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Pamela Wise began composing music and playing the piano by
ear at the age of 5. Her father Robert C. Wise who was a bassist
decided to start her on piano lessons when she was nine. After
studying the piano basics, Pamela began playing for her church
choir which was directed by her father. While in high school,
Pamela formed her own R&B group called the Ohio Movement which
performed throughout the Midwest and East Coast. After 8 years
with the Ohio Movement, Pamela decided to leave the band.
"I always wanted to be a jazz composer and pianist, it was
definitely in my blood after growing up listening to it."
When her brother Craig finished college and moved to Cleveland,
Ohio, in 1978 he encouraged Pamela to move with him and she
did. While in Cleveland, Pamela attended Cuyahoga Community
College and further studied music. "Shortly after Craig received
an employment opportunity from a prominent bank in Detroit,
MI and we moved to Detroit in December 1979. I worked with
several R&B groups in the Detroit area, but I still wanted
to play jazz."
Pamela bumped into Wendell Harrison in a recording studio
while taping some of her compositions. Wendell (who later
became her husband) became interested in her music and started
featuring her compositions on his recordings as well as featuring
her in his ensembles. Pamela was blessed with the opportunity
to be performing and composing for artists such as Freddie
Hubbard, Woody Shaw, Leon Thomas and Eddie Harris (to name
a few).
In 1989, Pamela started forming her own ensemble with saxophonist
James Carter, trumpeter Dwight Adams, bassist Jaribu Shahid,
drummer Ali Muhammad and percussionist Andrew Daniels. Then
Pamela received two Creative Artist Grant awards from the
Arts Foundation of Michigan to write compositions demonstrating
the link between Afro Cuban and jazz music. In addition, she
was still performing with her ensemble and freelancing with
other groups. One of her most favorite freelance project in
1994 was co-writing the title track on violinist Regina Carter’s
CD I WANNA TALK TO YOU. Regina, Pamela and cellist Akua Dixon
Turre took some of the finest music to airwaves at WDET FM
public radio on the Kim Heron Show.
In 1994, Wendell Harrison introduced Pamela to world renowned
percussionist Jerry Gonzalez and produced her first compact
disc SONGO FESTIVIDAD. Pamela's new CD "Negre Con Leche, Black
with Cream" is available on Amazon.com.
Reviews
"Wise, an assured bop pianist with a Tyneresque (as in McCoy
Tyner) touch, composes strong melodies and braces them with
the simmering rhythms of the Afro-Cuban tradition."
Dan Ouellette-Downbeat Magazine
"Far from Havana, the Latin jazz movement has taken root in
such unlikely places as Detroit, where pianist/composer Pamela
Wise displays a thorough understanding of the idiom on SONGO
FESTIVIDAD. With special guest Jerry Gonzalez on congas and
Wendell Harrison, Detroit’s resident jazz guru on clarinet,
Wise has fashioned a hybrid that capitalizes on authentically
performed Afro-Cuban and Brazilian rhythms while allowing
Harrison and other soloists to flex their avant-garde oriented
improvisational style. The inclusion of Gonzalez was a good
choice: his trumpet work on the Wise composition HASTA MANANA
is one of the albums’ high points, and makes the album worth
seeking out."
Mark Holston - JAZZIZ Magazine
"Pamela Wise’s SONGO FESTIVIDAD is a perfect example of the
current trends in Latin jazz. She has written some innovative
songs that draw from the influence of Tito Rodriguez and Machito,
while the playing of all concerned has the energy of the Fania
All Stars."
Leonard J. Bukowski-Cadance Magazine
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