Tenor Saxophonist Michael Pedicin
To Release
"As It Should Be: Ballads 2,"
On His GroundBlue Imprint, April 21
To Release
"As It Should Be: Ballads 2,"
On His GroundBlue Imprint, April 21
Includes 8 Ballads by His Longtime Collaborator,
The Guitarist Johnnie Valentino
Michael Pedicin will celebrate the release of As It Should Be: Ballads 2 at the following engagements: 4/16 Smalls, NYC; 4/22 Exit Zero Jazz Festival, Cape May, NJ (for which Pedicin is Artist in Residence); 5/12 Trumpets, Montclair, NJ; and 5/13 Chris' Jazz Café, Philadelphia. Personnel is the same as on the new CD, minus Alex Acuña and with drummer Anwar Marshall subbing for Justin Faulkner.
Media Contact:
The Guitarist Johnnie Valentino
CD Release Shows Scheduled for
4/16 Smalls, NYC;
4/22 Exit Zero Jazz Festival, Cape May, NJ;
5/12 Trumpets, Montclair, NJ;
5/13 Chris' Jazz Cafe, Philadelphia
4/16 Smalls, NYC;
4/22 Exit Zero Jazz Festival, Cape May, NJ;
5/12 Trumpets, Montclair, NJ;
5/13 Chris' Jazz Cafe, Philadelphia
March 20, 2017
With the April 21 release of As It Should Be: Ballads 2, tenor and soprano saxophonist Michael Pedicin continues to spread the message of acceptance and justice he eloquently shared on his critically acclaimed 2011 album Ballads ... searching for peace.
"I'm one of those diehard '60s kids that grew up concerned about peace
and togetherness," Pedicin explains. "I think about that every day of my
life. We're all one."
In addition to covers of John Coltrane's "Crescent" and Paul Simon's "Bridge Over Troubled Water," the album, his 14th as a leader, features eight ballads by longtime collaborator guitarist Johnnie Valentino. Pedicin and Valentino are joined on the recording by Frank Strauss on keyboards, bassist Mike Boone, drummer Justin Faulkner (of Branford Marsalis's band), and percussionist Alex Acuña. With the exception of Acuña, all are either from, still live in, or have roots in Philadelphia.
Ballads showcasing the
exquisitely lyrical aspects of Pedicin's playing are the focus of the
album, but several songs were treated to somewhat brighter grooves than
had been originally intended after the musicians got to the recording
studio, particularly "From Afar," which was double-timed at a bossa-nova-like clip by Faulkner and Acuña.
L.
to r.: Mike Boone, bass; Frank Strauss, piano; Michael Pedicin, tenor
and soprano saxophones; Vic Stevens, engineer; Johnnie Valentino,
guitar; Justin Faulkner, drums.
A second-generation saxophonist, Michael Pedicin is the son of alto saxophonist and singer Mike Pedicin,
a hugely popular entertainer and bandleader in the Philadelphia area
for more than six decades until his retirement at age 80. When the
younger Pedicin was 13, his father took him to the Harlem Club in
Atlantic City to hear and meet the bluesy jazz saxophonist Willis "Gator
Tail" Jackson, who became his hero on the horn. Then he heard records
by John Coltrane and Cannonball Adderley, and he knew what he wanted to
do for the rest of his life: play the saxophone.
Pedicin studied theory with guitarist Dennis Sandole and saxophone with Philadelphia Orchestra clarinetist Mike Guerra, both of whom had once taught Coltrane, as well as with onetime Woody Herman saxophonist Buddy Savitt.
While attending Philadelphia's University of the Arts (UArts), where he
majored in composition, he began competing at -- and winning --
collegiate jazz festivals around the country.
Switching from alto to tenor as his main instrument at age
20, Pedicin supported himself throughout the 1970s as a member of the
horn section at Philadelphia's Sigma Sound Studios. Working for
producers Kenny Gamble, Leon Huff, and Thom Bell, he played on countless
sessions by the likes of the Spinners, O'Jays, and Lou Rawls even as he
continued to tour with Maynard Ferguson, the O'Jays, Rawls, Stevie
Wonder, and David Bowie. Michael Pedicin Jr., his first album, was released in 1980 on Gamble & Huff's Philadelphia International label.
From 1976 to 1981 Pedicin taught at UArts, and during much of
the '80s, he juggled teaching duties at Philadelphia's Temple
University and two years of touring with Dave Brubeck. Besides leading his own quintet, he toured from 2003 to 2006 with Pat Martino and in early 2011 with the Dave Brubeck Quartet with Darius Brubeck filling in for his ailing father.
Pedicin also continued his non-musical education, earning a
Ph.D in Psychology from the Philadelphia College of Osteopathic
Medicine/International University for Graduate Studies in 2002. The
shingle above his office in Linwood, NJ, reads "Dr. Michael Pedicino"
as he recently changed his last name back to the one taken away from
his grandfather in 1906 when he arrived at Ellis Island from Foggia,
Italy. While Pedicin has no plans to change his name in the world of
music, he is in the process of obtaining dual American-Italian
citizenship.
The new album is just the latest chapter in this master
musician's ongoing quest to help make Philadelphia's sobriquet as the
City of Brotherly Love a reality for human beings of all races,
ethnicities, and nationalities through sweet melodies and gentle
improvisations. "My goal with this CD," Pedicin explains, "was to create
some pretty and accessible jazz in ballad form. This is not about
revolutionizing the art form we so love, but providing a soft and
relaxing platform on which to enjoy it."
Media Contact: