Jazz Drummer/Composer Reggie Quinerly Releases “Music Inpsired by Freedmantown” | Coming Sept. 18th, 2012

“Music Inspired by Freedmantown,” Debut CD by Drummer/Composer Reggie Quinerly, to Be Released Sept. 18

While growing up in Houston, Texas,
jazz drummer and composer Reggie Quinerly heard talk of Freedmantown, a
largely forgotten African-American neighborhood established by newly
emancipated slaves directly following the Civil War. He later immersed
himself in research and began learning about some of the pioneers who
built houses, schools, and businesses in that neighborhood. “Music
Inspired by Freedmantown,” Quinerly’s debut recording, is in many ways
the result of that research. And with the new CD, Quinerly is giving
Houston and the world at large vibrant musical memories of a time and
place that should not be forgotten.

Richmond, CA (PRWE August 20, 2012

On his forthcoming debut CD, jazz drummer/composer Reggie Quinerly
taps a rich vein of cultural history from his native Houston to produce
an ambitious, soulful, and uniquely resonant work—“Music Inspired by
Freedmantown.”
The disc will be released September 18 by Quinerly’s
Redefinition Music label.

Although Quinerly attended grammar school in the heart of the
historic African-American district once known as Freedmantown (now the
Fourth Ward), he knew little of the significance of the area. But a
melody he composed while in his second year at Juilliard opened the door
to memories of his hometown and, soon, an obsession with learning
everything he could about the neighborhood and its past.

“Over time I began to discover how this area became home to Houston’s
largest population of African-American homeowners immediately following
the Emancipation Proclamation,” says Quinerly, 31. “I learned how its
history has played a significant role in the advancement of racial and
economic equality, impacting the lives of all Texans from then on.”

The streets of Freedmantown, he says, “were becoming the backdrop for
this project. I wanted to capture the very soulful essence of
Freedmantown’s voice.”

With the exception of the standards “I’m Old Fashioned” and
“Sentimental Journey” (the latter his mother’s favorite song), all of
the songs on the CD were composed by Quinerly and most relate directly
to Freedmantown. A world-class cast of players was on hand to help the
leader breathe life into his evocative sound portraits: tenor
saxophonist Tim Warfield, pianist Gerald Clayton, guitarist Mike Moreno
(a classmate of the drummer’s at Houston’s High School for the
Performing and Visual Arts), and bassist Vicente Archer.

Also featured, on two selections, are trumpeter Antoine Drye, tenor
saxophonist Matt Parker, and trombonist Corey King, as well as vocalist
Sarah Elizabeth Charles (on “Victoria”) and pianist/organist Enoch Smith
Jr., who sings his own lyrics on the church-influenced track
“Freedmantown” (“The soul of this place / is written on every citizen’s
face”).

Reggie Quinerly started playing drums at age 8 after hearing Lester
Grant playing at the church Quinerly attended with his family. “Many
people, including myself, come to jazz through church, with the latter
helping to shape the way we hear and play the former. In my mind, he was
a jazz drummer first,” Quinerly says of Grant, with whom he studied for
a year. “Much later I discovered he had been a top session drummer in
the ’50s for many traveling blues and jazz acts, which explained why the
way he played wasn’t necessarily from the gospel tradition. It wasn’t
shoutin’ music. Sitting at his side, I developed my sensibility for
hearing the drums a little bit differently. It was definitely more
low-key.”

Quinerly subsequently studied with Sam Dinkins, who “knew how to play
all the percussion instruments—not just drums, not just the drum set,
but all of the world percussion. I was exposed to all kinds of music and
all kinds of styles. He was also the consummate professional. Being a
drummer, even a great one, was never enough. He stressed the importance
of building businesses and creating opportunities for other artists to
thrive. Those lessons have stayed with me.”

After high school, Quinerly went straight to New York City and
enrolled at the Mannes School of Music at New School University,
studying with Jimmy Cobb, Lewis Nash, and Kenny Washington. He earned
his Master’s in Jazz Studies at The Juilliard School. Since leaving
Texas, Quinerly has worked with such notable musicians as Von Freeman,
Vincent Herring, John Hicks, Joe Lovano, Branford Marsalis, Christian
McBride, Wynton Marsalis, and Greg Osby. With saxophonist Marcus
Strickland, he also played and lectured in New York City schools as part
of Lincoln Center’s Jazz in the Schools program. For the last six
years, Quinerly has played drums every Sunday at Paterson, New Jersey’s
Calvary Baptist Church (where Enoch Smith Jr. serves as musical
director).

Quinerly is looking forward to bringing “Music Inspired by
Freedmantown” to the stage. He will perform a CD release show at Smoke
in New York City on 12/5, and a very special concert is planned for
12/29 at Houston’s African American Museum at The Gregory School. “I
feel extremely privileged,” he says, “for the opportunity to present
this music at The Gregory School, a special venue that celebrates the
collective achievements of all people, past, present, and future.”

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