Darcy Hepner profile picture

Darcy Hepner

Living well is the best revenge

About Me

A seasoned performer, accomplished composer and respected educator, saxophonist Darcy Hepner has dedicated the past 30 years toward strengthening and refining his grasp of jazz, R&B and blues. Originally a cellist with a classical pedigree, he switched to saxophone while studying at the University of Miami and subsequently worked during the early ‘80s with such legendary figures as B.B. King, Aretha Franklin, Sergio Mendes and Henry Mancini. From 1985-1989, he taught at the Berklee College of Music in Boston and from 1996 -2005 lived in New York and worked on the Big Apple jazz scene as well as on various Broadway and off-Broadway shows, including "Movin' Out," "Love, Janis" and "Stray Cats." From 1999-2004, he toured as a regular member of the world renowned jazz-rock group Blood, Sweat & Tears.His impressive list of credentials includes work with jazz singers Tony Bennett and Mel Torme, the Artie Shaw big band, The Uptown Horns, the Brooklyn Jazz Composers Orchestra, the Berlin Contemporary Jazz Orchestra, rocker David Johansen, Broadway star Tom Wopat, saxophonist David Liebman, trumpeter Kenny Wheeler and drumming great Louie Bellson. Darcy is in demand as a clinician and has presented master classes in Jazz Improvisation and Music Business in many colleges and universities including the Bilgi University in Istanbul, Turkey and Sacramento City College in Sacramento, California. His masterclass CD Putting the 'R' in R&B was featured in Jazz Player Magazine. The Saxophone Journal recently featured his "Jam Band" play-along CD. A sequel "Jam Band 2" was featured in the May/June 2005 issue.Raised in the "Steel City" of Hamilton, Ontario, Hepner comes from a musical family. His father, Dr. Lee Hepner, was the founder of the Edmonton Symphony Orchestra and went on to become a Professor of Music at McMaster University in Hamilton, Ontario. His mother, Patricia Rolston, is a well known pianist who has performed throughout Canada and Europe. Darcy first came to music as a cellist, encouraged by his parents who hoped he would one day join them on the concert stage. He did eventually play cello in his father's orchestra at age 15 and also won a scholarship to the famed Congress of Strings in Cincinnati. Shortly after, he discovered the Beatles and electric guitar. "That was my recreational thing," he recalls. "I was playing guitar and had a little band that did Blood, Sweat & Tears stuff .And a saxophone player that I had in my band couldn’t play anything that I wrote, so one week out of frustration I just said, 'Gimme that, it can’t be that hard.' And about two months later I sold my guitar and bought an alto saxophone and started trying to figure it out."Originally a cello major during his first year in college in Canada, Hepner wanted to switch to saxophone. "But the university that I went to didn’t consider saxophone a legitimate instrument, so I became a flute major," he recalls. His early saxophone influences during the early '70s included ubiquitous session man Tom Scott and Edgar Winter, a keyboardist who doubled on R&B-drenched alto sax. During this time studied privately with the Toronto-based Coltrane-inspired tenor saxophonist Pat LaBarbera and also grabbed a lesson with the great saxophonist Sonny Stitt when he came through town. "I was seeking people out all the time here, just to keep pushing forward on the instrument."After completing his Masters Degree in Jazz at the University of Miami went on to study with alto sax great Lee Konitz and tenor saxophonist Bob Mintzer. In 1985, Hepner began teaching full-time at the Berklee College of Music in Boston and went on to become the Founding Department Head of the Selkirk College Music Program in Nelson, British Columbia, a position he held for seven years. It was during this time that he lent his saxophone sound to legendary performers including B.B. King, Sergio Mendes, Henry Mancini, and Aretha Franklin. He also toured the United States as a member of the Artie Shaw big band, performing at the Blue Note in New York and with Mel Tormé at the Hollywood Bowl. Hepner's self-titled debut as a leader was released in 1997 on Water Street Music. In August, 2005, Hepner returned to his hometown of Hamilton, Ontario, where he is currently a Professor of Music at Mohawk College. (with Thanks to Thomas' Myspace Editor V4.4)

My Interests

Music:

Member Since: 11/21/2006
Band Website: darcyhepner.com/
Influences: Richard Prior, Joanie Madden, Charlie Parker, Hal Galper, John Coltrane, Dick Oatts, Tom Scott, Hubert Laws, Henry Mancini, Stanley Turrentine, Joe Farrell, Astrid Hepner, Joe Zawinul, Lee Konitz, Theo Nabicht, Miles Davis, Gil Evans, Thad Jones, Chick Corea, the Beatles, Herbie Hancock, Jimmy Smith, Rich Perry, Andy Middleton, Randy & Michael Brecker, Bob Mintzer, Joe Henderson, Rick Margitza, Ron Miller, Jim McNeely, David Sanborn, Steve Grossman, Dave Liebman, James Brown, Bill Evans, Brad Mehldau, Stan Getz, Cannonball Adderley, Frank Sinatra, Glen Plake, Joe Farrell, Richard Newell, Mick Rolston, Isobel Moore, Jerry Bergonzi, David Liebman, Fred Lipsius, EW&F, Louis Sclavis, Ian Fleming, Chris Potter, Wayne Krantz, Jeremy Hepner, Ornette Coleman, Emmanuel Pahud, Sonny Rollins, Sonny Stitt, Roland Kirk, Edgar Winter, Freddie Hubbard, Leo Sullivan, Rodney Dangerfield . . .
Sounds Like:Live with BS&T

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Record Label: Water Street Music
Type of Label: Indie