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Django Bates
Django Bates
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Key Information

Django Bates (born Leon Bates, 2 October 1960)[1] is a British jazz musician, composer, multi-instrumentalist, band leader and educator. He plays the piano, keyboards and the tenor horn. Bates has been described as "one of the most talented musicians Britain has produced... his work covers the entire spectrum of jazz, from early jazz through to bebop and free jazz to jazz-rock fusion."[2]

In addition to his jazz work, he is also a classical composer (writing both large- and small-scale compositions on commission), theatre composer, and has taught as a professor at various European music schools. As a leader, his bands have included Human Chain, Delightful Precipice, Quiet Nights, Powder Room Collapse Orchestra and Belovèd, and he was also a leading figure in Loose Tubes and Bill Bruford's Earthworks.

Early life

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Bates was born in Beckenham, then in Kent, now Greater London, England,[1] and attended Sedgehill School. While at this school, he also attended the Centre for Young Musicians in London (1971–77), where he learned trumpet, piano, and violin.[1] In 1977–78, he studied at Morley College.[1] In 1978, he enrolled at the Royal College of Music to study composition but left after two weeks.[1][2]

As jazz musician

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Bates founded Human Chain in 1979 and, in the 1980s, he rose to prominence in a jazz orchestra called Loose Tubes.[1] In 1991, he started the 19-piece jazz orchestra Delightful Precipice.[3] He also assembled the Powder Room Collapse Orchestra (which recorded Music for The Third Policeman)[1][4] and created Circus Umbilicus, a musical circus show.[5] Bates has appeared as a sideman or member of Dudu Pukwana's Zila,[6] Tim Whitehead's Borderline,[7] Ken Stubbs's First House,[8] Bill Bruford's Earthworks,[9] Sidsel Endresen,[1] and in the bands of George Russell[1] and George Gruntz. He has performed with Michael Brecker, Tim Berne, Christian Jarvi, Vince Mendoza, David Sanborn, Kate Rusby, and Don Alias.

As composer

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Django Bates

Bates has concentrated on writing large-scale compositions on commission. These include:

Bates worked closely with director Lucy Bailey on several theatre projects, including Gobbledegook for the Gogmagogs, Baby Doll, (Birmingham Rep, National Theatre, Albery Theatre), Stairs to the Roof (Chichester Festival Theatre), The Postman Always Rings Twice (West Yorkshire Playhouse, Albery Theatre) and Titus Andronicus (Shakespeare's Globe). They also worked on a short film You Can Run. Other theatre work includes Gregory Doran's production of As You Like It (RSC), and Campbell Graham's Out There!.

Bates was the inaugural artistic director of the music festival FuseLeeds in 2004. He used this opportunity to initiate the first orchestral commission for Jonny Greenwood of Radiohead. Bates also commissioned sixty composers including Laurie Anderson, Gavin Bryars, Patrick Moore, and John Zorn, to write one bar each. He then quilted these bars into the piece "Premature Celebration", which was performed by Evan Parker and the London Sinfonietta to celebrate Parker's 60th birthday.

Teaching

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In 2002, Bates was a tutor at the Banff Centre jazz programme alongside Jim Black and Dave Douglas.[13] In July 2005, Bates was appointed Professor of Rhythmic Music at the Rhythmic Music Conservatory (RMC) in Copenhagen, Denmark.[14] He was appointed visiting professor of jazz at the Royal Academy of Music in London in September 2010.[15] In September 2011, he was appointed Professor of Jazz at HKB Bern, Switzerland.[16]

Awards and honours

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The Wire voted Bates Best UK Jazz Composer in 1987 and 1990.

In 2008, he was nominated for the PRS New Music Award.[18] He was awarded a fellowship by the Leeds College of Music in 1995.[19]

Discography

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An asterisk (*) indicates that the year is that of release.

