Jim Knapp Explained

Jim Knapp
Birth Name:James Donald Knapp, Jr.
Birth Date:July 28, 1939
Birth Place:Chicago, Illinois, U.S.
Death Date:November 13, 2021
Death Place:Kirkland, Washington, U.S.
Occupation:Musician
Instrument:Trumpet
Years Active:1962 - 2021

James Donald Knapp, Jr. (July 28, 1939 - November 13, 2021) was an American jazz trumpeter, composer, and educator. He taught at Cornish College of the Arts in Seattle for 45 years.

Biography

Jim Knapp was born on July 28, 1939, in Chicago, Illinois, U.S. He studied piano at age six and took up trumpet at age twelve. He studied music composition at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign with Kenneth Gaburo and received a Bachelor of Music from the University of Illinois in 1962.[1] Drafted into the US Army, he was stationed in Stuttgart, Germany from 1962 to 1964. He returned to the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, studied composition with Salvatore Martirano and composed for the college jazz band led by violist John Garvey. In 1968, Knapp's rotary-valve flugelhorn solos and composition "Medley" were noted at the Collegiate Jazz Festival (CJF).[2] In 1969, Knapp was awarded "Best Composer" by the CJF.[3] He completed his Master of Music in Composition in 1969.

Knapp married dancer Joan Skinner in 1969. Skinner created the Skinner Releasing Technique.

Knapp began teaching at Cornish College of the Arts in Seattle, Washington in 1971, replacing Floyd Standifer who left to teach at Olympic College.[4] Knapp joined Joe Field's chamber jazz ensemble Matrix. In 1977, when Joe Field left Seattle, Knapp renamed the group the Composers and Improvisors Orchestra (CIO) and made it the Cornish group-in-residence for eight years. Guest artists included Gil Evans, Carla Bley, Sam Rivers, and Anthony Braxton.[5] Cornish gained full accreditation in 1977 and Knapp assembled a jazz faculty that included bassist Gary Peacock, vocalist Jay Clayton, drummer Jerry Granelli, saxophonist Denney Goodhew, and trombonist Julian Priester.[6] Knapp retired from Cornish in 2016.

Knapp performed "Atlas Eclipticalis" and "Winter Music" with composer John Cage in 1983.[7]

Knapp won a Fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts to compose for the CIO in 1984.[8]

Knapp recorded free improvisations on an ECM record titled First Avenue.[9]

Selected discography

With Jim Knapp Orchestra

With Scrape

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Lidral . Karel . Four Pieces by James Knapp for Jazz Ensemble: Stylistic Analysis and Performance Guides . 1986 . Doctoral Thesis . Urbana, IL . 14.
  2. Book: Carey . Joseph . Big Noise from Notre Dame . 1986 . University of Notre Dame Press . Notre Dame, Indiana . 0-268-00677-6 . 70, 72.
  3. Book: Carey . Joseph . Big Noise from Notre Dame . 1986 . University of Notre Dame Press . Notre Dame, Indiana . 0-268-00677-6 . 87.
  4. Book: Armbruster . Kurt . Before Seattle Rocked: A City and its Music . 2011 . University of Washington Press . Seattle, Washington . 978-0-295-99113-9 . 295.
  5. Book: Armbruster . Kurt . Before Seattle Rocked: A City and its Music . 2011 . University of Washington Press . Seattle, Washington . 978-0-295-99113-9 . 297.
  6. Book: Darroch . Lynn . Rhythm in the Rain: Jazz in the Pacific Northwest . 2016 . Ooligan Press . Portland, Oregon . 9781932010817 . 85.
  7. News: Bargreen . Melinda . Cage pushes musical frontier too far . The Seattle Times . 12 December 1983 . 31.
  8. News: de Barros . Paul . Curtain Falls on a Unique Jazz Orchestra . 17 December 2021 . The Seattle Times . 3 April 1986 . G1.
  9. Book: de Barros . Paul . Jackson Street After Hours: The Roots of Jazz in Seattle . 1993 . Sasquatch Books . Seattle, Washington . 0-912365-86-2 . 204.