Peter Landgren, Dean of the University of Cincinnati College-Conservatory of Music (CCM), has announced the appointment of saxophonist and composer Craig Bailey to the faculty of CCM's Department of Jazz Studies.
Bailey joins CCM as Assistant Professor of Music in Jazz Saxophone beginning in August of 2014. Alongside his teaching responsibilities, Bailey will serve as music director and conductor of CCM's acclaimed Jazz Lab Band.
Bailey's interest in music began at the age of 8 when he learned how to play the recorder with a small group of classmates. Following that, he became a part of the All City Boys Choir in his hometown of Cincinnati. He enrolled in the beginning band program in junior high and took up the clarinet, saxophone and flute, perfecting his skills in playing all three instruments in high school and college.
Bailey earned his undergraduate degree from the University of Miami, then headed to New York City in 1985. As a young artist in New York, he worked with drummer Charli Persip's Superband. During this time, Bailey made many musical contacts and heard some of the jazz world's finest veterans and young lions.
After he joined the world-renowned group of Panama Francis and his Savoy Sultans, Bailey learned more about traditional swing music. With Francis' group, he traveled to Europe for the first time.
After playing with the Savoy Sultans for two years, Bailey landed an audition with Ray Charles and became the music legend's lead alto saxophonist from 1988-2004. While working with Charles, Bailey also collaborated with other artists including the TanaReid Quintet, Bobby Watson's Tailor Made Big Band and the
Tom Harrell Big Band. Bailey developed his small group writing and playing style during this time, drawing upon the wealth of experiences from having played with some of the world's greatest composers and arrangers. Performing great works of music has led Bailey to his own arranging and composing.
Bailey's debut album, A New Journey, was met with critical acclaim and is referenced in The Encyclopedia of Jazz. His second release, Brooklyn, was met with a favorable review in JazzTimes magazine, with critic Ron Wynn observing, "This band has played these songs long enough to have a polish and precision, which is refreshing. The group also brings a sense of purpose to Bailey's compositions ... and his impact is sizable on Brooklyn."
Learn more about CCM's accomplished faculty by visiting
ccm.uc.edu/about/villagenews/faculty.
The University of Cincinnati College-Conservatory of Music (CCM) is recognized both nationally and internationally as one of the leading conservatories for the performing and electronic media arts, composition, scholarship and pedagogy.
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