JC Hopkins - Piano, Songwriter, Vocals
Queen Esther,Nicole Nelson- vocals
Lewis "Flip" Barnes - Vocals, Trumpet James Zollar - Trumpet Chuck MacKinnon - Trumpet, Arranger Mark McGowan - Trumpet Cleave Guyton - Alto Saxophone, Flute, & Clarinet Patience Higgins - Tenor Saxophone Claire Daly - Baritone Saxophone Vincent Chancey - Frency Horn J. Walter Hawkes - Trombone, Arranger Liberty Ellman - Guitar Catherine Popper - Bass Warren Smith - Vibraphone Sunny Jain - Drums
WATCH THE MOVIE!
Influences
Duke Ellington, Charles Mingus, Thelonious Monk, Mose Allison, Louis Armstrong, Frank Sinatra, Sun Ra, Arvo Part, Malcomn X, Haruki Murkami, Oscar Levant, Satchell Paige,Gore Vidal, Hans Hoffman, Satie, Art Tatum, Lee Freidlander, Collette, Herman Melville,
Godard, Ingrid and Ingmar Bergman, Dinah Washington, Clifford Brown, Henry Miller,Harlod Lloyd, Miles, William James, DeKooning, Scott Joplin, Janis Joplin, Dylan Thomas, Bob Dylan, Robert Johnson, Robert Lowell, Preston Sturges, Maysle Brothers, Joan Mitchell, Willie Mays, Emma Goldman, Faure, Charles Darwin, Rahsaan Roland Kirk, Babe Ruth, J.J Johnson, Bill Evans, Sandy Koufax, Grandma Moses, Weegee, Reginald Marsh, Brassai, Phillip Roth, Eugene O'Neil, Billie Holliday, Gil Evans, Leo Durocher, John Cassavetes, Larry David, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Walt Whitman, Ruth Laredo, Scriabin, Wong Kar-Wai, Ambrose Bierce, Fellini, Eddie Lang, Count Basie, Poulenc, Jimmie Noone, Art Blakey, Bartok, Bertolt Brecht, Matisse,The Everly Brothers, The Marx Brothers, the Stanley Brothers, The Boswell Sisters, Alexander Calder, Woody Allen, Chopin, Ben Webster, Karl Marx, e.e. cummings, John Coltrane, The Council of Nicea, Tom Waits, John Updike, Bukowski, Kenneth Koch, Basquiat, Gershwin, Kern, Hoagy Carmichael, Mahler, Cole Porter, Pagnol, Busby Berkely, Humphrey Bogart, The Beatles, Herbie Nichols, Randy Weston, Jimmy Knepper, Gerry Mulligan, Judy Holliday, Frank Capra, Shostakovitch,Vaughn Williams, Ho Chi Minh, Hanna Arendt, Henry Moore, Bix Beiderbecke, Fritz Lang, Dexter Gordon, Cesare Pavese, Kadinsky, Arp, Jimmy Guiffre, Beethoven, Ernst Krenek, Clifford Odets, Raymond Chandler, Aristophanes, Jung, Appolinaire, W.G. Sebald, Susan Sontag, Glenn Gould, Randy Newman, The Clash, Woody Guthrie, Art Ensemble of Chcago, Charles Ives....
Sounds Like
Ellington meets Mingus meets Hoagy Carmichael in New Orleans bump into Dinah Washington and have a ball ..
Strolling into an East Village coffee shop, JC Hopkins looks just a little out of place. And not just because the Fort Greene, Brooklyn resident is beyond his home borough. Tall and coolly confident, immaculate in a three-piece suit topped by a tweed applejack cap, JC stands out in the neighborhood crowd of part-time punks, baggy-pants NYU undergrads, and graying bohemians.
But JC is used to it. He's always been a man slightly out of his time, looking to the past for inspiration while moving restlessly into his own future. He's been a folk-rocker, an indie-rocker, and a piano bar entertainer - all en route to his current incarnation as a composer of wry, inventive tunes and front man for one of the hippest little big bands in the country, the JC Hopkins Biggish Band.
Following in the footsteps of Hoagy Carmichael and Irving Berlin, Hopkins writes deceptively simple words and melodies that speak to something deeper, and more emotionally complex, with the potential to add a page to the great American Songbook. "It's the best of American Song from every era which most interests me," says Hopkins.
Those songs evolved into a musical theater work entitled Show Biz'ness, created by JC and poet Peter Simonelli, which ran for six months in San Francisco. The show gave rise to two important songs: "Show Biz'ness," newly recorded for Underneath A Brooklyn Moon; and "Dreams Come True," covered by Willie Nelson and Norah Jones on Willie's album It Always Will Be (2004, Lost Highway).
In 2000, JC moved to New York. He started gigging around town at clubs like Fez, Tonic, and The Slipper Room with a core group of players that included Norah Jones on vocals. (JC and bassist Lee Alexander co-wrote "Painter Song" for her 2002 multi-platinum debut Come Away With Me.) He also recorded original material with some of the greats, tracking with Band alumni Levon Helm and Garth Hudson, producing and playing piano on Victoria Williams' 2000 album 'Water to Drink.'
JC's Biggish Band continued to germinate, attracting a variety of top New York players, and drawing sell-out crowds on both coasts at tastemaker venues such as NYC's Joe's Pub, and LA's Largo. Singers as diverse as Victoria Williams, Martha Wainwright, Syd Straw, and Madeleine Peyroux (who co-wrote four songs included on Underneath A Brooklyn Moon), fronted the band, before Queen Esther became the primary vocalist. "Queen Esther's voice has the strength and style of Betty Carter or Sarah Vaughan, real favorites of mine," says JC. In 2006, JC was invited to produce an album of children's music with writer/actor John Lithgow. "The Sunny Side of the Street," was nominated for a Grammy award in 2007. A live show, "John Lithgow: The Sunny Side of the Street," performed on Broadway at the New Victory Theater in New York in Early 2008, for which JC was musical director. As a playwright, JC has written a two-act romantic tragedy, "Rose does Rico," a three-act post- 9/11 drama, "Hope for Hope," and is currently at work on a burlesque-swing musical, "Underneath a Brooklyn Moon." "It's just been one thing leading naturally to another," Hopkins muses, "but don't ask me what comes next!"
You should create your own MySpace Layouts like me by using nUCLEArcENTURy.COM's MySpace Profile Editor!
Hello! Just wanted to drop in and let you know that pre-orders for my new jazz standards album "Bittersweet" are now taking place! The first 100 pre-orders will receive a signed copy! Release date is set for May 19th, but you will get your copy a few days earlier! Kate and I are very excited about the record, and we can't wait for you to hear it. Head over to www.bittersweetthealbum.com to pre-order! Thanks! ~Mark
Happy New Year JC! It was so awesome sharing the bill yet again with such a talented person!! Aldo got me a gig at The Living Room on Jan. 10th. It would mean the world if you could swing by!! Look forward to seeing you in the year to come!
Du bon son par ici...! Merci pour la joue (ou la rocket je ne sais plus)... DE NOUVELLES VERSIONS SUR MON PROFIL !!! Donner moi votre avis. A bientôt !