EDUTAIN: The James
Carter Discography
My Main Purpose is to "EDUTAIN"A Combination Of Educating and Entertaining The Listener
I hope I can be a healing force in the world, on and off stage. There's an education to be had from this music, this heritage; as my teacher says, 'keep your eyes on the prize, study the music.' ...I'm paying homage to where I come from. Music as a whole gives a person a third eye, like a sixth sense... I make music the center of my everyday life."
Short Biography
Born in Detroit, Michigan, in 1969, James Carter began playing saxophone
at age 11, first recorded with a Detroit student ensemble in 1986 and, by
1991, had recorded with legendary trumpeter Lester Bowie on The Organizer
and contributed to the 1991 collection The Tough Young Tenors. Mastering a
family of reed instruments, from sopranino to contrabass saxophones to
contrabass and bass clarinets, James Carter mesmerized the jazz world after
arriving in New York City in 1988 to play under the auspices of Lester
Bowie.
His debut recording, JC On The Set, released in Japan when Carter was a mere
23 years old, heralded the arrival of a significant and powerful new musical
force in jazz. Recorded at the same session as his debut, Carter's next
release, Jurassic Classics (1994), found him entering the Top Jazz Albums
chart for the first time. It was a feat to be echoed with four of Carter's
subsequent releases: The Real Quiet Storm (1995), Conversin' With The Elders
(1996), In Carterian Fashion (1998), and Chasin' The Gypsy (2000).
Gardenias For Lady Day is the first James Carter collection since the
simultaneous release, in June 2000, of Layin' In The Cut, an electric
jazz/funk collective jam session, and Chasin' The Gypsy, an homage to Django
Reinhardt. In a review of those two albums, Rolling Stone (August 3, 2000)
asserted that "....saxophonist James Carter is as near as jazz gets nowadays
to a Young Turk -- not some ironically avant-post-rock experimentalist but a
cocky scene stealer with...a knack for coming up with noticeable records."
Carter has performed, either live or in the studio, with the Lincoln Center
Jazz Orchestra, the late Julius Hemphill, Ronald Shannon Jackson, the
Charles Mingus Big Band, soprano Kathleen Battle, Aretha Franklin, David
Murray, the Art Ensemble of Chicago, Ginger Baker, Sonny Rollins, and many
others. He appeared in the 1994 PBS telecast of "Live At Lincoln Center" and
portrayed saxophonist Ben Webster in Robert Altman's 1996 film, "Kansas
City."
James Carter recently topped Downbeat's annual Critics Poll in the Baritone
Saxophone category for the third year in a row.



