- Fly Trio
- Los Angeles Jazz Collective
- Artists Recording Collective
- Negroni's Trio
- BFM Jazz
- 482 Records
- John Abercrombie
- Susie Arioli
- Lisle Atkinson
- Yaala Balin
- David Binney
- Cindy Blackman
- Johnathan Blake
- Theo Bleckmann
- Luis Bonilla
- Ralph Bowen
- Don Braden
- Brave Souls
- Chloe Brisson
- George Brooks
- Beaty Brothers
- Henry Brun
- Bill Cantrall
- Bill Carrothers
- Edmar Castaneda
- Emmet Cohen
- George Colligan
- Marc Copland
- Patrick Cornelius
- Patty Cronheim
- John Daversa
- Eli Degibri
- Mike DiRubbo
- Toru Dodo
- Denise Donatelli
- ECM Records
- Nathan Eklund
- Steve Elmer
- Ari Erev
- Peter Erskine
- Wayne Escoffery
- John Escreet
- Carl Fischer
- Elli Fordyce
- Beka G
- Chantale Gagne
- Letizia Gambi
- Marshall Gilkes
- Hans Glawischnig
- Larry Goldings
- Eddie Gomez
- Richie Goods
- Wycliffe Gordon
- Chris Greene
- Tord Gustavsen
- Tim Hagans
- Scott Healy
- Lisa Hearns
- Tommy Igoe
- Impossible Gentelmen
- Francis Jacob
- Jando Music
- Michael Janisch
- NY Jazz Initative
- Jazzheads Records
- Aaron Johnson
- Beat Kaestli
- Kevin Kastning
- Manu Katche
- Ryan Keberle
- Majid Khaliq
- Randy Klein
- Kneebody
- Jonathan Kreisberg
- Dana Lauren
- Jay Leonhart
- Carolyn Leonhart
- Morrie Louden
- Brian Lynch
- Curtis MacDonald
- Mike Mainieri
- Ellis Marsalis
- Donny McCaslin
- Melford/Kalmanovitch
- Jando Music
- Lewis Nash
- Sean Nowell
- Arturo O' Farrill
- Bill O'Connell
- Meg Okura
- Chris Parker
- Rick Parker
- Alan Pasqua
- Dida Pelled
- Luis Perdomo
- The Persuasions
- Misha Piatigorsky
- Jean-Michel Pilc
- Victor Prieto
- Dafnis Prieto
- Mahlis Panos Project
- Kristjan Randalu
- Mark Rapp
- Groove Note Records
- Pirouet Records
- Bob Reynolds
- Abigail Riccards
- Duke Robillard
- Reuben Rogers
- Ted Rosenthal
- Gonzalo Rubalcaba
- The Rubin Museum
- Amanda Ruzza
- Bobby Sanabria
- Steven Schoenberg
- Second Movement
- Artist Share
- Avery Sharpe
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- Gwilym Simcock
- Edward Simon
- Marlon Simon
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- Jim Snidero
- Emilio Solla
- Russ Spiegel
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- Bill Stewart
- Joan Stiles
- Loren Stillman
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- The Gaddabouts
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- Mark Weinstein
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- Lenny White
- Dan Wilensky
- Jeff Williams
- Anthony Wilson
- Ben Wolfe
- Sam Yahel
- Craig Yaremko
- Alper Yilmaz
- Samir Zarif
- Miguel Zenon
- Zoho Records
Donny McCaslin
Born August 11, 1966, McCaslin grew up in in Santa Cruz, CA; inspired by his father, a pianist and vibraphonist, the youngster started playing tenor saxophone at 12, and quickly progressed, touring Europe and participating in the prestigious Monterey Jazz Festival’s California All-Star band while in high school. After attending the Berklee College of Music in Boston, he joined Berklee professor Gary Burton’s quintet, with whom he toured for four years. McCaslin moved to New York, in 1991, working with bassist Eddie Gomez and then joining the group Steps Ahead, with whom he made the 1995 disc Vibe (NYC Records).
But he really began to turn heads with his solo work in larger ensembles – first Ken Schaphorst’s big band, and subsequently the acclaimed Maria Schneider Orchestra, where his performance on the album Concert In The Garden received a Grammy nomination for “Best Jazz Instrumental Solo” in 2004.
So much for McCaslin’s “traditional” credentials, which provide the anchor for his much-admired work in more adventurous realms. Chief among these is the pianoless quartet Lan Xang (which evolved from an experimental partnership with fellow New York saxophonist David Binney) and the quintet led by the widely lionized trumpeter Dave Douglas, who added McCaslin to his band in 2005. Reviewing the Douglas Quintet in Jazz Times, Josef Woodard wrote of McCaslin: “He’s a versatile player who moves easily between inside and outside musical zones . . . . [T] here’s a fluidity and grace to his playing even when he’s pushing at envelopes.”
Thanks to the high profile of the Dave Douglas Quintet, McCaslin in the last two years has achieved wider praise for the incisive twists and purposeful turns of his emotionally charged solos. But those qualities – along with his sometimes startling virtuosity, and his distinctive voice as a composer – had actually been on display for much of the previous decade, during which McCaslin proved himself a valued sideman on recordings by Danilo Perez, Luciana Souza, and performances with Tom Harrell, Brian Blade, John Pattitucci, The Mingus Band, and Pat Metheny. . Meanwhile, the previous albums under his own name have shown him subtly incorporating elements of Latin American music within adventurous jazz frameworks.
In 2006, McCaslin received a Doris Duke grant for new jazz composition from Chamber Music America; In Pursuit comprises the results of that work.
For More Info Go To: www.donnymccaslin.com