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Vince Mendoza

A versatile, multi Grammy-winning arranger and composer, Vince Mendoza is known for his sophisticated arrangements, which touch upon post-bop jazz, classical, and pop with crossover sensibilities musically and culturally. Emerging in the 1980s, he has garnered acclaim for his work with other artists, supplying arrangements for Joni Mitchell, Charlie Haden, and others. Mendoza spent many years as chief conductor with the Dutch Metropole Orkest, issuing his own albums as well as collaborating with Elvis Costello,John Scofield. He's recorded several acclaimed albums under as a leader, including 1999's Epiphany, and 2011's Nights on Earth. He conducted the Czech National Symphony Orchestra for 2021's Freedom Over Everything, and returned to the Metropole Orkest for 2023's Olympians. Born in 1961 in Norwalk, Connecticut, Mendoza started playing classical guitar and piano at age six. However, inspired by his love of jazz and soul music, he switched to trumpet in high school and eventually enrolled at Ohio State University. There, he studied composition, learned the drums and bass, and played in the various jazz and concert ensembles. Mendoza then went on to finish his graduate studies in composition at the University of Southern California. Basing himself in Los Angeles, he found work in the many studios there, writing for television and movies. It was during this period that he also began making connections in the pop and jazz scenes, arranging on albums by drummer Peter Erskine, bassist Charlie Haden, singer/songwriter Rickie Lee Jones, and others. Mendoza quickly developed a reputation as an expert in blending acoustic and electric instruments, a sound he showcased on his 1990 debut, Start Here, which featured saxophonist Joe Lovano and guitarists John Scofield and Ralph Towner. More similarly eclectic crossover albums followed, including 1991's Instructions Inside with Lovano, saxophonist Bob Mintzer, and trumpeter Randy Brecker; 1993's Sketches with saxophonist David Liebman, drummer Erskine, and the WDR Big Band; and 1999's Epiphany, which featured the London Symphony Orchestra and a handful of jazz soloists, including Lovano, trumpeter Kenny Wheeler, and others. In the late '90s, Mendoza took on the role of chief conductor with the Dutch Metropole Orkest. For roughly the next 20 years, he split his time between working in Los Angeles and Europe, arranging for such diverse artists as Björk, Chris Botti, Joni Mitchell, and more. He also recorded a number of highly regarded albums with the Orkest, including 2006's My Flame Burns Blue with Elvis Costello, 2007's The Look of Love: Burt Bacharach Songbook with Trijntje Oosterhuis, and 2010's Fast City: A Tribute to Joe Zawinul. Also in 2010, the Orkest released the full-length 54 featuring John Scofield on guitar. The album earned Mendoza a Grammy Award for Best Instrumental Arrangement for the album's leadoff track, "Carlos." In 2011, he released the globally acclaimed solo album Nights on Earth, followed two years later by Perfect Vision: The Esquivel Sound, which marked the end of his tenure with Metropole Orkest. Following his departure from the Orkest, Mendoza returned to solo and session work, supplying arrangements for Andrea Bocelli, Madeleine Peyroux, Diana Krall, and many others. His own Homecoming arrived in 2017 found him collaborating on original material with the WDR Big Band. In 2019, he joined trumpeter Terell Stafford, saxophonist Dick Oatts, and the Temple University Studio Orchestra for the Grammy-nominated Constant Renaissance, that featured original pieces inspired by Philadelphia's rich jazz heritage. In 2020 he arranged and conducted the WDR Big Band in backing drummer/composer Antonio Sanchez on Channels Of Energy. In 2021, Mendoza released Freedom Over Everything in collaboration with the Czech National Symphony Orchestra and jazz soloists including Joshua Redman. The set offered a host of far ranging originals that meditated on the state of America in the wake of the 2016 election, the killing of George Floyd by police officers, the Black Lives Matter movement, and the pacifist, civil rights philosophy of Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. The album won acclaim internationally and sold exceptionally well. Mendoza reunited with Metropole Orkest for 2023's Olympians, performing originals he wrote for the orchestra over 28 years. They were joined on the recording by several soloists including saxophonists Chris Potter and David Binney, vocalists Cecile McLorin Salvant and Dianne Reeves, percussionist Alex Acuña, and guitarist /charango player Ramón Stagnaro.
© Matt Collar /TiVo

Discography

35 album(s) • Sorted by Bestseller

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