Bio

Benjamin Boone is a  saxophonist, composer, and Professor of Music at California State University Fresno. He has served as a U.S. Fulbright Scholar to Ireland’s Irish World Academy of Music and Dance (2022-23), The University of Ghana (2017-18), and as a U.S. Fulbright Senior Specialist to the Republic of Moldova (2005). He grew up in the small textile town of Statesville, North Carolina, the youngest of five sons. “My brothers pursued history, literature, art, and biology, so I have always gravitated towards interdisciplinary projects,” he says. “I like to make artistic statements that address culturally relevant topics in a germane manner.”

A respected composer in both new music and jazz circles, his Origin Records release The Poetry of Jazz, a collaboration with the late U.S. Poet Laureate and Pulitzer Prize recipient Philip Levine, was recognized as a milestone poetry/music project immediately upon its release in 2018. Praised in leading musical and literary publications, featured on NPR’s “All Things Considered,” voted the #3 “Best Album of 2018” in DownBeat Magazine’s annual Readers Poll`, and a Staff Pick in The Paris Review, The Poetry of Jazz established Boone as one of the most captivating and compelling voices among contemporary artists exploring the intersections between poetry and music.

The Poetry of Jazz was deemed of “historic importance” (UK Vibe), and “a master class in the combining of different art forms… an essay in complementarity” (All About Jazz). DownBeat Magazine noted, “despite the star turns [guests Branford Marsalis, Chris Potter, Greg Osby and Tom Harrell], Boone not only distinguishes himself with uncluttered, affecting orchestrations, but by passionately balancing intellect and emotion.” All About Jazz echoed, “these guest artists might be the attraction for the jazz listener, and Levine for the poetry fan, but that would miss the extraordinary music both written and performed by Boone.”

While in Ghana as a Fulbright Scholar (2017-18), Boone co-founded the new music ensemble The New Global Ensemble, comprised of traditional Ghanaian xylophonist Aaron Bebbe Sukura, traditional Ghanaian singer and drummer Baffour Awuah Kyerematen, and long-time collaborator German electro-acoustic violinist Stefan Poetzsch. Boone also collaborated with The Ghana Jazz Collective on the acclaimed 2020 album Joy, which has been called “dramatic and explicit” (Downbeat); “jubilant and propulsive,” (JazzWeek) and “one of the best releases so far this year” (London’s JazzFM). This album was awarded #5 “Best Album of 2020” and Boone was awarded #3 “Best Alto Saxophonist of 2020”in the 42nd Annual JazzStation Awards for the album. “Ghana’s music and culture transformed me musically and personally,” says Boone. “Music is part of the fabric of life and everyone participates and has a role. It’s a beautifully communal way of thinking and being.”

The Poets are Gathering, also released in 2020 on Origin Records, was featured in DownBeat Magazine‘s HOTBOX, which noted, “One of the more compelling poetry/jazz outings I’ve ever come across…wondrous.” It has been described as “an absolute must – a vector for the reflection of injustice” (Belgium’s Jazz Halo), “worthy of praise” (Black Grooves), and All About Jazz writes: “The union of poetry and jazz has never been so powerfully presented…perhaps best defines the iconic year of 2020.

Jazz All-Stars Ambrose Akinmusire, Greg Osby, Kenny Werner, Ben Monder, Ari Hoenig, and Corcoran Holt (among many others) partnered with Boone to accompany renowned poets Tyhimba Jess, Edward Hirsch, Kimiko Hahn, Patrick Sylvain, Faylita Hicks, and T.R. Hummer on Boone’s most recent exploration of the intersection between music and poetry, Caught in the Rhythm, to be released on Origin Records September 2023. This recording includes a tribute to Art Pepper, a reconning with racism, a dog eating a Nietzsche book, a pondering of teh role of poetry, an Emily Dickinson poem, and classic jazz, contemporary jazz, funk, rap, and everything in-between.

