The Mercury News

Hard-working piano man back in Bay Area

Gerald Clayton admits key to success is practice, practice, practice

- By Andrew Gilbert Correspond­ent Contact Andrew Gilbert at jazzscribe@aol.com.

How do you get to the Village Vanguard? Practice, practice, practice.

The old joke about Carnegie Hall applies just as well to jazz’s most storied venue, but for jazz musicians, the path to that hallowed stage involves informal training far off the radar.

Growing up in Los Angeles, pianist Gerald Clayton was intimately familiar with the workings of jazz bands. His father, the great bassist, arranger and composer John Clayton, and his uncle, saxophonis­t Jeff Clayton, co-led the Grammy Award-nominated Clayton Hamilton Jazz Orchestra. Gerald started performing with their smaller Clayton Brothers band while in high school.

But he got a whole new kind of education when he enrolled at the Manhattan School of Music in 2005, looking to get a taste of the Big Apple before finishing his undergrad degree at USC’s Thornton School of Music.

While he threw himself into formal studies with piano master Kenny Barron, Clayton quickly discovered that the most intensive practicing took place when he and his peers got together in their apartments, “a ritual that’s been going on here forever, at least back to Miles and Bird and Monk,” he said, referring to modern jazz icons Miles Davis, Charlie Parker and Thelonious Monk.

Now living in L.A., Clayton

was in the midst of a week-long run at the Vanguard when we spoke last month. His quintet performs Friday at Kuumbwa Jazz Center and concludes the Jazz at Lesher concert series with two shows Saturday. Both engagement­s include East Bay-raised saxophonis­t Dayna Stephens as a featured guest, renewing a connection first establishe­d when they both moved to New York around the same time.

“Right away with Dayna it was like, are you free? We’d get together and play all day, just calling tunes,” recalled Clayton, 34. “That’s how you really

get to know a musician. You get a sense of their musical DNA, the records they checked out, their musical idiosyncra­sies.

“Even cats of a really high caliber who you’d think are too busy are down to go to somebody’s house and shed and work on stuff. I remember one epic session in Harlem. I had four drummers, three pianists and seven or eight horn players in my little two-bedroom apartment.”

It’s probably safe to assume that one reason so many players came out that night was the host’s reputation as a keyboard monster. The four-time Grammy

Award nominee has been setting jaws slack since he was in high school, and when he’s not leading his own bands, he’s working with jazz’s most celebrated figures, including tenor sax star Charles Lloyd, drummer Terri Lyne Carrington and guitarist John Scofield (with whom he performs at Kuumbwa on Oct. 17 and SFJazz on Oct. 21).

Beyond his phenomenal technique and prodigious improvisat­ional imaginatio­n, Clayton impressed Stephens early on with his knack for constructi­ng a set so that each piece is part of a larger narrative arc.

“He’s a brilliant writer,

and his compositio­ns are ear worms for me,” said Stephens, who returns to the Bay Area in the fall for a series of gigs with pianist and NEA Jazz Master Kenny Barron’s Concentric Circles Quintet at Bach Dancing and Dynamite Society (Nov. 4), Sonoma State’s Green Center (Nov. 7) and the SFJazz Center (Nov. 9).

“Working on my own, I’ve taken some of Gerald’s tunes and made electronic music with them. He writes melodies that sticks with you, with harmonies that are so strong and still unexpected. Every new project of his is evolving and progressin­g.

He keeps you on the edge of your seat, wondering what he’s going to come up with next.”

For this weekend’s gigs, Clayton introduces a new configurat­ion of players, building on his longstandi­ng collaborat­ion with powerhouse drummer Justin Brown, a Berkeley High School alum. He’s played on all four of the pianist’s albums, from his 2009 trio debut “Two-Shade” (ArtistShar­e) to last year’s “Tributary Tales” (Motéma), which also features Stephens on baritone sax.

Like Clayton, Brown is now living in Los Angeles, as is bassist Dave Robaire, who’s performed several times at the Stanford Jazz Festival in recent years. Rounding out the quintet is stellar young vibraphoni­st Joel Ross, a Chicago native who spent two years at University of the Pacific’s Brubeck Institute.

Clayton first played with Ross when he was in high school “and even back then, he stood out,” Clayton said. “He’s got huge ears and a total willingnes­s to serve the music. The generation he’s in soaks up anything very quickly. He’s ready to push the music forward.”

 ?? COURTESY OF GERALD CLAYTON ?? The son and the nephew of accomplish­ed jazz musicians, pianist Gerald Clayton made a name for himself through both formal studies and practice, practice, practice.
COURTESY OF GERALD CLAYTON The son and the nephew of accomplish­ed jazz musicians, pianist Gerald Clayton made a name for himself through both formal studies and practice, practice, practice.

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