Always a staunch proponent of bebop, Walden produced a tribute to Charlie Parker at the 1990 Detroit International Jazz Festival with an 18-piece big band, large string section, and 30-voice choir conducted by Coleridge-Taylor Perkinson. Guest soloists for this Yardbird Suite included Dizzy Gillespie, Charles McPherson, Barry Harris, and Walden. This inspired the saxophonist to form the Detroit Jazz Orchestra, playing repertoire from a wide variety of bop sources. Shortly thereafter, Walden became more involved in academia, teaching at Michigan State University, Oberlin Conservatory in Ohio, and the University of Michigan, where he became a tenured professor. He was a mentor to the likes of now prominent jazz artists Rodney Whitaker, Geri Allen, Robert Hurst, and Regina Carter. He released three independent self-produced CDs: A Portrait of You, A Monk a Mingus Among Us, and Focus: The Music of Tadd Dameron. The saxophonist received the prestigious Michigan Governor's Arts Award in 1985 for the contributions of his Detroit Jazz Orchestra, and in 1996 he was named a Jazz Master by Arts Midwest. His last band was the ensemble Free Radicals, featuring Cassius Richmond and Marion Hayden. Donald Walden died Sunday, April 6, 2008, at home in Detroit at age 69 of longstanding complications with cancer. ~ Michael G. Nastos, Rovi
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Boperation |
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The Tadd Walk |
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Focus |