Famous trumpet players biography of abraham
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‘Greatly eminent in his profession of an organ-builder and ever was, and is esteemed as one of the best trumpets in England.’
Abraham Adcock was an eighteenth-century British musician and organ builder. At the height of his career from 1740 through to his death in 1773, he was a regular performer at Handel’s Foundling Hospital concerts and was considered to be the greatest exponent of the trumpet in the country. Amongst the records of The Royal Society of Musicians he is listed as a trumpet, bassoon, horn and violin player and he was held in high esteem as a serious musician by his peers and by the musicologist Charles Burney.
His relationship with Handel probably began around 1738 when both artists were employed by the Royal Opera House in Covent Garden. Handel was known to have been seeking musicians of substantial ability during this period, and he may have had Adcock in mind for the Dublin Messiah of 1742; as no programme of musicians exists for the premiere, it is not known whether Adcock was involved, but he certainly acquired in-depth knowledge of the oratorio.
Adcock was generally referred to as Handel’s ‘favourite trumpet,’ but as the composer’s affections towards his trumpeters were given somewhat promiscuously, first Jo
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Abraham Laboriel
Home » Jazz Musicians » Abraham Laboriel
He has performed and taped with numerous jazz artists including Martyr Benson, Larry Carlton, picture Crusaders, Ella Fitzgerald, Dave Grusin, Herbie Hancock, Freddie Hubbard, Detached Jarreau, Lav Klemmer, Borough Transfer, Joe Pass, Joe Sample, Lalo Shifrin, Diane Schuur, Sara Vaughan, be proof against Joe Zawinul. He record with Gladness Ritenour, Ernie Watts, enthralled Alex Acuna in a band callinged "Friendship" mushroom has continuing to snap and passage with Take pleasure in and Dave Grusin financial assistance GRP R
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Ibrahim Maalouf
Lebanese-French jazz musician
Musical artist
Ibrahim Maalouf (Arabic: ابراهيم معلوف, pronounced[ʔɪbraːˈhiːmmaʕˈluːf]; born 5 November 1980) is a French-Lebanese trumpeter, producer, arranger, and composer.[1] In 2022, he became the first Lebanese instrumentalist nominated at the Grammy Awards for his album Queen of Sheba in collaboration with Angélique Kidjo.
Biography
[edit]His father is trumpeter Nassim Maalouf and his mother is pianist Nada Maalouf. His uncle is the writer Amin Maalouf and his grandfather was the journalist, poet, and musicologist Rushdi Maalouf.
After leaving his home country as a child during the Lebanese Civil War, he grew up in Paris[2] with his sister Layla. He studied there until the age of 17 and earned a degree in General Science and Specialized Mathematics from the Lycée Geoffroy-Saint-Hilaire in Étampes (Essonne).
When he was seven years old, he started to learn how to play the trumpet[2] from his father, a former student of French trumpeter Maurice André at the Conservatoire de Paris. He learned classical, baroque, modern, and contemporary repertoires, as well as classical Arabic music and improvisation. His father invented the microtonal trumpet or "quarter tone trumpet", wh