“Music and life do not separate” says saxophone virtuoso James
Carter, “my elders have taught me that music is a culture and a way
of life.” Detroit native Carter shared his childhood home with
five musically inclined siblings in “a house filled with all manner
of sounds, from The Beatles to Funk and Hendrix.” The Jazz
influence came from Carter’s mother who “brought the voices of
greats like Billie Holiday and Ella Fitzgerald into my life.”It was
his mother who in 1980 took young Carter to see the Count Basie
Orchestra at the Detroit Music Hall, where the big-band sound made a
lasting impression, but it was a World Saxophone Quartet concert two
years later that would set music as a path for life. “To watch four
saxophonists individually and collectively, literally shred the
stage” recalls Carter, “it sparked a furnace inside of me that
won’t quit to this day.” At the tender age of seventeen the young
prodigy shared a stage with the great Wynton Marsalis and at 23,
released his landmark debut album JC On the Set, hailed by many as the
arrival of a new Jazz master. Over the decades that followed, Carter
has cemented his reputation as one of this generation’s most
charismatic and versatile soloists, boasting collaborations with
Lester Bowie, Julius Hemphill, Dee Dee Bridgewater, Kathleen Battle,
Frank Lowe & Saxemble, the World Saxophone Quartet and Wynton
Marsalis among other Jazz greats. 2019 sees Carter release his
eighteenth original recording, marking the Jazz master’s debut as a
band leader for Blue Note records. Captured live at the 2018 Newport
Jazzfestival, the celebrated James Carter Organ Trio: Live From
Newport Jazz, pays homage to the legendary Django Reinhardt and is a
return of sorts to the 2000 Chasin’ the Gypsy album where Carter
first paid tribute to the swing-guitar icon for whom he carries great
affection. Honing his craft to a jaw-dropping technical level, Carter
is the master of a family of saxophones, flute and clarinet. His is a
powerhouse virtuosity likened by composer Roberto Sierra to the great
Paganini. It was in fact this astounding instrumental flexibility,
coupled with an eclectic body of recordings that inspired the Spanish
maestro to write the celebrated Concerto for Saxophones and Orchestra
for the 31-year-old. Written expressly for Carter and mixing Jazz,
Latin and classical elements, the work showcases the
multi-instrumentalist’s outstanding technical virtuosity whilst
allowing him “the freedom to improvise.” The four-movement piece
sees Carter take center stage throughout, executing swift instrument
transitions between Tenor and Soprano and employing a full gamut of
musical expression, from furiously-fast Coltrane like tempo to a quiet
ballad. The concerto premiered in 2002 with Neeme Järvi conducting
the Detroit Symphony to three sold out performances, followed by four
additional sold-out shows a year later. Carter went on to perform the
concerto to captivated audiences worldwide earning critical praise and
meriting standing ovations. Notable performances include the 2016
Leipzig MDR, Berlin Rundfunk the same year with Kristjan Järvi
conducting, and 2019 when he collaborated with the Boston Symphony
Orchestra, Thomas Wilkins conducting. The concerto’s unfading charm
was to have carried Carter into 2020 and the Tanglewood Music Festival
for a performance of Sierra’s piece with the iconic Boston Symphony,
conducted by Ken David-Masur; however, COVID necessitated a
rescheduling TBA shortly. Early 2023 brought Carter to the NYC Blue
Note as special guest with DJ Logic and with Galactic. His capacious
ability to cross boundaries, mesh genres, and deliver it all with mind
boggling energy, clarity and that “special something” that brings
audiences to their feet clamoring for more. It could be genius, but
those in the know, call it James Carter! "Make no mistake:
Carter…who has emerged as one of the brightest stars in jazzdom, was
the man. His performance was nothing short of a virtuoso clinic, a
toe-tapping, heart-stopping, smile making romp."Lawrence B. Johnson,
DETROIT NEWS"This is James Carter in the present tense, at the full
height of his jaw-dropping powers, swooping through a new concerto he
premiered in October with the Detroit Symphony."DETROIT NEWS
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10/07/2025 Last update