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Hundreds of years ago "coopers" were the
craftsmen who worked with wood and metal, especially making barrels and
casks, but also musical instruments which they learned to play so that
over time they also became the town minstrels. Jessie Allen Cooper
shares more than just his name with his ancestors. Not only does he
enjoy woodworking, he is a popular musician who forges carefully-crafted
instrumental music on his sixth album, SOUND TRAVELS.
Cooper demonstrates his versatility by
performing on saxophone, harmonica and keyboards. His wide-ranging and
eclectic musical interests are displayed on SOUND TRAVELS, which
primarily falls into the realm of smooth jazz; but on various tracks it
also features soaring new age, world-beat percussion, techno-dance
rhythms, and funky blues-rock. The album is available in stores
nationwide and online at sites such as amazon.com and his own
www.CooperSoundWaves.com.
For his music, Jessie is the composer,
arranger, engineer and producer, but he also brings in some of the best
players in the industry to compliment his sound. On SOUND TRAVELS the
special guests include percussionist Steve Reid(Miles Davis, The
Rippingtons, Supertramp), guitarists Jack Majdecki (Glenn Yarbrough,
Tony Morales) and Ira Ingber (Bob Dylan, Bonnie Raitt, The Eagles),
keyboardist Steve Katz (Jon Anderson), and bassist Vail Johnson (Stevie
Nicks, Kenny G, Warren Hill) among others.
The
album includes several melodic smooth jazz tunes ("Full Moon," "Song For
You,"" Ballad for an Artist" and "Missing You") featuring interplay
between Cooper's soprano saxophone and Jim Hale's muted trumpet. "Ever
since I heard Miles Davis records in the late Sixties and early
Seventies using muted trumpet and saxophone I wanted to explore that
sound," Jessie says. SOUND TRAVELS also spotlights several gentle
compositions that could fit into the pop/new age genre ("Walk In The
Park" " Waltz for an Artist,"and "Tranquility"). A fast-paced
techno-beat propels "Dance On" while the sound turns to funky blues-rock
on "Groovin Out Back," both featuring Jessie on harmonica. Many of the
songs are textured with world-beat percussion sounds (especially congas
and dumbek) -- the African-sounding "Rain Dance," the Middle
Eastern-influenced "Awakening," and the highly-rhythmic "Heavens Dance."
The front and back covers of SOUND TRAVELS
reflect this diversity with photos from many countries superimposed to
reflect the music's global influences. The album title has several
meanings, and references how the music takes the listener on a journey
to many different places.
Although
Jessie grew up playing rock'n'roll, blues and R&B, his first album,
HEAVEN SENT, was meditative and new age (and features kalimba player
Buddy Kithara). It was recorded as live improvisation in a long hallway
with a very high ceiling for natural echo (inspired by playing harmonica
in empty boxcars and tunnels as a youngster). Cooper's second album, the
strong-selling SOFT WAVE, was a popular blend of smooth jazz and new age
music on the Narada label and the disc received heavy airplay
nationwide. The recording featured musicians such as keyboardists Rick
Krizman (Deborah Holland, and TV themes for Inside Edition and American
Journal), Mark Cohen (author of The Mythical Journey of Rathoshemzi) and
Rusty Hamilton (The Jacksons, Barry White, Kool & The Gang); and
percussionist Arno Lucas (Al Jarreau, Rickie Lee Jones, Randy Newman).
Cooper made his most complete smooth jazz
album with MOMENT IN TIME. Jessie surrounded himself with a team of top
players (and recording artists in their own right) including Steve Reid,
Russ Freeman (The Rippingtons, Kenny G), Ricardo Silveira (Gilberto Gil,
Herbie Mann), Rob Mullins (Branford Marsalis, Kirk Whalum), Steve Bailey
(The Rippingtons, David Benoit), Larry Washington (Elton John, The
Jacksons), Mike Smith (Bobby Lyle), Osamu Kitajima (Ottmar Liebert, Dan
Siegel), Mike Thompson (The Eagles, Alanis Morissette, Rod Stewart),
Mark Portmann (The Rippingtons, Celine Dion, Dave Koz) and others.
In
2000, Cooper completed SOUND OF FEELINGS, an ambitious five-CD set (plus
a sampler) of varied instrumental music that captures distinctly
different emotions (anger, love, depression, happiness, etc.). The music
was created specifically to go with the book "Living With Feeling" by
best-selling author Lucia Capacchione ("Visioning," "Power of the Other
Hand"), who uses the music extensively in her classes and seminars.
Shortly after completing that project,
Jessie got the opportunity to again explore wide-ranging emotions with
his music. The day after he began a new album, the terrorism tragedy of
Sept. 11, 2001 struck the nation. As he watched it unfold on TV along
with the grim aftermath, he found himself recording music that reflected
the horrific event and the feelings of the country. Recorded in the four
days immediately after the terrorist act (and released a year later on
the first anniversary), Cooper's album 9-11-01 is a full-length
soundtrack documenting the disaster. The music has been played on
hundreds of radio stations, especially each year on that date.
Cooper's music also has been included on
multi-artist recordings including Hallmarks MUSIC TO SHUT OUT THE RUSH
HOUR and SONGS OF THE DOLPHIN, MCA/Sona Gaia's COLLECTION ONE, and
Narada's RADIOACTIVE and NUAGES SAMPLER.
Jessie's
love of music began at a young age. "I was always escaping into music.
When I was growing up, every cent I could earn I spent buying records."
At age 13, growing up in Everett, Washington, Jessie was the singer in
his first rock band. But when he was 15 he saw John Mayall play
harmonica in concert which immediately led Jessie to that instrument. "I
started studying the blues and especially the harmonica players like
Little Walter, Paul Butterfield, Magic Dick with the J. Geils Band,
Stevie Wonder and Toots Thielemans."
When Jessie was 19, the chromatic
limitations of the diatonic harmonica compelled him to embrace the
saxophone. He deepened his studies of jazz improvisation and composition
at Western Washington State University (where he minored in art). From
his late teens on, he was in a succession of bands playing different
styles of music -- Mosehops (hard blues-rock), Rainbow Blues Band
(strictly the blues), Déjà vu (funk and R&B) and Aurora (pop-rock).
Aurora toured extensively throughout the Pacific Northwest and Canada.
When that group broke up, Cooper moved to Los Angeles where he got gigs
playing with The Coasters and Charles Wright before beginning to record
his own music. Cooper also maintained his love of working with wood by
opening a museum-quality, archival, picture framing company (which he
still owns) where each piece is carefully crafted by hand from start to
finish.
"I
believe music is a high art form that adds something special to our
lives," says Cooper. "It can take us through many emotions, add richness
to our world and even assist in healing broken spirits. I create music
to effect positive change in people's lives."
PR AGENCY: THE CREATIVE SERVICE COMPANY
(CreatServ9@aol.com) 4360
Emerald Dr., Colorado Springs, CO 80918 * 719-548-9872 * fax719-599-9607
To find out more about Jessie Allen
Cooper
or to order any of his albums, please visit his website:
http://www.coopersoundwaves.com/
PUBLICITY AGENCY: THE CREATIVE SERVICE
COMPANY (CreatServ9@aol.com)
4360 Emerald Dr.,
Colorado Springs, CO 80918 * 719-548-9872 * fax 719-599-9607
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