Jazz on Jay Season Opens Thursday

Dylan Canterbury’s New Quintet Plays New Season’s First Show, 12 Noon on Thursday, June 5

Dylan Canterbury opens the new season at Jazz on Jay Thursday; the busy trumpeter, composer and arranger played his first-ever show as bandleader at Jazz on Jay in 2021. All 13 noontime shows are free, open to everyone.

Thursday, Canterbury leads a new quintet whose guitarist Wyatt Ambrose opened last season at Jazz on Jay. While this lineup is new – Ambrose; Tyler Giroux, piano; Dave Shoudy, bass; and Matt Niedbalski, drums – “we’ve all worked with each other in different settings before,” says Canterbury.

Dylan Canterbury. Photo provided

For Canterbury, it all started with a birthday CD. “Louis Armstrong was and continues to be my primary inspiration,” he says. “My parents got me a CD of his for my 10th birthday, and I still remember the feeling I had when I listened to it for the first time. Even as a kid, I knew I was experiencing something uniquely special, and that I wanted to be a part of that in any way possible,” he recalls.

Making music himself seems a natural for this member of a musical family. Canterbury’s father played trombone in high school and college, one cousin teaches music and another is training as a music therapist. Canterbury’s wife is a classically trained violinist and vocalist, and her father plays cello with the Syracuse Orchestra. 

Locally, Canterbury studied with Eric Latini and Joe Lamb and played his first gig at 15; at SUNY Purchase he trained with Jon Faddis, Jim Rotondi and Ray Vega. 

“Most of the tunes (he’ll play Thursday) are originals,” says Canterbury, “largely in the post-bop style, influenced primarily by 1960s Blue Note recordings.” He adds, “For originals, we’ll be playing some of my older compositions such as ‘Spin’ and ‘Quiet Revolution,’ as well as debuting a new tune called ‘El-Ahrairah.’” They’ll also play Steve Swallow’s “Eiderdown,” Dave Grusin’s “Chanson” and Bill Evans’ arrangement of “Wrap Your Troubles in Dreams.”

“When playing standards, I try to keep the song’s original intent in mind while finding some kind of new wrinkle to lean into,” he says. “It’s important to maintain the integrity of a tune while also not just treading the same ground as those who came before us,” he explains, adding. “There’s ample room for improvisation.”

Busy as player and composer, Canterbury leads own quintet, co-leads the BWC (Brucker-Weisse-Canterbury) Jazz Orchestra, and he plays with Keith Pray’s Big Soul Ensemble, Bobby Previte’s Upstate Composers Orchestra, the Empire Jazz Orchestra, the Tim Olsen Big Band and Alex Torres and his Latin Orchestra. His “Going Places” album hit in 2020.

He also teaches at SUNY Schenectady where he directs the jazz ensemble and teaches jazz-focused courses in trumpet, improvisation, and history. “Until its closure last year, I was on faculty at the College of St. Rose,” says Canterbury, “where I taught improvisation and arranging. I also maintain a studio of private students.”

For the nonprofit Jazz Lines Publications that preserves historic jazz literature and scores, he does engraving, the craft of using musical notation to produce cleaned-up versions of classic music scores by referencing original source material. When written sources aren’t available, Canterbury’s well-tuned ear enables him to copy scores from original recordings, a craft called transcribing.

On Friday, July 18th, Canterbury will play Music Haven in Schenectady’s Central Park with the SUNY Schenectady Jazz Faculty Combo; and he plays with Keith Pray’s Big Soul Ensemble on the last Tuesday of every month at the Cock ‘n Bull in Galway. Both ensembles often play his original compositions, as does the BWC Jazz Orchestra whose performances are less frequent these days.

Jazz on Jay free concerts are noon to 1:30 p.m. at Jay Square, the newly park space opposite Schenectady City Hall. The rain site is Robb Alley at Proctors, 432 State St., Schenectady. Seating is provided indoors at Robb Alley, but patrons are invited to bring their own seating and refreshments to Jay Square.

Jazz on Jay is presented by the ElectriCity Arts and Entertainment District and sponsored by the New York State Council on the Arts, a Schenectady County Legislature Arts & Culture Grant, Downtown Schenectady Improvement Corporation, The Schenectady Foundation, Price Chopper/Market 32, MVP Health Care, Schenectady County, Schenectady City Hall, and Proctors Collaborative. This blog is a series media sponsor.