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Pianist, composer, and bandleader Lee Shaw is a youthful octogenarian who has mo

re energy, passion, and intellectual curiosity than many people a fraction of he


r age. She has had her own swinging, acoustic jazz piano trio for more than 40 y
ears, during which time she performed in numerous clubs, concerts, and festivals
in the United States and Europe. Her latest CD/DVD, Live in Graz, brings us fa
ce to face with this genius of jazz who is finally receiving her due.
Lee Shaw has laser-like musical intensity, true mastery of the piano, and her to
nal palette is huge. Owen McNally of The Hartford Courant notes that Lee Shaw i
s, a modest, irresistible person of immodest, irrepressible talent. She comes ac
ross both in the interview and at the keyboard as an artist who had a virtually
religious calling for jazz, come what may. Bill Milkowski, in Jazz Times, observ
es , "her harmonic language is expansive, her time impeccable, her touch divine.
"
Born in Cushing, Oklahoma in 1926, she grew up in Ada,Oklahoma. Shaw learned t
he "American Songbook" tunes when they were new. She had a voracious appetite fo
r music of all kinds: "I loved music, and I wanted to carry it with me wherever
I went. That's why I was really happy when tape recorders came along!" She grad
uated from the Oklahoma college for Women and earned her Master s Degree in piano
from the American Conservatory of Music in Chicago, but the lure of jazz came st
rong, and soon she was playing in clubs all over the city.
It was in Chicago that she met drummer Stan Shaw, and they formed a piano trio.
Shortly after their marriage in 1962, the couple moved to Puerto Rico, and whil
e there Lee studied with Jesu Maria Sanroma at Conservatorio de Música de Puerto
Rico. She credits her club and concert playing during this period for the influ
ence Latin music has had on her composing and playing. A year later the couple
moved to New York, playing their first gig at The Embers. Other city engagements
included the Village Vanguard, the Half Note, Minton's Playhouse and other clu
bs in Harlem.
The trio also performed at the Apollo theatre, the benefit for the Dr. Martin Lu
ther King march on Washington.
Over the years, Shaw studied with Oscar Peterson, taught piano to John Medeski,
and worked with countless jazz luminaries including Dexter Gordon, Thad Jones, C
hico Hamilton, Pepper Adams, Zoot Simms, Al Cohn, Richard Davis, Slam Stewart, M
ajor Holly, and Eddie Jones, among others. Bandleaders such as Lionel Hampton a
sked her to join their groups, but she turned down these offers in order to focu
s on the trio. In 1993, she was inducted into the Oklahoma Hall of Fame.
Eventually Lee and Stan moved to Albany, New York as they continued to play with
big name musicians near home and on the road. In the mid 1990s, Lee and bassis
t Rich Syracuse began playing as a duo because of Stan's increasing disability.
Jeff (Siege) Siegel joined as drummer after Stan's death in 2001, and a new inc
arnation of the trio formed.
The Lee Shaw Trio has appeared at the Mary Lou Williams Jazz Festival at the Ken
nedy Center in Washington, DC. New York state performances include the Lake Geor
ge Jazz Festival, Hyde Museum, Saugerties Pro Musica, Adirondack Community Colle
ge, Wall Street Jazz Festival, North Pointe Cultural Arts Center, Spencertown Ac
ademy, Rensselaerville Institute, Schenectady Museum, the concert series A Place
for Jazz, SUNY Albany, and their CD release concert in the new Massry Center fo
r the Arts. In Oklahoma, the trio has played at East Central University, Oklaho
ma Central University, and the University of Science and Arts. In 2006, Lee Shaw
and bassist Rich Syracuse played a concert at Steinway Hall in San Jose, Califo
rnia. Lee has also appeared on Marian McPartland s Piano Jazz program, and NPR ha
iled her, along with McPartland, and the late Mary Lou Williams, as one of jazz s p
remier pianists.
In 2007 the trio embarked on their three country tour in Europe, where they perf
ormed concerts in Austria, Switzerland, and Germany. One of the Austrian concer
ts was recorded by the Austrian Broadcast Company and became the centerpiece of
their 2008 release "Live in Graz" CD/DVD. The German concert, held at the art g
allery and concert hall, World of Basses in Reutlingen, prompted owner and music
al instrument dealer Tobias Festl to organize the Lee Shaw Jazz Festival for Sep
tember of 2008. This unique venue draws together an eclectic mix of visual arts
and jazz, and in performance allows for a cultural exchange of musicians from a
round the world. Guest appearances at the Lee Shaw Jazz Festival included noted
European musicians Nils Wogram, Torsten Goodes, Julian Wasserfuhr, Cecile Vendr
y, and Harry Sokol. The trio will be returning to Europe in May of 2009 for mor
e concerts.
Since 1983, Lee has been adjunct faculty at the College of Saint Rose in Albany,
New York, and also instructs privately. Lee is an ardently passionate teacher.
"So many jazz musicians have been so generous to me in the past. The only way
I can truly thank them is to pass on to my students what I learned from them. "
During the Lee Shaw Jazz Festival in Reutlingen, Germany this last September, Ar
min Knaver noted in a profile of Lee that playing before the public is not a stre
ssor for her, but a wellspring of pure energy. Lee Shaw herself adds As long as i
t s so much fun for me, I ll keep on.

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