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Gregory Charles Royal
Gregory Charles Royal is a jazz trombonist and founder of The BeBop Channel
About Me
From Wikipedia
Gregory Charles Royal, also known as Chuck Royal (born October 10, 1961 in Greensboro, North Carolina), is an
American musician, trombonist, composer, writer, co-founder of The BeBop Channel.[1], founder of the New York Jazz
Film Festival, a judge on America's Hot Musician.[2][3] and the artistic director of the American Youth Symphony (AYS)
in Washington, D.C.[4]
Early life and education
Royal is the son of biochemist and microbiologist husband and wife team Gladys W. Royal and George C. Royal, and
grew up in Washington, DC. His brother Christopher Royal is also a jazz musician.[5] Gregory received training on the
trombone in the DC Youth Orchestra Program.[6] Royal also studied at the Duke Ellington School of the Arts.[7][8]
As a student at Howard University,[9] he received the 1982 DownBeat Magazine Student Music Award for Jazz Vocal
Group: Graduate College Outstanding Performance in the Jazz Instrumental Soloist Category.[10] He graduated from
Howard University with a Master of Music in Jazz Studies.[4]
Career
As a 10th grader, Royal caught the attention of drummer Art Blakey during Blakey's appearance at Blues Alley in
Washington, DC.[11] Blakey invited Royal to live with him in the summer of 1978 at his 45th Street Manhattan
apartment and join his band The Jazz Messengers.[12] Royal's association with Blakey was an indoctrination in the
New York jazz scene and led to important engagements with the Collective Black Artist's (CBA) Ensemble.
Royal played with the Duke Ellington Orchestra (1989–99), Art Blakey and The Jazz Messengers,[13] Slide Hampton
and his World of Trombones[14] and Howard University Jazz Ensemble.[15] He has appeared onstage as a trombonist
with the Broadway shows Five Guys Named Moe[16] and Jelly's Last Jam.[17]
Royal released the jazz album Dream Come True on the GCR Music Company label in 1979. It includes Clarence Seay
on bass, Jeff Corbett on drums, Warren Taylor on flute and saxophone, and Geri Allen on piano.[18]
The Dreamer, written by Royal and performed by Sarah Loverock, was certified Gold by the Canadian Recording
Industry Association CRIA on November 4, 2009.[19]
Royal has written, acted and performed in the musical theatre production It's a Hardbop Life.[20][21] An early version
of the show, performed in New York in 2001 and La Crosse in 2002, used a college basketball star seeking inspiration
in jazz as the main character.[22] It's a Hardbop Life appeared as a special event at the New York JVC Jazz Festival in
2004.[21] Revised versions have been presented at a number of venues including Mead Theatre Lab at Flashpoint in
Washington, DC in 2010[20] and the Producers Club in New York in 2011.[20][21][23] The most recent version of the
show connects a hip-hop artist to his jazz-era father. Royal has stated that The mission of the (program) is to
encourage the young hip-hop generation that instrumental music is integral and important today and not an ancient
tradition of past decades.[21] Royal is vocal about his concern for the future of music. He advocates that artistic
elites desiring to save jazz and classical music should try to connect with (and educate) a younger hip-hop and MTV
audience.[24] Royal was commissioned by the DC Commission for the Arts and Humanities to produce the
documentary To Rap or Play on the subject.[25]
Royal has also written and appeared in the Off-Broadway production God Doesn't Mean You Get To Live Forever,
presented in March 2012 at the Baruch Performing Arts Center,[26] and in 2015 at the Mt. Lebanon Baptist Church
Theatre.[27]
Royal wrote and starred in the short film World's Not for Me, in which he plays a jazz musician who awakens from a
near 30 year coma to find a world he no longer recognizes musically, culturally or financially. The film won the Harlem
Spotlight Best Narrative Short Award at the Harlem International Film Festival in September, 2016.[28]
Most recently, Royal co-founded The BeBop Channel, the first TV network focused solely on Jazz culture.[29] Royal is
also founder of the New York Jazz Film Festival.[30]
My Jazz Story
I love jazz because... I was first exposed to jazz... I met [musician name]... The best show I ever attended was... The first jazz record I bought was... My advice to new listeners... Or whatever else you have in mind.