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WILLIAM CEPEDA
Composer-Producer-Trombonist
BIOGRAPHY
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Widely recognized and accomplished, William Cepeda has traveled the world
performing with many great jazz and Latin artists. His music career began
at age ten when William played percussion with his friends in his hometown,
Loiza, Puerto Rico. As a teenager, he picked up the trombone, which soon
became his instrument of choice and began playing professionally in Puerto
Rico. Cepeda is a member of the world-renowned Cepeda family, which is
credited with keeping Afro-Puerto Rican folkloric music alive.
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As a composer, Cepeda has developed an innovative and unique
style
inspired by many influences and personal experiences. Cepeda's music
reflects, among many other elements, traditional folkloric Afro-Puerto
Rican rhythms and sounds. In 1997, he was selected by American
Composers Orchestra as one of today's most important and influential
Puerto Rican composers. His talent has been recognized with
commissions, grants and awards from Meet the Composer, American
Composers Forum, the Association of Hispanic Arts' Latino Arts
Advancement Program and American Composers Orchestra. In 2002 Cepeda
was honored with a Meet the Composer New Residencies Award to be a
resident composer in Puerto Rico for three years. During this
residency, Cepeda will work with three host institutions - the
Conservatory of Music in Puerto Rico, Agua, Sol y Sereno (a theatre
organization) and the Department of Education - to create new works that
celebrate local culture and community. He is also responsible for
teaching, organizing cultural events and performing multi-disciplinary
contemporary pieces.
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As a trombonist, Cepeda's performance history in jazz could not
have begun any better. In 1989, when Dizzy Gillespie brought his United
Nation Orchestra to Puerto Rico, William was hired to play trombone. The
chance encounter turned into a lasting relationship, and shortly thereafter
William was invited to tour Europe with Dizzy's group. Cepeda then moved
to New York, and continued working with the band. Dizzy also asked the
young trombonist to join his world tour with the great South African singer,
Miriam Makeba. Paquito D'Rivera now carries on Dizzy's legacy leading
the United Nation Orchestra and William remains a member of this outstanding
Grammy award-winning group. Other jazz artists Cepeda has toured with
include: Lester Bowie and his Brass Fantasy, David Murray, Bobby Watson,
and Slide Hampton & The JazzMasters. Equally well-known in the Latin
music scene, Cepeda has worked with legendary figures such as Oscar De
Leon, the five-time Grammy award winner Eddie Palmieri, vocalist Celia
Cruz and Tito Puente. When he is not touring, Cepeda is busy in the recording
studio. As a recording artist, he appears on over 100 recordings as well
as jingles and movie soundtracks.
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As a producer, Cepeda has produced many CDs, including his own
solo-productions on the Blue Jackel label: Grupo Afro Boricua ("Bombazo"),
a recording of Afro-Puerto Rican percussion and voice; William Cepeda
Afro-Rican Jazz ("My Roots and Beyond"), a jazz recording of
original compositions and arrangements; and the 2002 Latin Grammy nominee
William Cepeda Afro-Rican Jazz ("Branching Out") a blend of
Caribbean, jazz and word music.
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Cepeda's formal musical training includes two Bachelor of Arts degrees
- one in jazz composition and arranging from Berklee College of Music
in Boston and one in music education from Conservatory of Music in Puerto
Rico. Cepeda was awarded a full scholarship to the Aaron Copland School
of Music at Queens College in New York, where he received a Masters degree
in Jazz performance, and studied composition and improvisation with Donald
Byrd, Jimmy Heath and Slide Hampton. Cepeda has taught at the Brooklyn
Conservatory of Music, and the Conservatory of Music of Puerto Rico. He
also conducts seminars and workshops as well as private lessons.
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