Saxophonist
Eric Person was born in St. Louis, MO, the son of local musician and businessman Thomas Person. A child prodigy, he began playing saxophone at age seven and had gained his first orchestral experience by the time he was in the fifth grade. While at Normandy Junior and Senior high schools, he continued his musical studies and eventually got his first opportunities to play jazz. As a member of the Norsemen, the top jazz band at Normandy High,
Person gained popularity and was active in almost every facet of music life at the school. Concert and symphonic orchestras, the marching bands and classical solo work kept
Person motivated to attend school. Those years at Normandy were also successful in developing his love of many types of musical expression. When not playing in school ensembles, he played in funk bands and was a member of the James Matthews Quartet. They worked many of the hot jazz clubs of the day around St. Louis such as the Barbary Coast and The Place of Pleasure. For a teenager, to be able to cut his teeth on serious jazz, and the experience was invaluable. "We were playing all the hippest songs in the jazz canon such as "Isotope," "Inner Urge," "Passion Dance," "Red Clay," and songs by
John Coltrane,
Horace Silver, and
Miles Davis. It was a blast," says
Person.
It was during this phase of his musical education that
Person developed his love of composition. He was first encouraged to compose by the legendary St. Louis saxophonist/composer, Jimmy Sharrod. In 1993,
Person wrote "Sharrod" as a tribute to him. It was later included on the
World Saxophone Quartet's Moving Right Along. Several more of
Person's compositions, including "Great Expectations" with its challenging 5/4 time section and "Mr. More or Less," which teeters between 4/4 and 3/4 time signatures, also came from this early writing period. They were both recorded on Arrival and
More Tales to Tell, two of
Person's critically acclaimed recordings.
In 1979 while at Normandy High,
Person enrolled and studied at the St. Louis Conservatory of Music. In 1982, he moved to New York City to continue his career as a jazz musician. There he met such jazz greats as
Woody Shaw,
Art Blakey,
Gary Bartz, and
Jackie McLean, among others. His big break came in 1983 during his association with the
John Hicks Big Band when he received the call from the legendary drummer
Chico Hamilton. That fruitful collaboration lasted through five recordings and many national and international tours. "In music, Chico is open to it all and that's inspiring."
In 1984,
Person joined
Ronald Shannon Jackson's
Decoding Society.
Shannon's angular melodies, cosmic sonorities, and ferocious energy influenced the development of so many areas of
Person's playing and later gave him his first opportunities to record and travel. "I did my first tours of the USA and Europe with Shannon and from the first moment to the last I was challenged."
In 1987,
Person joined
Kelvyn Bell's band called
Kelvynator. The band had a funky, exotic, driving beat that was intoxicating to listeners and resulted in their CD release
Refunkanation. In that same year,
Person formed one of the first saxophone/tabla duos with Bob Coke called Sources. Coke played tabla, Indian sarod, acoustic guitar, and assorted percussion instruments. The focus of the band was new directions and sounds, a new energy for the age. They toured France and the Northeastern part of the United States and received rave reviews for their innovations. From 1987 to 1993,
Person toured internationally with Sources,
Kelvynator,
Shannon Jackson. and
Chico Hamilton.
When bassist
Dave Holland asked
Person to join his band in the fall of 1993, this was by far his most challenging musical experience.
Holland's use of odd meters, free time, and modality was just the ticket Person was looking for. They released Dream of the Elders, which highlighted a sound that was light, energetic, and ethereal.
Person's association with
Holland opened the doors to an even more fruitful period that continued throughout
Person's with the
World Saxophone Quartet. For the next four years, he worked
Holland,
WSQ,
Chico Hamilton, and also debuted his first CDs for Soul Note Records: Arrival,
Prophecy, and
More Tales to Tell. "I was writing like crazy in this period and I love it when my pen is hot!"
These first recordings as a leader received great critical acclaim.
Person placed in the Top Ten of Downbeat Magazine's Readers Poll for four years in a row from 1992 through 1995 for soprano sax. All the while, he was constantly pushing the musical envelope to include more songwriting, arranging, and producing, in addition to developing his own sound. Toward that end, he began assembling various musical combos -- looking for just the right sound that would become the sound of Meta-Four. Early incarnations of the band featuring bassist
Carlos Henderson, pianists
Michael Cain and Darryl Grant, drummers
E.J. Strickland, Mark Johnson, and
Gene Jackson ,and guitarist
Cary DeNigris have given way to the current lineup that consists of pianist
John Esposito, bassist
Kenny Davis, and drummer Pete O'Brian.
Person's s fourth CD as the leader of Meta-Four, Extra Pressure was released in the fall of 1999 to critical acclaim which firmly planted Person's skills as a leader on the national and international jazz scenes. 2003 featured a new release titled Live at Big Sur, his fifth CD as the leader of Meta-Four. For the past 20 years,
Person has made New York his home base and has been active performing and recording with a wide circle of musicians including
Ofra Haza,
the Allman Brothers,
Vernon Reid & Living Colour,
Woody Shaw,
Onaje Allen Gumbs, and the New York City Symphony, among others. ~ Paula Edelstein