Contact: Laura Hancock / University Advancement / lhancock@eou.edu
Source: John Winn / Director, The Community School of the Arts / csa@eou.edu
Friday, October 6, 2006
LA GRANDE, Oregon — George Winston, best known for his melodic rural folk piano style, has made no secret of the debt his playing owes to the musicians of New Orleans. Winston will appear in concert at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in Mckenzie Theatre. The show is part of the Community Concert Series sponsored by the Community School of the Arts at EOU.

Photo/Dancing Cat Productions
George Winston will perform at EOU Oct. 11
at 7:30 p.m. in McKenzie Theatre.
Tickets are $20 general, $10 students and are available at Sunflower Books or online at www.eou.edu/csa. Tickets will also be sold at the door at $5 higher.
"Gulf Coast Blues & Impressions A Hurricane Relief Benefit " was inspired by Winston's desire to support the Gulf Coast after the recent hurricane-related devastation. This region has a mystique all its own and he has been to it many times, from Corpus Christi, to Galveston, to Lake Charles, to New Orleans, to Gulfport/Biloxi/Bay St. Louis, to Mobile, to Pensacola, to Panama City, to the Tampa Bay, to Ft. Myers, to Naples.
Winston cites the pianists of New Orleans as the biggest influences on his own piano playing. He will donate all of his artist royalties from the album to organizations involved in helping those on the Gulf Coast and in New Orleans to rebuild and return and organizations such as Common Ground (www.commongroundrelief.org), ACORN (www.acorn.org) and others. In unity with the artist, RCA Records will be donating the bulk of its net profits to benefit musicians in the New Orleans area.
"Gulf Coast Blues & Impressions" features six Winston compositions inspired by the Gulf Coast as well as pieces written by or influenced by six of the greatest New Orleans pianists: Henry Butler, James Booker, Professor Longhair, Dr. John, Allen Toussaint and Jon Cleary.
"Much of my work on the piano is studying the musical languages of the great New Orleans R&B pianists," Winston says. "Especially Professor Longhair, the founder of the New Orleans R&B piano scene in the late 1940s who inspired so many; James Booker, whose language most influences the way I think of playing; and Henry Butler, who is the pianist I have studied the most since 1985. I'm also indebted to New Orleans pianists Dr. John, Jon Cleary and the eminent composer/pianist Allen Toussaint."
James Booker's Pixie lives up to its title with a treatment that features syncopated phrases in the right hand and Booker¹s trademark left hand with a moving bass line and partial chords.
"James Booker was the first one to take R&B, soul music, the Blues, New Orleans music and more, to make a solo piano style which encompassed seven different ways of playing," Winston says. Henry Butler's complex composition "The Breaks" is full of dramatic chords and flurries.
Says Winston: "Henry is the pianist I have been studying the most since I first heard him in 1985. In my view he has taken R&B piano to its pinnacle, and he is the only pianist I know of who plays the deep Blues and R&B and mainstream jazz.You need to see him live to fully experience his
music."
Please bring a canned food item to the concert for the Salvation Army food bank.
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