American musician (1954–2022)
Chuck Deardorf (April 3, 1954 – October 9, 2022)[ 1] was an American musician. He was best known for playing double bass and bass guitar with the Deardorf Peterson Group . He also headed the jazz department at the Cornish College of the Arts .
Early life
Deardorf was born on April 3, 1954,[ 2] and grew up in the Dayton metropolitan area .[ 3] He started playing the double bass when he was fifteen.[ 4] During his senior year of high school, he relocated to the West Coast and attended Central Kitsap High School .[ 3] He then studied at the Evergreen State College , before playing at Seattle jazz clubs such as Parnell's and Dimitriou's Jazz Alley.[ 3] [ 4] There, he served as a backing musician to Zoot Sims , Monty Alexander , and Kenny Barron , among others.[ 4]
Career
Deardorf first taught music at Western Washington University in 1978.[ 3] He then joined the faculty at the Cornish College of the Arts a year later as a professor of jazz and instrumental music.[ 3] [ 5] He ultimately became the administrator of the school's jazz program, serving in that capacity from 1986 until 2000.[ 3]
Outside of teaching, Deardorf continued to perform and record as a sideman for musicians such as Jovino Santos Neto , Bud Shank , Don Lanphere , Dave Peck , and Pete Christlieb .[ 3] [ 6] He also played together with Dave Peterson, a local guitarist and composer, on a frequent basis starting in the late 1970s. The duo eventually established the Deardorf Peterson Group in 2004. They released Portal , their first album as co-bandleaders, that same year.[ 6] Deardorf also released two albums as leader – Transparence (2011) and Perception (2019).[ 3] [ 7] He joked that he "play[ed] both kinds of music: country and western ".[ 3]
Personal life and death
Deardorf married Kelly Harland in 1987.[ 3] [ 8] She is a singer and author, and he had produced and featured on several of her albums. They remained married for 35 years until his death. Together, they had one son.[ 3]
Deardorf suffered from hereditary kidney disease . To avoid dialysis , he underwent a kidney transplant from his brother in 2011.[ 4] He died on October 9, 2022, aged 68, at the Virginia Mason Medical Center in Seattle . He had contracted COVID-19 two months before his death, leading to health complications.[ 3] [ 4]
Discography
As leader
2004 Portal (co-leader with Dave Peterson as The Deardorf/Peterson Group)[ 9]
2011 Transparence [ 7]
2019 Perception [ 7]
As sideman
With Don Lanphere
1984 Don Loves Midge [ 7]
1986 Stop [ 7]
1988 Jay Clayton & Don Lanphere: TheJazz Alley Tapes [ 7]
1990 Don Lanphere & Larry Coryell [ 7]
1995 Go...Again [ 7]
1999 Year 'Round Christmas [ 7]
With Bud Shank
With Dave Peck
With Jovino Santos Neto
1997 Caboclo [ 7]
2000 Live in Olympia [ 7]
2003 Canto do Rio [ 7]
2011 Current [ 7]
With Gunnar Bob Madsen
1998 Power of a Hat [ 7]
1998 Spinning World: 13 Ways of Looking at a Waltz [ 7]
With Jim Knapp
1995 On Going Home [ 7]
1998 Things for Now [ 7]
With others
1989 Breaking Through , Phil Sheeran[ 7]
1990 Worth Waiting For , P.J. Perry [ 7]
1991 Living Things , Michael Tomlinson[ 7]
1991 Pacific Aire , Tom Collier [ 7]
1998 Collection , Mike Strickland[ 7]
1998 Photographs , Barney McClure[ 7]
1998 Red Kelley's Heroes, Pete Christlieb [ 7]
1999 Joy to the World , Gene Nery[ 7]
1999 The Face of Love , Eugene Maslov[ 7]
2002 Twelve Times Romance , Kelly Harland[ 7]
2003 Convergence Zone , Phil Kelly & the NW Prevailing Winds[ 7]
2003 Some Devil , Dave Matthews [ 7]
2005 Carolyn Graye , Carolyn Graye[ 7]
2006 Laid Back & Blues: Live at the Sky Church in Seattle, Larry Coryell [ 7]
2007 Malibu Manouche , Neil Andersson[ 7]
2007 Shade , Richie Cole [ 7]
2008 From the Depths , Karen Emerson[ 7]
2008 Long Ago and Far Away: Kelly Harland Sings Jerome Kern , Kelly Harland[ 7]
2008 Words & Music , Paul West[ 7]
2009 Across the Sound , Terry Lauber[ 7]
2009 Alone Together With the Blues , Mia Vermillion[ 7]
2010 As the Crow Flies , Neil Andersson/Malibu Manouche/Peter Pendras[ 7]
2010 Inner Mission , Randy Brecker /Richard Cole[ 7]
2010 Reunion , Hadley Caliman /Pete Christlieb[ 7]
2011 Imaginary Sketches , Chad McCullough/Bram Weijters[ 7]
2012 Double Exposure , Frank D'Rone [ 7]
References
^ Bassist and music educator Chuck Deardorf has died
^ "Chuck Deardorf" . All About Jazz . March 17, 2020. Retrieved October 14, 2022 .
^ a b c d e f g h i j k l de Barros, Paul (October 11, 2022). "Chuck Deardorf, a pillar of Northwest jazz, dies at 68" . The Seattle Times . Retrieved October 14, 2022 .
^ a b c d e Lloyd, Robin (October 10, 2022). "Bassist and music educator Chuck Deardorf has died" . KNKX . Retrieved October 14, 2022 .
^ De Barros, Paul (October 16, 1994). "City of Jazz – It May Be Lite, Hard, Retro Or Ultra-Hip, And It's Alive And Swinging In Seattle" . Seattle Times . Archived from the original on March 3, 2016. Retrieved September 15, 2016 .
^ a b Mason, Stewart. "Deardorf Peterson Group – Biography" . AllMusic . Retrieved October 14, 2022 .
^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw "Deardorf – Album Discography" . AllMusic . Retrieved October 14, 2022 .
^ "SeattleNoise: Kelly Harland" . Seattle Post-Intelligencer . May 15, 2008. Retrieved March 30, 2009 .
^ "Chuck Deardorf – Credits" . AllMusic . Retrieved October 14, 2022 .
^ "Bud Shank Quartet – At Jazz Alley Album Reviews, Songs & More" . AllMusic . Retrieved October 14, 2022 .
External links
International National Artists