As leader/co-leader

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Year recorded Title Label Personnel/Notes
1986 Human Chain With Steve Argüelles (drums, percussion)
1987 Cashin' In EG As Human Chain; most tracks trio, with Steve Argüelles (drums), Stuart Hall (strings, piccolo); one track quartet, with Steve Buckley (penny whistle) added
1990 Music for The Third Policeman Ah Um With Steve Buckley (tin whistle, alto sax, clarinet, bicycle bell), Steve Berry (cello, double bass), Martin France (drums, percussion), Stuart Hall (banjo, violin, guitar, mandolin), Sarah Harrison (violin, hooter), Robert Juritz (bassoon), Dai Pritchard (clarinet, bass clarinet); Eddie Parker (bass flute), Dave Pattman (bongos), Ashley Slater (bass trombone) are added on one or two tracks each. Live performance from 2000 on YouTube:[20]
1993 Summer Fruits (and Unrest) JMT With Eddie Parker (flute, bass flute), Sarah Homer (clarinet, bass clarinet), Iain Ballamy and Steve Buckley (soprano sax, alto sax), Mark Lockheart and Barak Schmool (tenor sax), Julian Argüelles (baritone sax), Sid Gauld (high trumpet), Chris Batchelor (soloing trumpet), David Laurence (French horn), Roland Bates (trombone), Richard Henry (bass trombone), Sarah Waterhouse (tuba), Steve Watts (acoustic bass), Mike Mondesir (electric bass), Stuart Hall (electric guitar, violin, lap steel, banjo), Martin France (drums), Thebe Lipare (percussion)
1994 Autumn Fires (and Green Shoots) JMT Solo piano
1995 Winter Truce (and Homes Blaze) JMT With Eddie Parker (flute, bass flute), Iain Ballamy (soprano sax, alto sax, tenor sax), Steve Buckley (soprano sax, alto sax, tin whistle), Mark Lockheart (tenor sax, clarinet), Barak Schmool (tenor sax, piccolo), Julian Argüelles (soprano sax, baritone sax), Sid Gauld and Chris Batchelor (trumpet), David Laurence (French horn), Roland Bates (trombone), Richard Henry (bass trombone), Sarah Waterhouse (tuba), Mike Mondesir (electric bass), Stuart Hall (guitar, violin, banjo), Martin France (drums, percussion), Christine Tobin (vocals)
1995* Good Evening...Here Is the News Decca/Argo
1997 Like Life Storyville With the Danish Radio Jazz Orchestra and others
1998 Quiet Nights Screwgun With Iain Ballamy (sax, harmonica), Josefine Cronholm (vocals, Tibetan bells), Mike Mondesir (bass), Martin France (drums, percussion)
2003 You Live and Learn...(Apparently) Lost Marble With Iain Ballamy (tenor sax), Chris Batchelor (trumpet), Josefine Lindstrand (bells, vocals), Deirdre Cooper (cello), Nic Pendlebury (viola), Charles Mutter and Ian Humphries (violin), Mike Mondesir (bass, vocals), Martin France (drums, percussion); David Sanborn (alto sax), Jim Mullen (guitar), Laurence Cottle (bass), Barak Schmool (percussion) added on one track each
2008* Spring Is Here (Shall We Dance?) Lost Marble With 19-piece band
2008–09 Beloved Bird Lost Marble Trio, with Petter Eldh (bass), Peter Bruun (drums)
2011 Confirmation Lost Marble Most tracks trio, with Petter Eldh (bass), Peter Bruun (drums); some tracks quartet, with Ashley Slater (vocals) added
2016 The Study of Touch ECM Trio, with Petter Eldh (bass), Peter Bruun (drums)
2017 Saluting Sgt. Pepper Edition With the Frankfurt Radio Big Band
2020 Tenacity Lost Marble Trio, with Petter Eldh (bass), Peter Bruun (drums)

As sideman

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With Loose Tubes

  • Loose Tubes (1985)
  • Delightful Precipice (1986)
  • Open Letter (1988)
  • Dancing on Frith Street (recorded live 1990) (2010)
  • Säd Afrika (recorded live 1990) (2012)

With Billy Jenkins

With First House

With Bill Bruford's Earthworks

With Iain Ballamy

With Tim Berne's Caos Totale

With Anouar Brahem

With Sidsel Endresen

  • So I Write (1990)
  • Exile (1993)

With Julian Argüelles

  • Skull View (1997)
  • Escapade (1999)

With others

  • Dudu PukwanaLife in Bracknell and Willisau (1983)
  • Tim Whitehead's Borderline – English People (1983)
  • Dudu Pukwana – Zila '86 (1986)
  • Social Systems – Research (1987)
  • The Dedication OrchestraSpirits Rejoice (1992)
  • Hank RobertsLittle Motor People (JMT, 1993)
  • Christy DoranPlay the music of Jimi Hendrix (1994)
  • Harry Beckett – Bates plays piano on song: 'Les Jardins du Casino' – Les Jardins du Casino (1995), Maxine (2010)
  • Michael GibbsBig Music (ACT, 1996)
  • Bendik Hofseth – Colours (1997)
  • Søren Nørbo Trio – Debates (2005)
  • Marius NesetGolden XPlosion (2011)

