As a youngster growing up in Atlantic City,
Stan Hope and his friends would climb the roof of the building across from the club where
the Count Basie Orchestra was playing. Listening to
Basie's band which boasted, among others,
Lester Young,
Buck Clayton, and
Freddie Green,
Hope begin thinking that this was what he wanted to do. He was pushed over the line when his aunt gave him records of
Erroll Garner playing "Be Anything" and
Garner's composition "Pastels" for his birthday. Both these tunes appear on
Hope's album
Pastels, made for Savant Records in 1998.
Hope has little formal piano education, teaching himself on a piano his mother bought when he was 10 years old. He played professionally for 10 years before taking some lessons in order to learn to read. With a career starting in 1949 (at his first gig, he played guitar), and spanning 50 years,
Hope has played with many of the giants who habituated East Coast jazz venues.
Coleman Hawkins,
Hank Mobley,
Lorez Alexandria,
Johnny Hartman, and
Hank Crawford were just few of the performers he's shared the stage with.
Hope has played and continues to play at major jazz venues in New York City, including Birdland, the Village Vanguard, and the Blue Note. Since 1985 or so,
Hope has occupied the piano chair for vocalist
Etta Jones and tenor saxophonist
Houston Person, and frequently recorded with them. His album
Pastels is his second as leader, having cut an album for Mainstream Records in 1972. With a solid, reliable style shaped by
Erroll Garner and
Bud Powell as well as by the many variegated jazz performers he has worked with,
Stan Hope is about to enter his seventh decade as a working jazz pianist. ~ Dave Nathan