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Hilario Duran and his Latin Jazz Big Band

Hilario Duran and his Latin Jazz Big Band

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  • Years Active: 1990s

Biography

Pianist Hilario Durán was born in 1953 in Havana, Cuba. He was naturally influenced by the greats of Cuban piano music like Ernesto Lecuona, Frank Emilio Flynn and Peruchin. He studied and graduated from the revered Amadeo Roldan Music Institute in Havana, boasting fellow graduates Chucho Valdes, Paquito D'Rivera and Gonzalo Rubalcaba. Durán also studied the tumbao with Evaristo Aparicio, composition and conducting from German Pifferrer, and orchestral techniques from Guillermo Barreto. His early band Los D'Siempre was not as anchored in playing folkloric, traditional Cuban music or polyrhythmic music as expanding the harmonic language of it with jazz infusions. When D'Rivera and Arturo Sandoval defected from Cuba to the U.S. in 1980, and Irakere made their initial splash on the American music scene, Durán was inspired to follow their lead. The pianist joined Sandoval's band, and remained for nine years from 1981-1990, collaborated with Dizzy Gillespie's United Nation Orchestra, and worked with composer/arranger Michael Legrand. In 1990, Durán formed his own band Perspectiva, touring through Latin America and Europe, and was the pianist in Jane Bunnett's award winning Spirits of Havana band. In 1995 after a final European tour with Perspectiva, Durán established his solo career and moved to Toronto, Canada with his family. An important part of the Canadian music scene ever since, he has been a member of the jazz faculty at Humber College, acting as both and adjunct piano professor and ensemble director. Among the many musicians he has collaborated with; Tata Guines, Changuito, Horacio "El Negro" Hernandez, Jorge Reyes, Roberto Occhipinti, Larry Cramer, John Patitucci, Michael Brecker, Regina Carter, Dave Valentin, Juan Pablo Torres, John Benitez, Dafnis Prieto, Hugh Marsh, Carlos "Patato" Valdés and Leny Andrade, as well as classical ensembles Quartetto Gelato and the Gryphon Trio. Bunnett's Spirits Of Havana CD won a Juno award on 1990, while Durán himself was nominated in 2003 for a Juno for the CD Havana Remembered, and won in 2005 for New Danzon. In 2005, Durán formed his Latin Jazz Big Band with Canadian and Cuban musicians in Toronto in collaboration with Russia's Globalis Orchestra playing arrangements by Roberto Occhipinti.
— Michael G. Nastos , All Music Guide

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