References

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Further reading

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Django Bates is a British jazz composer, pianist, multi-instrumentalist, bandleader, and educator known for his innovative and eclectic style that blends jazz with classical, folk, and world music influences, as well as for his central role in the 1980s British jazz renaissance as a founder of the influential big band Loose Tubes. Born in Beckenham, Kent, England, Bates grew up in a musically diverse household and became largely self-taught, briefly studying at institutions such as the Centre for Young Musicians and Morley College before leaving the Royal College of Music after two weeks. He rose to prominence in the 1980s through Loose Tubes (1983–1990), a democratic collective that marked a key moment in British jazz revival, performing at major venues including the Proms at the Royal Albert Hall, and he also played in Bill Bruford’s Earthworks from 1986 to 1994. Bates has since led his own groups including Human Chain and Delightful Precipice, while producing acclaimed albums such as Belovèd Bird (2009), Confirmation (2011), The Study of Touch (2017), and Tenacity (2021, recognized as one of DownBeat magazine’s best albums of the year). His commissioned works span orchestral pieces, concertos, and collaborations with ensembles such as the Dutch Metropole Orchestra, Britten Sinfonia, Brodsky Quartet, and artists including Evelyn Glennie and Joanna MacGregor. In 1997 he received the Jazzpar Prize, often regarded as the “Nobel Prize of Jazz.” Bates has held academic positions as professor at the Rhythmic Music Conservatory in Copenhagen (from 2005) and, since 2011, at the Hochschule der Künste Bern in Switzerland, where he is based.

Early life

Childhood and family background

Django Bates was born Leon Django Bates on 2 October 1960 in Beckenham, Kent, England. He grew up in a house near New Beckenham Station in a suburban street described as being full of bank managers, reflecting a middle-class environment. His parents were Frances and Ralf Bates, and he has a sister named Paddy. His father was a collector of jazz, Romanian, and African folk music who played a wide range of recorded music at home from various genres including classical, jazz, dixieland, African, and Romanian folk. When he was three and a half years old, Bates and his family undertook an adventurous tour of Europe, traveling by motorbike and sidecar through France, Austria, Italy, Romania, and Yugoslavia.

Education and early musical training

Bates attended Sedgehill School. During this period, he pursued formal musical instruction at the Centre for Young Musicians in London from 1971 to 1977, where he studied trumpet, piano, and violin. From 1977 to 1978, he attended Morley College, where his teacher Dave Smith introduced him to contemporary classical music. He subsequently enrolled at the Royal College of Music to study composition but left after two weeks.

Music career

Early bands and Loose Tubes

Django Bates founded his small ensemble Human Chain in 1979, initially as a duo with percussionist Steve Argüelles, providing an outlet for his early compositional and performance experiments. In the early 1980s, he gained significant professional experience playing with Dudu Pukwana's Zila, joining the band for European tours and contributing to the live album Life in Bracknell & Willisau (1983), his first recording. During this period he also performed with Tim Whitehead's Borderline, appearing on their album English People (1983), and with Ken Stubbs's First House, recording their ECM debut in 1986 and a follow-up released in 1990. Bates rose to prominence in the 1980s as a central figure in Loose Tubes, the innovative large jazz orchestra he joined in 1983 when it formed as a rehearsal workshop under Graham Collier before evolving into a leaderless collective of around 21 musicians. As one of the band's principal composers and keyboardists, he helped shape its distinctive anarchic yet sophisticated sound, with Loose Tubes releasing their self-titled debut in 1985, followed by Delightful Precipice (1986) and Open Letter (1988), and earning acclaim for performances including the 1987 BBC Proms at the Royal Albert Hall. The ensemble remained active until 1990. In parallel with Loose Tubes, Bates joined Bill Bruford's Earthworks in 1986, contributing keyboards to the drummer's progressive jazz-rock project and touring and recording with the group through the late 1980s. Human Chain continued intermittently as a smaller-group outlet amid these larger commitments.

