September 1
DETROIT INTERNATIONAL JAZZ FESTIVAL
Detroit, MI
Every once in a blue moon along comes
someone who can merge the forces of virtuosity and exuberance
and unleash them on an unsuspecting public. The latest in
this exclusive line of blue moon arrivals is Troy
"Trombone Shorty" Andrews.
Andrews plays trombone and trumpet. He is a man to be reckoned
with on both. A product of New Orleans' culturally rich
Treme neighborhood, Andrews was a bandleader by the age
of 6.
While Andrews was navigating New Orleans as a youngster
with his band in tow, he was also absorbing lessons at the
knee of his older brother James, a dynamic musical performer
known as "Satchmo of the Ghetto." It is safe to
say that by the time Andrews hit his early teens, he had
a PhD in the ways of the streets, which you can still hear
in his music. But he has also grown into a performer emanating
elegance and class; gleaned from his successful studies
at the prestigious New Orleans Center for the Creative Arts
(NOCCA). As a graduate he joined the ranks of other grads
like Wynton and Branford Marsalis, Harry Connick
Jr., and Nicholas Payton.
In 2005, Andrews was tapped by Lenny Kravitz
to be a featured member of his horn section for a world
tour. A tour that shared billing with acts such as Aerosmith.
In London, during the summer of 2006, Andrews began working
with producer Bob Ezrin and U2 at Abbey Road Studios.
This association led to Andrews performing with U2 and Green
Day during the re-opening spectacular of the New
Orleans Superdome for the NFL’s Monday Night Football
pre-game show. The show aired live on ESPN and was broadcast
internationally by Westwood One.
To wrap up 2006, Andrews made his acting debut on the NBC
television series “Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip.”
Leading a group of New Orleans musicians, his musical performance
of the holiday classic “O Holy Night” drew such
an enthusiastic response from viewers that NBC released
the single for free download on their web site.
Kicking off 2007, New Orleans’ premier music magazine,
Offbeat, named Andrews their Performer
of the Year. He also garnered honors as Best Contemporary
Jazz Performer.
The here and now finds Andrews a fully developed performer
locked, loaded and bursting into international consciousness.
His current project is Orleans Avenue,
a funk/pop/hip-hop mix populated with musicians like Andrews
who are young in age only. Orleans Avenue brings the heat
winding audiences up in merry confusion. Jazz fans shake
their heads in unexpected delight while the funksters shake
what they got with glee. Things reach a fever pitch as Andrews
starts his circular breathing–one note sustained in
pristine beauty while the band vamps on a second line beat
and sax player James Martin dances so ugly it's funky.
Virtuosity and exuberance, Orleans Avenue effortlessly
combines both. With Mike Ballard on bass,
James Martin on tenor sax, Pete
Murano on guitar, and Joey Peebles
on drums, their performances transcend the boundaries of
generations and classification. Trombone Shorty and Orleans
Avenue is high energy, high octane and highly contagious.