Musical artist
American jazz trumpeter and composer (1983–2022)
Jaimie "Breezy" Branch (June 17, 1983 – August 22, 2022) was an American jazz trumpeter and composer.
[1]
[2]
[3]
[4]
Life and career
Branch was born in
Huntington, New York , on June 17, 1983. She started playing trumpet at age nine.
[5] At age 14, she moved to
Wilmette , a suburb of Chicago.
[5] She attended the
New England Conservatory of Music .
[5]
After graduating, Branch moved back to Chicago, working as a musician, organizer, and sound engineer on the local music scene, including with
Jason Ajemian (on The Art of Dying , 2006),
Keefe Jackson 's Project Project (on Just Like This , 2007),
Tim Daisy 's New Fracture Quartet (on 1000 Lights , 2008),
Anton Hatwich , and
Ken Vandermark . She performed in Chicago and New York with her trio Princess, Princess (with bassist Toby Summerfield and drummer
Frank Rosaly ) and in trios with Tim Daisy and Daniel Levin,
[6] Matt Schneider and
Jason Adasiewicz , and Chris Velkommen and Sam Weinberg. Together with
Jason Stein ,
Jeb Bishop , and
Jason Roebke , she founded the band Block and Tackle.[
citation needed ]
In 2012 Branch moved to
Baltimore , where she worked toward a master's degree in Jazz performance from
Towson University .
[7] At this time she also founded the record label Pionic Records, which released the music of her group Bomb Shelter. After two years, she dropped out of Towson, and six months later she moved to New York to seek treatment for heroin addiction.
[7]
In the spring of 2015 Branch moved to Brooklyn, where she began working with
Fred Lonberg-Holm ,
Mike Pride ,
Luke Stewart ,
Jason Nazary , Tcheser Holmes, and many more.
[2]
[8] In addition, she performed on albums with the independent rock groups Never Enough Hope,
Local H and
The Atlas Moth . As of 2016, she worked in a quartet with
Chad Taylor (drums), Jason Ajemian (bass) and
Tomeka Reid (cello),
[9] as well as with
Mike Pride ,
Shayna Dulberger and
Weasel Walter , and with
Yoni Kretzmer and
Tobey Cederberg . In 2017 she released her debut solo album, Fly or Die , with Tomeka Reid, Jason Ajemian, Chad Taylor,
Matt Schneider ,
Ben LaMar Gay , and Josh Berman.
[3]
Fly or Die was chosen as one of NPR Music's Top 50 Albums of 2017.
[10]
Branch cited
Don Cherry ,
Axel Dörner ,
Booker Little ,
Miles Davis , and
Evan Parker among her musical influences.
[11]
[12]
Branch died at home in the
Red Hook section of
Brooklyn on August 22, 2022, at the age of 39, from an accidental drug overdose.
[13]
[10]
[14]
Discography
Albums as bandleader
With Anteloper
Duo with
Jason Nazary
[16]
[17]
Collaborations
Keefe Jackson's Project Project (with
Dave Rempis ,
Guillermo Gregorio , Anton Hatwich, Jason Stein, James Falzone,
Frank Rosaly , Josh Berman,
Jeb Bishop , Nick Broste, Marc Unternährer), Just Like This (
Delmark Records , 2007)
New Fracture Quartet (with Nate McBride, Tim Daisy, Dave Miller), 1,000 Lights (
Multikulti Project , 2008)
Predella Group (with Nate McBride,
Fred Lonberg-Holm , Tim Daisy,
Jeff Parker ,
Ken Vandermark ,
Jeb Bishop ), Strade D ' Acqua / Roads of Water (Multikulti, 2010)
Bullet Hell (with Jakob Kart and Theodore Representerer), Smart Bombs (Pionic, 2013)
Beyond All Things (with Chris Welcome and others), Live at the Bushwick Series (gaucimusic, 2018)
Party Knüllers X Jaimie Branch, Live at la Casa (2019)
Ig Henneman , Jaimie Branch &
Anne La Berge , Dropping Stuff and Other Folk Songs (
Relative Pitch , 2019)
An Unruly Manifesto (
James Brandon Lewis and others), An Unruly Manifesto (Relative Pitch, 2019)
Medicine Singers , Medicine Singers (
Stone Tapes &
Joyful Noise , 2022)
Dave Gisler Trio (with Jaimie Branch), Zurich Concert (
Intakt , 2020)
Dave Gisler Trio (with Jaimie Branch and
David Murray ), See You Out There (Intakt, 2022)
References
^ Margasak, Peter (2007-10-23).
"Branching out" . ChicagoReader.com. Retrieved 2017-11-15 .
^
a
b
c Brady, Shaun (2017-10-26).
"Jaimie Branch: Chicago State of Mind" . JazzTimes.com. Retrieved 2017-11-15 .
^
a
b
"Jaimie Branch: one of the most thrilling new voices of the New York avant-garde: Video" . JazzBluesNews.space. 2017-10-27. Archived from
the original on 2017-11-16. Retrieved 2017-11-15 .
^ Chinen, Nate (2022-08-24).
"Lauded trumpeter and composer Jaimie Branch dies at 39" . NPR. Retrieved 2022-08-24 .
^
a
b
c Moreno, Nereida (22 October 2019).
"Chicago Trumpeter Jaimie Branch Delivers A Political Message On 'FLY or DIE II' " . NPR . Retrieved 23 August 2022 .
^
"Event note 2008" . Archived from
the original on 2017-11-16. Retrieved 2017-11-15 .
^
a
b Margasak, Peter (26 April 2017).
"Trumpeter Jaimie Branch finally spreads her wings" . Chicago Reader . Retrieved 23 August 2022 .
^
Short profile of Experimental sound studio
Archived 2016-07-19 at the
Wayback Machine
^
Event notice on the site of Tomeka Reid
^
a
b Chinen, Nate.
"Lauded trumpeter and composer jaimie branch dies at 39" . npr.org . Retrieved August 24, 2022 .
^
"Intervju i Jazz Akkurat Nå (2016)" . Archived from
the original on 2016-08-11. Retrieved 2017-11-15 .
^ Snapes, Laura (24 August 2022).
"Jaimie Branch, jazz composer and trumpeter, dies aged 39" .
The Guardian . Retrieved 2022-08-25 .
^ Brodsky, Rachel (23 August 2022).
"Jaimie Branch, Free Jazz-Trumpeter & Composer, Dies At 39" . Stereogum . Retrieved 23 August 2022 .
^
a
b Edgar, Hannah (August 23, 2023).
"Jazz trumpeter jaimie branch died last year. Her final album, out now, soars onward" .
Chicago Tribune . Retrieved 2023-08-27 .
^
a
b
c
d
e
f
"International Anthem Recording Co" .
Bandcamp . Retrieved 2020-07-01 .
^
Margasak, Peter (2018-04-20).
"As Anteloper, Jaimie Branch and Jason Nazary push in a bruising, electronics-kissed direction" .
Chicago Reader . Retrieved 2019-02-26 .
^
"Jason Nazary" . Discography .
Discogs.com . Retrieved 2019-02-26 .
^
"Pink Dolphins, by Anteloper" . International Anthem . Retrieved 2022-12-29 .
External links
International National Artists