Leadership of large ensembles

Django Bates has led a series of ambitious large ensembles since the early 1990s, showcasing his distinctive compositional voice through expansive jazz orchestras and interdisciplinary projects. In 1991 he formed Delightful Precipice, a 19-piece jazz orchestra that built directly on the collective energy of Loose Tubes while establishing his own identity as a bandleader. The group produced a quartet of notable albums in the 1990s: Summer Fruits (and Unrest) in 1993, Autumn Fires (and Green Shoots) in 1994, Winter Truce (and Homes Blaze) in 1995, and Quiet Nights in 1998, the last of which emerged from his receipt of the 1997 Jazzpar Prize and included collaborations with ensembles such as the Danish Radio Jazz Orchestra. Earlier, Bates assembled the Powder Room Collapse Orchestra, which recorded the album Music for The Third Policeman. In 1999 he created Circus Umbilicus, a musical circus show that integrated his writing with theatrical spectacle. He later led the 19-piece band stoRMChaser—featuring musicians including Josefine Lindstrand, Marius Neset, Petter Eldh, and Anton Eger—for the project Spring Is Here (Shall We Dance?), released in 2008.

Trio and small-group projects

In the 2000s and 2010s, Django Bates focused on intimate small-group settings, most prominently through the Belovèd trio he co-founded with bassist Petter Eldh and drummer Peter Bruun. The ensemble emphasized collaborative improvisation and fresh approaches to jazz repertoire, with Bates serving as the primary composer and leader. Their debut recording, Belovèd Bird (2009), paid homage to Charlie Parker through inventive reinterpretations of his compositions. The trio followed with Confirmation (2011), which expanded on their shared language by blending original material with selected standards, occasionally incorporating guest vocals for added texture. The group's third album, The Study of Touch (2017), marked their debut on ECM Records and further refined their interplay, featuring largely original pieces alongside reimagined classics and highlighting the trio's nuanced, exploratory dynamic. These smaller ensembles allowed Bates to pursue more personal and immediate musical dialogues distinct from his large-ensemble work.

Composing and commissions

Concert and large-scale works

Django Bates has created several significant commissioned works for concert settings and large ensembles, extending his improvisational jazz roots into orchestral and classical formats. These pieces often feature innovative instrumentation and conceptual freedom, reflecting his boundary-crossing approach. "My Dream Kitchen" was composed for percussionist Evelyn Glennie, employing unconventional kitchen objects as instruments, including tuned plates and bowls, cooking timers, a cheese grater, roasting tins with corrugated bottoms, a rolling pin, a pedal bin, and 20 palette knives. The score appears conventional but incorporates actual cooking during performance, with Glennie specifying that any prepared food must include chocolate. "A Fine Frenzy" was commissioned by the Shobhana Jeyasingh Dance Company, integrating music with dance in a large-scale collaborative format. "What It's Like to Be Alive" is a piano concerto written for Joanna MacGregor, who premiered it with the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra in November 1996 at Liverpool Philharmonic Hall. Bates developed the piece over six years, organizing ideas on a washing line strung across his room to allow unrestricted exploration under its open title. MacGregor highlighted its heavy chords and counterpoint reminiscent of Ives, a ragtime parody with honky-tonk elements deliberately out of kilter, and a central extended section akin to a cadenza, all conveying wit on the surface but darkness beneath like Satie. "2000 Years Beyond UNDO" is a concerto for electric keyboard, premiered at the Barbican Centre's millennium festival in 2000. As the inaugural artistic director of the FuseLeeds contemporary music festival in 2004, Bates oversaw initiatives that included commissioning Jonny Greenwood's "Smear," an ambient work for the London Sinfonietta featuring ondes martenot and sumptuous microtonal textures.

Theatre collaborations

Django Bates has made substantial contributions to theatre as a composer, most prominently through his extended collaboration with director Lucy Bailey. Their partnership has spanned multiple productions, where Bates provided original music to enhance the dramatic narratives. Key works from this collaboration include Gobbledegook for the Gogmagogs, Baby Doll (staged at Birmingham Rep, the National Theatre, and the Albery Theatre), Stairs to the Roof (Chichester Festival Theatre), The Postman Always Rings Twice (West Yorkshire Playhouse and Albery Theatre), and Titus Andronicus (Shakespeare's Globe). In Titus Andronicus, Bates's score was noted for its unconventional approach, complementing the production's intense staging. Bates has also composed music for other theatre directors, including Gregory Doran's As You Like It for the Royal Shakespeare Company and Campbell Graham's Out There!

