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Photo of Chico Hamilton  

Foreststorn "Chico" Hamilton
Percussion, Bandleader, Composer, Educator
Born September 21, 1921 in Los Angeles, CA

Photo by Tom Pich

Information for Presenters

Available for:
Concert performance, speaker/panelist, guest conductor, public interviews, educator, clinic/masterclass, artist-in-residence.

Bands and instrumentation:
Solo; Quartet (Euphoria) w/sax, guitar, bass.

Speaking topics:
Solo drums; cinema.

Ensembles comfortable performing with or conducting as a visiting artist:
Student ensembles (high school and college jazz bands). Will also work with cinema.

Available as a soloist or to work with a local resident band or rhythm section?
No.

Availability:
Flexible.

Contact information:
Jeffrey Caddick
Joyous Shout Management
P.O. Box 15244
Evansville, IN 47715
Ph: 800/611-9084 cell: 210/929-6263
Email: joyshout@evansville.net
Web: www.joyousshout.com

Biography

Chico Hamilton is almost as well known for his band leadership and ability to discover talented newcomers as for his subtle, creative drumming. As a teenager growing up in Los Angeles, Hamilton started playing regularly for the first time with a band that included classmates Charles Mingus, Dexter Gordon, and Illinois Jacquet. He made his recording debut with Slim Gaillard, and studied drumming with jazz great Jo Jones during his military service from 1942-46.

After working briefly with Jimmy Mundy, Count Basie, and Lester Young, Hamilton joined Lena Horne's band in 1948, staying with her on and off for six years, including a tour of Europe. During this time, he also became an original member of the legendary Gerry Mulligan Quartet, which included Mulligan, Chet Baker, and Bob Whitlock. Successfully recording with them for three years (1952-55) on the Pacific Jazz label, Hamilton got his first shot as bandleader.

In 1955, he formed the Chico Hamilton Quintet, utilizing an unusual combination of instruments: cello, flute, guitar, bass, and drums. One of the important West Coast bands, the Hamilton group made their film debut in the movie The Sweet Smell of Success, as well as highlighting Jazz on a Summer's Day, the film about the 1958 Newport Jazz Festival. His second great band started in 1962 with Albert Stinson on bass, Gabor Szabo on guitar, and Charles Lloyd on tenor sax and flute, and George Bohanon on trombone, bringing a fresh, new sound to jazz once again. Over the years, Hamilton's bands have had various personnel, but the quality of the musicianship has remained high. Some of the players who Hamilton nurtured in his bands include Jim Hall, Charles Lloyd, Eric Dolphy, Ron Carter, Gabor Szabo, Arthur Blythe, Larry Coryell, and John Abercrombie.

During the 1960s, Hamilton formed a company to score feature films and commercials for television and radio. In 1987, Hamilton was on the originating faculty at Parsons New School of Jazz in New York. During the same year, he formed a new quartet called Euphoria, and began touring in Europe. The quartet met with great popularity, and in 1992, their album Arroyo placed in the Jazz Album of the Year category in the Down Beat Reader's Poll. In 1995, a documentary of Hamilton's extraordinary life and career, Dancing to a Different Drummer, directed by Julian Benedikt, was presented twice on the French-German Arts Network, ARTE. In June 1999, Hamilton received a Beacons of Jazz award from the Mannes College of Music at the New School University in New York City, where he is presently teaching. He is working on his autobiography and will be releasing four new albums in 2006 in celebration of his 85th birthday.

Mr. Hamilton was named an NEA Jazz master in 2004.

Selected Discography
Complete Pacific Jazz Recordings of the Chico Hamilton Quintet, Mosaic, 1955-59
Man From Two Worlds, Impulse!, 1962
Dancing to a Different Drummer, Soul Note, 1993
Foreststorn, Koch, 2000-01
Thoughts of…, Koch, 2002

Biography from NEA Jazz Masters (NEA, 2006). Copies can be ordered free of charge through our Publications section.