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Joan Chamorro (born in 1962) is a Spanish jazz musician and music teacher. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] He plays saxophone, clarinet, flute, cornet, and double bass. [ 3 ] He is the founder and director of the Sant Andreu Jazz Band . [ 4 ]
2022: Joan Chamorro Presenta's Big Band with the alumni Èlia Bastida, Joana Casanova, Joan Codina, Magalí Datzíra, Jan Domènech, Eva Fernández, Joan Marti, Marc Martín, Andrea Motis, Carla Motis, Rita Payés, Marçal Perramón, Joan Mar Sauqué and Max Tato; 2023: Sant Andreu abraça Brasil with multiple guest stars
Feeling Good with Joan Chamorro (Temps, 2012; Whaling City Sound, 2015) Coses Que Es Diuen Però Que No Es Fan, NewCat, Andrea Motis Joan Chamorro (DiscMedi, 2015) Motis Chamorro Big Band Live (2015) Joan Chamorro presenta La magia de la veu (Jazz to Jazz, 2015) Live at Palau de la Música (Jazz to Jazz, 2015) He's Funny That Way (Impulse!, 2016)
Joan Chamorro presenta La Màgica de la Veu (Jazz to Jazz, 2014) Joan Chamorro presenta Rita Payés (Jazz to Jazz, 2015) Lua amarela (Jazz to Jazz, 2016) Imagina (with Elisabeth Roma, 2019) [5] My Ideal (Venus, 2019) In New York (Venus, 2019) Como la piel (with Elisabeth Roma, 2021) De camino al camino (2024)
Andrea Motis & Joan Chamorro Quintet: Motis, Chamorro, Terraza, Traver, Pi (2018) Since 2009, [ 3 ] he has featured in several public appearances and records of the Sant Andreu Jazz Band , a youth big band founded by Joan Chamorro in Barcelona and formed by multi-instrumentalists such as Andrea Motis , Rita Payés and many others.
Duke Ellington's "Jeep Blues", which Russell called "very dear to him" and said is about reinvention, is used as a device to bring the two main characters together. [6] Susan Jacobs, the film's music supervisor , felt that diversity of the music is the key to the film as "it conveys something about the characters" as the music ranges from ...
Many big bands folded by the mid-1950s, but Ellington kept his band working, occasionally doing shows in ice-skating rinks to stay busy. The Duke Ellington Orchestra did European tours during the early 1950s, and Ellington was chiefly supporting the band himself through royalties earned on his popular compositions of the 1920s to the 1940s.
"My Baby Just Cares for Me" is a jazz standard written by Walter Donaldson with lyrics by Gus Kahn. Written for the film version of the musical comedy Whoopee! (1930), the song became a signature tune for Eddie Cantor who sang it in the movie.