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Kahil El'Zabar
Kahil El'Zabar
American musician
1
Roscoe Mitchell
Roscoe Mitchell
American jazz musician
2
Muhal Richard Abrams
Muhal Richard Abrams
American musician
3
Kalaparusha Maurice McIntyre
Kalaparusha Maurice McIntyre
American saxophonist
4
Malachi Favors
Malachi Favors
American bassist
5
Reggie Nicholson
Reggie Nicholson
American musician
6
Joseph Jarman
Joseph Jarman
American jazz musician
7
George Lewis
George Lewis
composer, electronic performer, installation artist, trombone player, and scholar
8
Phil Cohran
Phil Cohran
American trumpeter
9
Lester Bowie
Lester Bowie
American jazz trumpet player and composer (1941-1999)
10
Thurman Barker
Thurman Barker
American jazz drummer
11
Ernest Dawkins
Ernest Dawkins
jazz musician
12
Henry Threadgill
Henry Threadgill
American jazz musician
13
Hamid Drake
Hamid Drake
American musician
14
Tomeka Reid
Tomeka Reid
American jazz musician
15
Dana Hall
Dana Hall
Jazz drummer
16
Douglas Ewart
Douglas Ewart
American musician
17
Alvin Fielder
Alvin Fielder
American drummer
18
Malachi Thompson
Malachi Thompson
American musician
19
Donald Garrett
Donald Garrett
American musician and clarinetist
20
Nicole Mitchell
Nicole Mitchell
American jazz flutist
21
Marty Ehrlich
Marty Ehrlich
American musician
22
Don Moye
Don Moye
American percussionist
23
Mwata Bowden
Mwata Bowden
American musician
24
Phillip Wilson
Phillip Wilson
American drummer (1941-1992)
25
Jodie Christian
Jodie Christian
Jazz pianist
26
Amina Claudine Myers
Amina Claudine Myers
American musician
27
Jaribu Shahid
Jaribu Shahid
American jazz bassist
28
Baikida Carroll
Baikida Carroll
American musician
29
Iqua Colson
Iqua Colson
vocalist, composer, lyricist, arts administrator, and educator from the United States
30
Robert Irving III
Robert Irving III
American pianist and composer
31
Mercer Ellington
Mercer Ellington
American musician
32
Anthony Brown
Anthony Brown
jazz musician
33
Anthony Braxton
Anthony Braxton
American musician, composer, and philosopher
34
Mike Reed
Mike Reed
musical artist
35
Tani Tabbal
Tani Tabbal
American jazz drummer
36
Dave Pell
Dave Pell
American musician
37
Warren Smith
Warren Smith
American musician
38
Craig S. Harris
Craig S. Harris
American musician
39
Joseph Bowie
Joseph Bowie
American musician
40
Art Ensemble of Chicago
Art Ensemble of Chicago
American avant-garde group
41
Stanton Davis
Stanton Davis
American musician
42
Leroy Jenkins
Leroy Jenkins
composer and Avant-garde Jazz violinist and violist
43
Hamiet Bluiett
Hamiet Bluiett
American jazz saxophonist, clarinetist, and composer
44
Steve McCall
Steve McCall
American jazz drummer
45
Charles Mingus
Charles Mingus
American jazz double bassist, composer and bandleader
46
Gerald Wilson
Gerald Wilson
American trumpetist (1918-2014)
47
Ray Barretto
Ray Barretto
Puerto Rican jazz musician
48
Brainstorm
Brainstorm
American funk and R&B band
49
Mark Helias
Mark Helias
American musician
50
Clark Terry
Clark Terry
American swing and bebop musician
51
King Kolax
King Kolax
American musician
52
Andrew Lamb
Andrew Lamb
American musician
53
Julian Priester
Julian Priester
American jazz trombonist
54
Flying Bulgar Klezmer Band
Flying Bulgar Klezmer Band
55
Duke Ellington
Duke Ellington
American jazz musician, composer and band leader
56
Dave Douglas
Dave Douglas
American jazz trumpeter
Edward Wilkerson
American bandleader

Edward Wilkerson

Intro
American bandleader
Genres
Record Labels
Music

Edward L. Wilkerson Jr. (born July 27, 1953 in Terre Haute, Indiana) is an internationally recognized American jazz composer, arranger, musician, and educator based in Chicago. As founder and director of the cutting-edge octet 8 Bold Souls, and the 25-member performance ensemble Shadow Vignettes, Wilkerson has toured festivals and concert halls throughout the United States, Europe, Japan, and the Middle East. "Defender", a large-scale piece for Shadow Vignettes, was commissioned by the Lila Wallace/Reader's Digest Fund and featured in the 10th Anniversary of New Music America, a presentation of BAM's Next Wave Festival.

