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Tony Campise

Tony Campise
Birth name Anthony Sebastian Campise
Born (1943-01-22)January 22, 1943
Houston, Texas
Origin Houston, Texas
Died March 7, 2010(2010-03-07) (aged 67)
Austin, Texas
Genres Jazz
Occupation(s) Freelance jazz artist
Instruments Saxophones, flutes, clarinets, oboe (Multireedist)
Years active 1965–2009
Associated acts Stan Kenton Orchestra, Danish Radio Big Band

Anthony Sebastian "Tony" Campise (January 22, 1943 – March 7, 2010) was an American jazz musician. He primarily played tenor saxophone and flute though he was a multireedist who also used clarinet and oboe. He was known for his exceptional technique and fluid style on all reed instruments; Campise is most recognized for his association with the Stan Kenton Orchestra in the mid-1970s.

Campise was born and raised in Houston, Texas and early on had studied with Hal Tennyson at the age of 13 on alto sax and clarinet. He also studied with the famed Woody Herman jazz sideman Jerry Coker learning improvisation when he was 18, Campise also studied briefly with Lee Konitz. He studied flute and oboe extensively with Byron and Barbara Hester in the 1960s; most notably he studied flute with Julius Baker in New York during the late 1960s in hopes of becoming a classical flutist.

His formal musical education came in his college years while attending Sam Houston State University, the University of Houston, Houston Baptist College, and Monterey Peninsula College during the late 1960s and early 1970s.

Campise's saxophone style was eloquent, warm, and personal on ballads while muscular on up tempo jazz pieces (and sometimes quite frenetic); he was a devotee of the "Texas Tenor" jazz styles of Arnett Cobb and Illinois Jacquet. The more modern and Avante Garde influence he demonstrates on the recordings with Stan Kenton show how influenced he was by saxophonist Eric Dolphy. He was a native of Houston, Texas and developed a musical style and career there but eventually settled to Austin, Texas in 1984.


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