos, Concordia, St. Luke’s Orchestra, André Previn, Paul Simon, Barbra Streisand, Tony Bennett, Michael Jackson, Madonna, Pink Floyd, and Frank Sinatra.
Pugh added his sound to feature film soundtracks including A League of Their Own, When Harry Met Sally, and Meet Joe Black; and on hit Broadway cast recordings such as City of Angels, Fosse and Victor/Victoria.
In 2003, Pugh “re-premiered” the Nathaniel Shilkret: Trombone Concerto at Carnegie Hall with Skitch Henderson and the New York Pops Orchestra. This mid-twentieth century work was written for Tommy Dorsey.
Pugh is the only recipient of the National Academy of Recording Arts & Science's Virtuoso Award for Tenor trombone, awarded after being voted Tenor Trombone MVP by the New York recording community for five years.
In 2008, NPR named his album, X Over Trombone in their list of best classical CDs of 2008.
Pulitzer Prize winning composer Charles Wuorinen wrote his Ashberyana for Pugh, the Brentano String Quartet and pianist Sarah Rothenberg, premiered with the composer conducting and later performed with James Levine conducting.[1]
As a composer
Pugh's original music and arrangements has been on National Public Radio, in film scores, on "jingles", and on record. Pugh wrote the theme music for Performance Today, the daily classical music program on public radio. His composition, Lunch with Schrödinger's Cat, received a Lincoln Center premier in 1989 by Marin Alsop and the Concordia Chamber Orchestra. Pugh premiered his "Concerto for Trombone and Orchestra" in May 1992 with the Williamsport Symphony. It received its New York premier in March 2000 with Joseph Alessi as soloist and Leonard Slatkin conducting the New York Philharmonic. A founding member of the Graham Ashton Brass Ensemble, Pugh’s compositions can be heard on a recent Signum CDs Scenes of Spirits and The Graham Ashton Brass Ensemble Plays The Music of James Pugh and Daniel Schnyder.
As an educator
Pugh is on faculty at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. In the past, he taught at SUNY-Purchase College, the University of the Arts Philadelphia, and at New York University. In the summer, he has been on faculty at the Skidmore Summer Institute of Jazz at Skidmore College. He appears at schools as a guest artist and clinician.
In the field of instrument development
Pugh has been involved with the development of the Edwards small bore tenor trombone and has worked with Dave Monette in the development of the Monette TS11 and TS 6 small shank tenor trombone mouthpiece. He plays and endorses Monette mouthpieces exclusively.
Discography
Solo projects
1981: Crystal Eyes - Pewter Records
1984: The Pugh /Taylor Project - DMP Recording
2001: Pugh Mosso - CD recorded in Brisbane, Australia with the ConArtists, big band from the Queensland Conservatorium
2002: E'nJ "Legend and Lion" with Eijiro Nakagawa - SuperKids Recording, Japanese release
2004: Echano - CD recorded in Brisbane, Australia with the ConArtists, big band from the Queensland Conservatorium
2004: E2’nJ2 - TNC Records
2006: E'nJ "Just Us" - SuperKids Recording, Japanese release
2007: X Over Trombone - Albany records
2007: Holly and The Ivy - Montclair Citadel Band of the Salvation Army
2012: "The Devil's Hopyard" - Jazzmaniac Records
2012: "Pugh Taylor II" - Pewter Records
as sideman
1972: Giant Steps, with Woody Herman
1973: Thundering Herd, with Woody Herman
1976: The 40th Anniversary Concert, with Woody Herman
1977: Musicmagic, with Chick Corea and Return to Forever
1977: Return to Forever - Live, with Chick Corea
1978: Secret Agent, with Chick Corea
1979: In a Temple Garden (CTI, 1979) with Yusef Lateef
1988: The Disney Album, with Barbara Cook
1989: When Harry Met Sally, with Harry Connick, Jr.
1990: Big Boss Band, with George Benson
1992: League of Their Own, with James Taylor
1994: Mr. Gentle and Mr. Cool, with David “Fathead” Newman
1994: Scampi Fritti, with Marc Beacco
1995: Honey and Rue, with Kathleen Battle; St. Luke’s Orchestra, André Previn, conductor
1995: Rush Hour, with Joe Lovano; Gunther Schuller, conductor
1996: Two Lane Highways, with Jay Leonhart and Friends
1999: Crossing the Bridge, with Eileen Ivers
1999: Songs from the Last Century, with George Michael
2000: Eight, with Walter Blanton
2000: Two Against Nature, with Steely Dan
2002: Looking for America, with Carla Bley
2003: Alegría, with Wayne Shorter
2003: Everything Must Go, with Steely Dan
2006: "Morph the Cat", with Donald Fagen
2007: This Meets That, with John Scofield
1989–present Manhattan Jazz Orchestra – all recordings
1998–present Super Trombone – “Super Trombone,” “Hello Young Lovers,” “Take Five,”, "Basie" and “Mission Impossible”
2012: "Sunken Condos", with Donald Fagen
Broadway Recordings
1992 City of Angels
1995 Will Rogers' Follies
1998 Victor/Victoria
2000 Fosse
Motion Picture Soundtracks (featured soloist)
Classical (not as soloist)
Mass, Charles Wuorinen
Ponder Nothing, The Chamber Music of Ben Johnston, Music Amici
The Music of Irwin Bazelon
Collage - New York Trombone Quartet
Bright Sheng: Lacerations, 92nd St. Y Orchestra, Gerard Schwartz, conductor
EOS Orchestra - 5 CDs for Sony-BMG
Concordia Orchestra - 6 CDs for various labels
The Silk Road Project with YoYo Ma
The Graham Ashton Brass Ensemble Plays the Music of James Pugh and Daniel Schnyder, Graham Ashton Brass Ensemble
References and external links
Books
Dietrich, Kurt. Jazz 'Bones: The World of Jazz Trombone . Advance Music. 2005. ISBN 3-89221-069-1
pp. 344–7.
Feather, Leonard. Encyclopedia of Jazz in the Seventies ISBN 0-306-80290-2
Websites
Jim Pugh's Official Website
Jim Pugh at Trombone Page of the World
NPR's Top 10 Classical Albums of 2008
Footnotes
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- Pages with broken file links
- Articles with hCards
- Pages using Template:Infobox musical artist with unknown parameters
- 1950 births
- Living people
- People from Camden, New Jersey
- People from Butler, Pennsylvania
- American trombonists
- American film score composers
- Male film score composers
- Composers for trombone
- Return to Forever members
- Musicians from Pennsylvania
- Musicians from New Jersey
- Eastman School of Music alumni
- University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign faculty
- Steely Dan members