His music can be heard on 14 recordings, including two film soundtracks and the critically acclaimed albums Birth of a Notion, and 8 Bold Souls, both on his own Sessoms Records label.

One of the great saxophone and clarinet players on the Chicago scene, Wilkerson from the 1980s into the new millennium may have become best known as a bandleader and composer, particularly associated with medium- to large-scale projects (somewhat daunting in an era when creative music bandleaders are challenged to keep even small ensembles together). He has also been a major presence in Chicago's Association for the Advancement of Creative Musicians (AACM), teaching composition at the organization's music school and serving for a time as AACM president.

The AACM collective, with its spirit of community as well as unbridled creativity, has been a predominant nurturing force for Wilkerson and has informed much of his work. He was an original member of the Ethnic Heritage Ensemble (formed by percussionist Kahil El'Zabar upon El'Zabar's 1976 graduation from the AACM school) and remained with the group until 1997, when he was replaced by Ernest "Khabeer" Dawkins. However, while appearing on such Ethnic Heritage Ensemble recordings as Three Gentlemen From Chicago (Moers), Hang Tuff (Open Minds), and Dance With the Ancestors (Chameleon), Wilkerson was also becoming more involved in leading his own projects, which characteristically saw the reedman thinking big. His most ambitious project, Shadow Vignettes, was initiated in 1979; with 25 musicians and incorporating dance, poetry, and visual arts, the ensemble's influences include the big band work of Muhal Richard Abrams, Duke Ellington, Count Basie, and Sun Ra. Shadow Vignettes released one CD, Birth of a Notion, on the Sessoms Records label in 1985. One of Shadow Vignettes' major pieces is entitled "Defender", commissioned by the Lila Wallace/Reader's Digest Fund and featured in the tenth anniversary of New Music America, presented by the Brooklyn Academy of Music's Next Wave Festival.

Wilkerson's best-documented ensemble as a leader is 8 Bold Souls, an octet initiated in January 1985 with a series of Thursday-night concerts at the Chicago Filmmakers performance space. The popularity of the concerts led Wilkerson to establish 8 Bold Souls as a working band, and since their formation, four Souls CDs have been issued: 8 Bold Souls on Sessoms Records, Sideshow and Ant Farm on Arabesque Records, and Last Option on Thrill Jockey. Influenced by the small groups of Duke Ellington and Jimmie Lunceford, 8 Bold Souls also makes plenty of room for adventurous experimentation in the AACM spirit, drawing fully on the unusual sonic possibilities of the group's instrumentation of two woodwinds, trumpet, trombone, cello, tuba, bass, and trap drums. Overall, Wilkerson's work may be heard on 14 recordings, including two film soundtracks.

In addition to his work with 8 Bold Souls, Shadow Vignettes, and the Ethnic Heritage Ensemble, Wilkerson has also played with the AACM Big Band, Roscoe Mitchell, Douglas Ewart, the Temptations, Chico Freeman, Geri Allen, the Lyric Opera of Chicago, Muhal Richard Abrams, Aretha Franklin, and George Lewis.

Wilkerson's most recent release is the ensemble performance, Frequency, on the Thrill Jockey label. Encompassing distinctive compositions, and high-quality improvisational flights plus World and Native American sonic echoes, this debut CD confirms both the talents of the band Frequency and the continued adaptability of AACM members.

Besides the AACM-link, each participant in this Chicago-based quartet brings different sensibilities to the session. It includes reedist Ed Wilkerson and bassist Harrison Bankhead from 8 Bold Souls. Flautist Nicole Mitchell leads her own groups as well as working as an educator, while veteran percussionist Avreeayl Ra’s AACM involvement goes back almost to the cooperative’s founding.

Wilkerson has received grants from the Illinois Arts Council, the National Endowment for the Arts, Meet the Composer, and the Community Arts Assistance Program, and has been cited in numerous music polls.

In his free time, Wilkerson, past president and longtime member of the Association for the Advancement of Creative Musicians (AACM), teaches composition at the AACM School of Music.