J. D. Allen Explained

J. D. Allen
Birth Date:1972 12, mf=yes
Birth Place:Detroit, Michigan
Genre:Jazz
Instrument:Tenor saxophone
Years Active:1996–present
Label:Criss Cross, Sunnyside, Savant

J. D. Allen III (born John Daniel Allen III, December 11, 1972)[1] is an American jazz tenor saxophonist and composer.

Career

After moving to New York City, Allen played with George Cables, Betty Carter, Ron Carter, Jack DeJohnette, Frank Foster, Butch Morris, David Murray, and Wallace Roney. Closer to his generation, he has played with Lucian Ban, Cindy Blackman, Gerald Cleaver, Dave Douglas, Orrin Evans, Duane Eubanks, Marcus Gilmore, Russell Gunn, Winard Harper, Elisabeth Kontomanou, Meshell Ndegeocello, Jeremy Pelt, Eric Revis.[2]

Allen's first solo album, In Search Of (Criss Cross, 1999), led to his selection as Best New Artist in Italy. In 2002, his second album was chosen a top ten album of the year by Jazziz magazine. Ten years later he was named best composer and best tenor saxophonist in the Critics' Poll at DownBeat magazine. A critic at NPR picked his album Victory (Sunnyside, 2011) for the number three spot in the top twenty albums of 2011.[3] Allen also works under the pseudonym "Bigger Thomas" and "Cross Damon."

Discography

As leader

As co-leader

As sideman

With Cindy Blackman

With Orrin Evans

With Winard Harper

With Lisa Hilton

With Fabio Morgera

With Jeremy Pelt

With Tarbaby

With others

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Current Biography Yearbook 2010. 2010. H.W. Wilson. Ipswich, Massachusetts . 9780824211134. 5–8. Allen, J.D..
  2. Web site: Nastos. Michael G.. J.D. Allen. AllMusic. 12 February 2018.
  3. Web site: Jarenwattananon. Patrick. The Best Jazz of 2011. NPR.org. 12 February 2018. en. 9 December 2011.
  4. Web site: Welcome to the Jazz Depot . www.jazzdepot.com.