Jazz pianist
Gerald Clayton is an adept improviser and composer with a bent toward post-bop and straight-ahead jazz. In addition to
Clayton's own recordings and those with his father, bassist
John Clayton, he has helped to shape a number of high-profile jazz projects including albums by
Roberta Gambarini,
Diana Krall,
Roy Hargrove, and
Ambrose Akinmusire. His own trio dates, including 2009's
Two Shade and 2011's
Bond: The Paris Sessions (with bassist
Joe Sanders and drummer
Justin Brown), established his reputation as both a composer and arranger of great skill. The latter album earned a Grammy nomination, as did 2013's
Life Forum, which found him expanding his group with saxophonists
Logan Richardson and
Dayna Stephens,
Akinmusire on trumpet, and vocalists
Gretchen Parlato and
Sachal Vasandani. A larger group also helmed 2017's charting
Tributary Tales, featuring saxophonist
Ben Wendel, percussionist
Henry Cole, and
Carl Hancock Rux joining
Vasandani on overtone singing. More Grammy nominations arrived with 2019's
Happening: Live at the Village Vanguard. His debut for Blue Note Records, the live album paved the way for his first studio date for the storied label, 2022's
Bells on Sand, which featured appearances by his father,
John Clayton, saxophonist
Charles Lloyd, and others.
The son of bassist/bandleader
John Clayton,
Gerald was born in the Netherlands but grew up in Los Angeles, California. Interested in music from a young age, he began studying piano at age seven and eventually graduated from the Los Angeles County High School for the Arts, after which he earned a music degree from the USC Thornton School of Music. In 2006,
Clayton took second place in the prestigious
Thelonious Monk Institute of Jazz Piano Competition. Based out of New York City,
Clayton has performed with a bevy of name musicians including trumpeter
Roy Hargrove and pianist/vocalist
Diana Krall, as well as his father's
Clayton-Hamilton Jazz Orchestra and the
Clayton Brothers trio. He has received several Grammy nods, including a nomination for Best Instrumental Composition for the song "Battle Circle" on the
Clayton Brothers' album New Song and Dance.
Clayton released his debut solo album,
Two-Shade, in 2009, which garnered a Grammy nomination for Best Improvised Jazz Solo for his take on
Cole Porter's "All of You." In 2011 he delivered his sophomore album,
Bond: The Paris Sessions, which hit number 12 on the traditional jazz chart and picked up a Grammy nomination for Best Jazz Instrumental Album. That same year, he appeared on trumpeter
Ambrose Akinmusire's critically lauded sophomore album,
When the Heart Emerges Glistening.
Akinmusire then returned the favor, appearing on
Clayton's third solo album and first for Concord Records,
Life Forum. An ambitious all-star recording, the album cracked the Top Ten of the jazz chart and earned
Clayton yet another Grammy Award nomination for Best Jazz Instrumental Album.
In 2017 he made the move to Motéma Music for
Tributary Tales, which featured contributions from saxophonists
Logan Richardson,
Ben Wendel, and
Dayna Stephens, as well as vocalist
Sachal Vasandani and poets
Carl Hancock Rux and Aja Monet. Away from his solo work, the pianist has stayed busy making appearances on albums by
Terri Lyne Carrington,
Peter Bernstein,
Avishai Cohen, and others.
In the spring of 2019,
Clayton signed to Blue Note Records and celebrated by playing six nights at the storied Village Vanguard with a quintet that included his longtime collaborators
Sanders,
Brown, and
Richardson, with
Walter Smith III on tenor saxophone. Those performances were compiled for
Happening: Live at the Village Vanguard. Released during the summer of 2020 it picked up two Grammy nominations, including Best Improvised Jazz Solo for "Celia." The pianist's second Blue Note album and first studio date for the label,
Bells on Sand, arrived in April 2022 and featured contributions from his father
John Clayton, as well as saxophonist
Charles Lloyd, Portuguese vocalist MARO, and drummer
Justin Brown. ~ Matt Collar