Orphy Robinson
Orphy Robinson MBE (born 13 October 1960) is a British jazz multi-instrumentalist who plays vibraphone, keyboards, saxophone, trumpet, piano, marimba, steelpans and drums. He has written music for television, film and theatre. CareerRobinson began his professional career with the band Savanna in the late 1970s.[1] During the mid- to late-1980s, he was a member of the Jazz Warriors with Courtney Pine,[1][2] and worked with Mica Paris and Andy Sheppard.[1] In the 1990s, Robinson released two critically acclaimed solo albums: When Tomorrow Comes and The Vibes Describes. He has recorded as a guest musician and has toured with Hugh Hopper[3] and Robert Wyatt. For the UK celebration of the bicentenary of the Abolition of the Slave Trade Act in 2007, Robinson was commissioned to write and perform pieces from his suite Routes Through Roots in the Houses of Parliament. He was commissioned by the Phoenix Dance company to write 42 Shades of Black. In June 2014, he was commissioned to write a suite for the combined Shivanova and Ignite ensembles for the 2014 Women's Festival at Kings Place in the UK. He has written for The Proms at the Royal Albert Hall and for the Romanian violin virtuoso Alexander Balanescu. During 2009, several albums featured Robinson as guest soloist, including No Now Is So! by the Alexander Hawkins ensemble, Out of Office by the Burn Out Mama band from Finland, and albums by Louis Moholo, Leee John and Beggar & Co. Since late 2009, he has been a featured soloist on marimba and vibraphone with the violinist Nigel Kennedy, performing an extensive repertoire including Johann Sebastian Bach, Antonio Vivaldi's The Four Seasons, Jimi Hendrix and Duke Ellington. Robinson has performed as guest musician on three albums with Kennedy: The Four Elements (2011), Vivaldi: The New Four Seasons (2015) and My World (2016). In the latter part of 2009, he was invited to become musical director of a large ensemble at The Roundhouse with the drummer Nick Mason of Pink Floyd. The duo Black Top was formed in 2011 with the Free Improv pianist Pat Thomas. An album entitled #One was released internationally in July 2014 on the Babel Label with guest saxophonist Steve Williamson. The second Black Top album, #Two, had Evan Parker as guest. Robinson started The Spontaneous Cosmic RawXtra ensemble at the Kings Place concert venue in October 2009. The ensemble was included in Black British Jazz (2014), an Open University book by Jason Toynbee. A DVD and recording were released in 2015. Robinson was instrumental in the formation of the band Malik & the O.G's with band leader Malik Al Nasir and also in his tribute to Gil Scott-Heron at St George's Hall, Liverpool, entitled[4] The Revolution Will Be Live![5] Robinson has worked with Lester Bowie, Don Cherry, Neneh Cherry, Junior Giscombe, Kate Havnevik, Imagination, Lionel Loueke, Wynton Marsalis, Hugh Masekela, Jean-Paul "Bluey" Maunick, Joe McPhee, Thurston Moore, Butch Morris, David Murray, Sunny Murray, Mica Paris, Robert Plant, Wadada Leo Smith, Spring Heel Jack, Joss Stone, Jamaaladeen Tacuma, John Tchicai, Kenny Thomas and Nana Vasconcelos. Other workRobinson represented Great Britain at the Olympic Games in Atlanta, Georgia. He has worked in schools and on large-scale education projects, including at the Hackney Empire, where he led the Music Education department for more than ten years. He has been on the board of The Vortex jazz club, Warriors International, the National Youth Jazz Orchestra, the British Academy of Songwriters, Composers and Authors and the Participation and Learning Education advisory board at the Hackney Empire. Robinson is a founding member of Edge (The Shape of Things to Come), a group of artists, writers and promoters curating events pitched as a fringe to the London Jazz Festival. Due to the success of their first programme, titled Edge 08, Robinson and the journalist Paul Bradshaw continued to curate events internationally as well as all-year round events in the UK. Their project Love Supreme Reimagined, a homage to the 1965 John Coltrane album A Love Supreme, a large-scale ensemble with Robinson in the role of musical director, received critical acclaim at the 2014 South Bank Meltdown Festival curated by James Lavelle. Robinson produced Carleen Anderson's album Cage Street Memorial (2016). In 2017, Anderson was nominated as Best Jazz Vocalist at the Jazz FM Jazz Awards. In 2018, the album was nominated in the Jazz Innovation category at the same awards. Awards and honors
Recipient of the prestigious Paul Hamlyn Award for artists for his work as a composer 2022 https://www.phf.org.uk/news-and-publications/600000-awarded-to-new-recipients-of-awards-for-artists-2022 Appointed visiting Fellowship Jesus College, Cambridge University 2024. DiscographyAs leader
With Savannah
With Black Top
Other
As guestWith Beggar & Co
With Tony Bevan
With Alexander Hawkins
With Jazz Warriors
With Nigel Kennedy
With the London Improvisors Orchestra
With Mica Paris
With Courtney Pine
With Andy Sheppard
With others
Film and television
References
External links |