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Life
began for Kamasi
Washington on February
18, 1981 in Los Angeles,
California. In the
Washington family music
was more of a
prerequisite then a
privilege. But Kamasi
never saw it that way,
his love for music began
at first sound. His
father, Rickey
Washington is a
professional saxophonist
by night and a high
school music teacher by
day. Kamasi’s mother,
Valerie Washington is an
accomplished flutist who
fell in love with the
world of science and
became a high school
chemistry teacher after
her stint as a genetic
researcher. By the age
of two Kamasi had
already began to play
the drums and piano, the
only thing that kept him
away from the wind
instruments at that
early age was his lack
of dental development.
He began his exploration
into the world of the
reeds and brass when he
was about seven and his
father gave him a
clarinet. By the age of
twelve Kamasi had found
his voice in the form of
a tenor saxophone, in
fact it was the same
saxophone that his
father played in high
school.
Over
the next year Kamasi’s
development and devotion
to music had out grown
his academic
environment. So he
transferred from The Los
Angeles Center of
Enriched Studies (one
the top academic high
schools in the nation)
and enrolled into the
Hamilton High School
Music Academy. It was
around this time that
Kamasi also joined The
Multi School Jazz Band (M.S.J.B.),
an assembly of the
finest young jazz
musicians in Los Angeles
County and led by
Reginald Andrews the
same man that taught
Kamasi’s father in high
school. Because of the
sheer vastness of talent
that he was surrounded
by it was in The Multi
School Jazz Band that
Kamasi was most inspired
during his high school
years. Through M.S.J.B.
Kamasi was also able to
meet, learn, and create
relationships with many
of his musical idols
such as Wayne Shorter,
Herbie Hancock, Horse
Tapscot, Gerald Wilson,
and many others. In
Kamasi’s senior year of
high school he had the
opportunity to compete
in the John Coltrane
Saxophone competition,
in which he received the
first place award. As an
additional benefit to
winning the competition
the band of M.S.J.B.
members that he
assembled to accompany
him had such an
immediate connection
that they decided to
stay together and form a
group that soon after
would be known as “The
Young Jazz Giants”.
This fiery group of
“Young Giants” wasted no
time in spreading their
musical wings and flying
all over the Los Angeles
jazz scene spreading the
good news that jazz was
still alive and in very
good hands. It was
during this time that
Kamasi became interested
in composition and he
started writing his own
music. Over the next
year “The Young Jazz
Giants” had really began
to develop their own
sound and were creating
a lot of excitement in
their community. After
graduating from high
school Kamasi began his
studies at U.C.L.A. were
the facility included
some of the finest
musicians in the history
of Jazz, such as Kenny
Burrell, Billy Higgins,
Harold Land, Lew
Mathews, Garnett Brown,
Jeff Clayton, Gerald
Wilson, and many others.
By the end of his first
year at U.C.L.A. Kamasi
began performing with
many of his professors.
In fact he joined Gerald
Wilson’s big band and
later became the only
member of his regular
Los Angeles band to be
invited to play on his
latest album “In My
Time” which was recorded
in New York. During the
summer after Kamasi’s
first year at U.C.L.A.
the head of a new record
label called “Bird Man
Records” heard him
playing with “The Young
Jazz Giants” and became
very interested in
making an album with the
group. So Kamasi
recorded his first album
it was called The Young
Jazz Giants. The
completion of the album
seemed like the “big
break” for “The Young
Jazz Giants” but
unforeseen delays in the
products release ended
in the album being
released almost two
years after it’s
completion. Ironically
the talent level of the
group was far too high
for any of the members
of the band to stay
“ready and waiting” for
too long, thus “The
Young Jazz Giants”
unofficially disbanded.
Kamasi began to take
interest and became
influenced by many other
forms of music, from
European Classical to
Hip Hop. This really
opened his mind to the
fact that all of the
different forms that
music takes are equally
relevant. From this
Kamasi ended up playing
with many of the most
legendary musicians of
the current variety such
as Snoop Dog, Raphael
Saadiq, and many others.
Yet during this time
Kamasi despite his
newfound respect for all
of the forms of music
realized that Jazz was
still the music that was
closest to his heart. So
he started a new band
that would be able to
play the new music that
he is creating. The new
group is called “The
Next Step” and that’s
precisely what Kamasi
intends on taking.
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