Bruce Forman’s guitar
style has been an important part of the international jazz scene
for more than two decades. He has been featured as leader as well
as sideman at most of the prestigious festivals and concert venues
throughout the world. His numerous recording and performing credits
include the likes of Bobby Hutcherson, Ray Brown, Dizzy Gillespie,
Freddie Hubbard, Stanley Turrentine, Joe Henderson, Barney Kessel,
and others. Known for bop-style phrasing and inventive harmonizations,
his ability to work in a variety of settings keeps him in constant
demand.
His devotion to sharing his knowledge—particularly
with children—has been a constant throughout his career. Having
taught since his late teens, he is keenly aware of the needs of
developing musicians and is personally connected to all of his students,
many of whom have moved on to successful careers as recording and
performing artists. He has served as ‘artist in residence’
at numerous music workshops worldwide, has conducted seminars in
conservatories and universities across four continents, is a Resource
Team member for the IAJE and a longstanding member of the Monterey
Jazz Festival Education Program.
In January 2000, he founded JazzMasters Workshop, a music-mentoring
program that is free to student-age musicians. Beginning in 2001,
JazzMasters achieved non-profit 501(c)(3) status and has operated
more than 600 workshops in venues throughout California, including
an entry-level performance program at The Boys & Girls Club
of Monterey County for at-risk children. In 2002, JazzMasters expanded
to the East Coast, with an after-school program at Clara H. Carlson
School in N.Y. Through JazzMasters Workshops’ auspices, many
of the world’s greatest touring and recording artists have
had the opportunity to inspire and interact with the upcoming generation.
In June 2003, the Jazz Journalist’s Association recognized
this work by bestowing an award for “Service To and Beyond
Jazz.”
Bruce Forman’s music publications
exemplify his passion for music and educating. The Jazz Guitarists
Handbook, (GSP Publications), is a critically acclaimed method book
that clarifies the concepts of jazz from a performance-based point
of view. Jazz Band Guitar, (Mel Bay Publications), is a no-nonsense
approach to the big band for guitarists of all levels. His video,
Jazz Guitar Soloing, (GSP), encompasses the important musical aspects
that make up an expressive and swinging solo.
In April 2003, his first published
fiction novel, Trust Me, was released by Lost Coast Press. The story
is a Faustian frolic, a guitarist’s personal odyssey through
jazz, mysticism and human folly. It has received rave reviews for
its portrayal of playing music and the jazz life.
He has thirteen recordings as leader,
the most recent being a self-produced issue entitled Dedication,
Bootleg Vol. I, a selection of compositions and arrangements that
reveal his personal acknowledgement of many of the musicians and
experiences that shaped his music. Among his numerous recordings
as sideman, Bruce was prominently featured on Ray Brown’s
Some of my best friends are Guitarists CD, released in 2002.
September 2003 commemorated
his 21st year at the Monterey Jazz Festival with a trio performance
with special guest Sherman Irby, and as a featured member of tribute
to the late Bill Berry.
JazzMasters
Workshop: a personal narrative
Jazz music is living legacy, one with a profound tradition and a
limitless future. It represents the continuum of the American experience.
I grew increasingly frustrated that many of our treasures and greatest
resources—the masters of past and current generations—have
left us and that their experience and knowledge weren’t fully
acknowledged or utilized.
As a young man, I was fortunate to
have been afforded the opportunity to interact with many great players,
to learn by playing with them and to grow though musical and personal
contact. This, I felt was sorely lacking in today’s experience.
I decided to stop complaining about it and to do something. I consider
that to be one of the pivotal moments of my life to date. I started
by finding a suitable site (one that was safe and easily accessible
for young players) and then put out the word out that I was there
through schools, private teachers and with coverage by local journalists.
I was adamant that these workshops
would be about playing and everyone would get to experience making
music with me firsthand, and that teaching—at least in the
classic sense—was only done in context of that moment’s
music. I was equally steadfast in my commitment to this being free
of charge to students, as I saw the music becoming overwhelmingly
populated by students who were rich in resources. Learning to play
music is not cheap, given the expenses of instruments, private instruction,
music camps, etc. It is my opinion that music—particularly
jazz—is a thread that ties all practitioners together and
affords the opportunity for all to relate and grow on a common level.
I asked for contributions
from friends and parents in order to pay for substitute mentors
when I needed to work on the road. This is what led to a fortuitous
moment. I met a fan, Mike Lyons, a guitar-playing Silicon Valley
Venture Capitalist. He felt that the JazzMasters Workshop model
was visionary and set up a meeting with Andy Rappaport. The upshot
being that they helped me get non-profit status and contributed
seed money to start the program on an expanded level.
To fully implement this vision and
to fulfill our mission I had to take a year off from touring and
to cut back or shelve many projects that I had invested much of
my time and creative energy. Why? Because this was too important.
I saw—and still see—my work with JazzMasters serving
a larger common good than any one person’s project. Through
JazzMasters Workshop, I am engaging the music community, assisting
young players, activating communities in regards to the arts and
culture and ultimately, doing my part for the future of jazz, a
music and art form which I have dedicated my life’s work.
Already, the sacrifice has been worth it. The rewards—seeing
young people enthused and progress, and mentors energized in a new
and productive way—have exceeded what I have given.
In our initial phase,
we focused on students who had outgrown or were not getting enough
input from their school programs. As we grew stronger as an organization,
and our roots in the communities we worked deepened, we uncovered
an even greater area of need: children at the youngest ages. Whether
or not there were programs in schools—an area that has become
increasingly challenged—we found that inspiring kids and instilling
them with the benefits and value of performance music was too compelling
an issue to ignore. We launched a Developmental Music Program at
the Boys & Girls Club in Seaside, CA, a place where children
could play instruments for the first time, could get guidance and
inspiration from enthusiastic professionals, people passionate about
their art. This program (run weekly like all the others) has grown
and expanded into many other regions and is a cost-effective way
to provide a connection for musicians of a given community and the
children who live there.
Our mission: Transforming
lives through mentoring and music is what we are all about. The
strength of our program is the positive effect it has on all who
are involved. The students, mentors—great people whose greatness
increases through their giving and sharing, families, schools, teachers,
and the community at large. JazzMasters represents a new approach,
based on the time-honored, time-proven mentoring model, one that
can expand and flourish throughout the world and serve the greater
good through the experience of jazz and music performance.