Scott Robinson (jazz musician)

Scott Robinson (born April 27, 1959) is an American jazz multi-instrumentalist. Robinson is best known for his work on multiple saxophones, but he has also performed on clarinet, alto clarinet, flute, trumpet, sarrusophone, and other, more obscure instruments.

Scott Robinson
Robinson at the 2013 Aarhus Jazz Festival
Background information
Born (1959-04-27) April 27, 1959
Pompton Plains, New Jersey, U.S.
GenresJazz
Occupation(s)Musician, multi-instrumentalist
InstrumentsClarinet, saxophone, trumpet, sarrusophone, ophicleide, theremin
LabelsArbors, ScienSonic
Website[www.sciensonic.net]
Robinson performing at the International Jazz Festival of Punta del Este in 2015

Music career

The son of a piano teacher and National Geographic book editor,[1] Robinson graduated from the Berklee College of Music in 1981. The next year, he joined the college's staff, becoming its youngest faculty member.[2]

Robinson has appeared on more than 275 LP and CD releases, including 20 under his leadership,[3] with musicians Frank Wess,[2] Roscoe Mitchell, Ruby Braff, Joe Lovano, Ron Carter, Paquito D'Rivera, David Bowie, Maria Schneider, Rufus Reid,[3] Buck Clayton, and the Orchestra of St. Luke's.[1] Four of these recordings won a Grammy Award.[3] He has received four fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts.[1]

In 2000, the U.S. State Department named him a jazz ambassador for the year 2001,[1] funding a tour of West Africa in which he played the early works of Louis Armstrong.[2] Material from these appearances was released on the album Jazz Ambassador: Scott Robinson Plays the Compositions of Louis Armstrong by Arbors Records.

Throughout his career, Robinson has worked to keep unusual and obscure instruments in the public view. For example, he has recorded an album featuring the C-melody saxophone and performs with the ophicleide. He also owns and records with a vintage contrabass saxophone so rare that fewer than twenty in playable condition are known to exist.[3]

Since 2009, he has operated his record label, ScienSonic Laboratories.

Select discography

As leader/co-leader

  • Multiple Instruments (Multijazz, 1984)
  • Winds of Change (Multijazz, 1990)
  • Magic Eye (Bliss, 1993)
  • Thinking Big (Arbors, 1997)
  • Melody from the Sky (Arbors, 2000)
  • Summertime (Cube Bohemia, 2004)
  • Jazz Ambassador (Arbors, 2004)
  • Forever Lasting (Arbors, 2008)
  • Live at Space Farms (ScienSonic, 2010)
  • Nucleus (ScienSonic, 2010)
  • Bronze Nemesis (Doc-tone/ScienSonic, 2012)
  • Mission In Space (ScienSonic, 2014)
  • ? (ScienSonic, 2015)
  • Heliosonic Toneways (ScienSonic, 2017)
  • Tenormore (Arbors, 2019)

As sideman or guest

With Ruby Braff

  • 1997 Ruby Braff Remembers Louis Armstrong: Being With You
  • 2002 Variety Is the Spice of Braff
  • 2010 Our Love Is Here to Stay

With John Fedchock

  • 1992 New York Big Band
  • 1998 On the Edge
  • 2002 No Nonsense

With Marty Grosz

  • 1994 Keep a Song in Your Soul
  • 1996 The Rhythm for Sale
  • 2005 Chasin' the Spots
  • 2006 Marty Grosz and His Hot Combination
  • 2009 Hot Winds: The Classic Sessions
  • 2012 The James P. Johnson Songbook

With Keith Ingham

  • 1994 The Keith Ingham New York 9, Vol. 1
  • 1994 The Keith Ingham New York 9, Vol. 2
  • 1998 A Mellow Bit of Rhythm
  • 1999 A Star Dust Melody
  • 2001 Keith Ingham New York 9, Vol. 3

With Frank Kimbrough

With Frank Mantooth

  • 1989 Suite Tooth
  • 1993 Dangerous Precedent
  • 1999 Miracle

With Bob Mintzer

  • 1990 The Art of the Big Band
  • 2000 Homage to Count Basie
  • 2006 Old School New Lessons

With John Pizzarelli

  • 1991 All of Me
  • 1993 Naturally
  • 1994 New Standards
  • 1997 Our Love Is Here to Stay

With the Joe Roccisano Orchestra

With Randy Sandke

  • 1990 Stampede
  • 1993 The Bix Beiderbecke Era
  • 1994 Chase
  • 1995 Calling All Cats
  • 2000 Re-Discovered Louis & Bix
  • 2002 Randy Sandke Meets Bix Beiderbecke
  • 2002 Inside Out
  • 2005 Outside In

With Maria Schneider

With John Sheridan

  • 2005 Easy as It Gets
  • 2007 Swing Is Still the King
  • 2010 Hooray for Christmas!

With others

References

  1. Torreano, Bradley. "Scott Robinson". AllMusic. Retrieved 11 December 2018.
  2. Levine, Bill. "Our Critics Picks Archived 2005-12-29 at the Wayback Machine", the Nashville Scene, published October 6, 2005. Retrieved February 26, 2007.
  3. Small, Mark. "Scott Robinson '81: Unusual Voices, Berklee Today. Retrieved February 26, 2007.
  4. "Scott Robinson | Credits | AllMusic". AllMusic. Retrieved 31 December 2016.
  • [www.sciensonic.net]
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