Film and television contributions

Django Bates' contributions to film are limited but include his work as composer on the short film You Can Run (2005), directed by Lucy Bailey. He provided the original music score for the project, which was written by Neil Monaghan and features cinematography by David Katznelson. This collaboration with Bailey marked a transition of their working relationship from theatre to screen media. No additional major scoring credits for film or television projects have been verified in primary industry sources such as IMDb, indicating this remains his principal documented involvement in screen composition. Django Bates has held several key teaching positions in jazz and rhythmic music at international conservatories and programmes. In July 2005, he was appointed Professor of Rhythmic Music at the Rhythmic Music Conservatory (RMC) in Copenhagen, Denmark, a role he maintained until 2011. In 2010, Bates was appointed visiting professor of jazz at the Royal Academy of Music in London. In September 2011, he assumed the position of Professor of Jazz at the Hochschule der Künste Bern (HKB) in Switzerland, where he remains active, teaching piano, composition, rhythm, trans-disciplinary projects, and leading ensembles such as the Bern Art Ensemble at BA and MA levels. His academic roles have contributed to the development of contemporary jazz education in Europe.

Awards and honours

Major recognitions

Django Bates has earned widespread acclaim in the jazz world through several prestigious awards and honours that highlight his innovative compositions and performances. The Wire magazine voted him Best UK Jazz Composer in 1987 and again in 1990. In 2005, he received a Fellowship from Leeds College of Music. He was awarded the Jazzpar Prize in 1997, widely regarded as a leading international honour in jazz. In 2008, Bates was nominated for the PRS New Music Award for his proposed work Pedal Tones. In 2014, he won the British Composers Award for Contemporary Jazz Composition for his work The Study of Touch. More recently, he received The Ivors Jazz Award in 2019, presented by The Ivors Academy in recognition of his significant contributions to British jazz.

Discography

Albums as leader or co-leader

Django Bates has led or co-led a diverse array of albums across his career, frequently showcasing his innovative compositions through small groups, large ensembles, and collaborative projects. His early recordings featured the duo Human Chain, with the self-titled Human Chain in 1986 and Cashin' In in 1987. In 1990, he issued Music for The Third Policeman, a project tied to his compositional work. The 1990s marked a prolific period with a series of albums exploring thematic and seasonal motifs, including Summer Fruits (and Unrest) in 1993, Autumn Fires (and Green Shoots) in 1994, Winter Truce (and Homes Blaze) in 1995, and Good Evening...Here Is the News in 1995. Like Life followed in 1998, recorded in collaboration with the Danish Radio Jazz Orchestra. Subsequent releases included Quiet Nights in 1998 and You Live and Learn...(Apparently) in 2003. In 2008, Bates released Spring Is Here (Shall We Dance?), followed by his work with the trio Belovèd (featuring Petter Eldh and Peter Bruun), which produced Belovèd Bird (2008–09), Confirmation (2011), and The Study of Touch (2017). He revisited large-ensemble formats with Saluting Sgt. Pepper in 2017, performed with the Frankfurt Radio Big Band. Belovèd later returned with Tenacity in 2020. These recordings highlight Bates' evolving approaches to composition, from intimate trio settings to ambitious orchestral arrangements.

Notable sideman appearances

Django Bates has appeared as a sideman on numerous influential jazz recordings, contributing his distinctive piano, keyboards, tenor horn, and compositional voice to a variety of ensembles and leaders. He was a central figure in the groundbreaking British big band Loose Tubes during its primary active period from 1984 to 1990, serving as pianist, composer, arranger, and tenor horn player while helping shape the group's eclectic, large-ensemble sound. Bates performed on their key studio albums Loose Tubes (1985), Delightful Precipice (1986), and Open Letter (1988). From 1986 to 1994, Bates co-founded and played keyboards and tenor horn in Bill Bruford's Earthworks, blending electronic and acoustic elements in a fusion-oriented quartet that also featured saxophonist Iain Ballamy. He contributed compositions and was a core member on the albums Earthworks (1987), Dig? (1989), and All Heaven Broke Loose (1991), as well as the live recording Stamping Ground (1994). Bates recorded with the quartet First House on two ECM albums, Cantilena and Eréndira, showcasing his piano and keyboards in a chamber-like setting alongside saxophonist Ken Stubbs. His collaborations extended to ECM projects with vocalist Sidsel Endresen on So I Write (1990) and Exile (1993), where he explored minimalist dynamics and text-based improvisation. Bates joined saxophonist Tim Berne's Caos Totale for the album Nice View (1994), adding keyboards and other contributions to the group's experimental sound. Later ECM appearances included piano work with oudist Anouar Brahem on Blue Maqams (2017), emphasizing subtle interplay and spacious textures in quartets featuring bassist Dave Holland and others.

References

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