Benjamin Boone / Tamela Ryatt

As a classical composer, Boone’s compositions have been performed in 38 countries, appear on 30 recordings, and have been the subject of several National NPR and Bayerischer Rundfunk (German Radio) stories. The past several years Boone has focused on writing music that addresses relevant cultural and environmental issues, music that aspires to speak to listeners on a level that touches their soul and instigates a greater sense of empathy and understanding. His ethnohistorical opera Ascencion, about Native American cultural genocide, co-written with Helene Joesph Weill, was featured on NPR’s “Weekend Edition Saturday,” and his orchestral work Waterless Music: A Drought Symphony, premiered at Los Angeles’ Disney Hall, was featured on NPR’s “Here and Now.” His compositions are published by Latham Music, Lorenz, Alry Publications, Sentinel Dome, Eighth Note Publications (Canada), GPG Music, and VR Music.

Benjamin Boone / Tamela Ryatt

Boone’s music has received awards and honors from the International Society of Contemporary Music, the Olympia International Prize for Composition, Billboard Magazine, the National Association of Composers, ASCAP Morton Gould Award, Meet the Composer/Southeastern Arts Federation, the National Flute Association, the Southeastern Composers’ League, the Delius Foundation, and Boston University, among others. He has received fellowships from the Fulbright Foundation, The U.S. Department of State,  the United States Information Service, Fundación Valparaíso (Spain), the Aspen Music Festival Center for Compositional Studies/Advanced Master Class Program, a U.S. Sub-Saharan Africa Regional Travel Grant, A*deVantgarde Festival für Nueue Musik, Munich/Office of the American Consulate, The American Music Center, New Music USA, the American Composer’s Forum, California State University, the North Carolina Arts Council Composition Fellowship, and the Tennessee Arts Commission Composition Fellowship. He was inducted into Central California’s “Valley Music Hall of Fame” in 2023.

Benjamin Boone / Mark Crosse

Boone has presented guest lectures and master classes at the Academy of Music (Moldova), the University of Magdeburg(Germany), the University of Limerick (Ireland), the University of Erlangen (Germany), Charles University (the Czech Republic), the University of Cape Town (South Africa), Addis Ababa University (Ethiopia), University of Ghana, Kumasi University (Ghana), and the Buenos Aires Festival of Saxophone, among many others in the U.S. such as Northwestern. He has been in residence at festivals and colonies such as Fundación Valparaíso (Spain), May-in-Miami, June in Buffalo, the Bowling Green New Music Festival, the Atlantic Center for the Arts, and the Aspen Music Festival, and he has given presentations at conferences such as the Society of Composers (national and regional), the International Society of Jazz Arrangers and Composers, National Flute Association, North American Saxophone Alliance (national and regional), National Association of Composers, World Saxophone Congress, Society for New Music, Conference on American Culture, Music Education Association, International Trumpet Guild, among others.

At California State University Fresno, Boone has received  the University’s “Provost Award for Excellence in Teaching,” the “Provost Award for Outstanding Achievement in Research, Scholarship and Creative Activities,” the “University Faculty Spirit of Service Award” for his design of a program hailed nationally as a model of Service-Learning Best Practices, the “Best in Show Award” for his commitment to academic excellence, and the University’s most prestigious award, the “Presidents Award of  Excellence” for his “integrity, leadership, and commitment to the university.”  Prior to his appointment at Fresno State, he taught at the University of Tennessee, where he received the “Chancellor’s Award for Excellence in Teaching.”

Boone received his two undergraduate degrees in Music Theory and Applied Music/Jazz Saxophone from The University of Tennessee, his Masters of Music in Composition from Boston University (where he was awarded their composition prize two consecutive years), Post-Graduate Studies in Jazz at Manhattan School of Music (while he was completing his Thesis at Boston University), and his Doctor of Musical Arts degree in Composition from the University of South Carolina. His primary teachers have included Bernard Rands, Charles Fussell, Jerry Coker, John A. Lennon, and Gordon “Dick” Goodwin. He currently lives in Fresno, California with his wife, a journalist and writer.

09/2023