Ryan Keberle
The great composers in jazz write music that’s not only fun to listen to, but it’s fun to play.
The great composers in jazz write music that’s not only fun to listen to, but it’s fun to play.
World domination for brass is my goal within 10 years.
To play with the great Steve Witser and Joe Alessi that summer in Colorado was pretty special.
When you communicate. . . make it easy for someone to call you for a gig.
Dizzy once told me he liked the way I played. . . I said could you write that down?!
Seeing live music is an integral part of the way we internalize the process of playing music.
I remember playing Studio 54 on New Year’s Eve in 1985. You get your freak on in a place like that!
We played Symphony Hall in Kawasaki and there were 1,100 or 1,200 people there to see a trombone quartet. It was an amazing experience!
To hear Clifford Brown two years after you start playing the trumpet in Montana was pretty eye opening . . . to say the least!
It boils down to playing music, talking about music, listening to music.
The phone rings in my office. It’s Rudy Van Gelder! He says . . . did you write Basically Blues . . . yes I did . . . well Buddy Rich just recorded it. Where do we send the check?