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John Heard
was born on July 3, 1938 and began playing the bass at the age
of fourteen and while still in High School in Pittsburgh at the
age of sixteen he began his professional career in a band with
Tommy Turrentine on trumpet, Booker Ervin on sax, J.C. Moses on
drums and Horace Parlan on piano. During his High School years
John was also one of two art students who were chosen to attend
special classes at the Carnegie Museum of Art. John worked in
Pittsburgh until he entered the Air Force in 1958 and was sent
to Germany where because of his gifts as an artist he was
given the title of “Artist, Special Services” a job that
consisted mostly of designing posters and signs for special
events. He also taught art classes to the officer’s wives
where he was able to pick up a little extra money
After leaving the Air
Force in 1961 John enrolled at The Art Institute of Pittsburgh,
studying on the GI Bill and also resumed his music career which
took him first to Buffalo and then on to California with Jon
Hencricks of Lambert, Hencricks and Ross fame in 1965.
Other than a four year
hiatus in the late 1980’s and early 1990’s when John pursued his
fine art career full time he has worked almost constantly in the
jazz world, appearing on over 150 albums and working with Benny
Carter, Rashan Roland Kirk, Hampton Hawes, Tete Montoliu, Oscar
Peterson, George Duke, Al Jarreau, John Handy, Wes Montgomery,
Cal Tjader, Willie Bobo, the Gerald Wilson Big Band, Freddie
Hubbard, Count Basie, Sonny Rollins, Sonny Stitt, Milt Jackson,
Ella Fitzgerald, Ahmad Jamal, Kenny Burrell, the Toshiko
Akiyoshi-Lew Tabakin Big Band, the Louis Bellson Big Band, Joe
Pass, Herb Ellis, Art Pepper, George Cables, Harold Land, Frank
Morgan, Dexter Gordon, Pharaoh Sanders and others. John has also
recorded with most of the above and has performed live at venues
such as the Royal Festival Hall, the Vienna Opera House,
and most of the major Jazz Festivals around the world and
just about every major jazz club you can name.
While John was getting
his music career on track throughout the 1960’s and early 70’s
he had to put his pursuit of an artistic career on the back
burner, although he did continue to sketch and paint throughout
these years. In 1974 Guitar Player magazine
commissioned John to sketch a series of six legendary guitar
players. That same year John’s sketch of Duke Ellington
graced the cover of the Monterey Jazz Festival’s program.
In 1985, inspired by his friend Jim Casey a sculptor who worked
on movie sets (including Francis Coppola’s Apocalypse Now),
John began sculpting . Finally in 1988 John “retired” from
his music career and devoted himself full time to painting and
sculpting.
The subject matter for
John’s art is often abstract, but he has painted, sketched or
sculpted portraits of many jazz legends including Rashan Roland
Kirk, Thelonious Monk, Bud Powell, Duke Ellington, Ella
Fitzgerald, Count Basie, Art Pepper, Zoot Simms, Freddie Green,
and Benny Carter to name but a few.
But the music kept
calling and after four years John started playing again and has
spent the last decade or so pursuing both careers, sometimes one
more than the other.
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