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Casey Abrams

From his youngest days, Casey Abrams’ musical imagination became focused on trying to play every one of the music teacher Mrs. Purdy’s collection of exotic world instruments at elementary school, McKenzie School in Wilmette, Illinois had in their collection.

While in Wilmette, he took piano lessons, and while he couldn’t read or write music very well, he composed a song called Jamaican Beach.  His piano teacher Gloria Yun, was so impressed by his music that she wrote it down and had it published in a publication for piano teachers and played it at his first recital. Casey’s first public singing performance was at a karaoke café in Wilmette, where he bravely got up to sing the Bee Gees hit Stayin’ Alive to a packed audience of college students, many of whom got up to dance and to raucously accompany him on stage. Casey was elated, and a star was born!   

Later, when he was in the 5th Grade, Casey and his family moved to Idyllwild, California, a small mountain town full of artists and a renowned High School for the arts, the Idyllwild Arts Academy, where his father Ira taught Film and Spanish, and his mother Pam organized screenwriting workshops and retreats.    In Idyllwild, Casey adopted his first puppy, Rockee, a Golden Retriever mix without a tail, and began to Photoshop himself into his own pop/rock garage band, DOGSTUBB — all the while, absorbing healthy doses of his parents’ eclectic library of cassette tapes and vinyl, including folk, roots, baroque,, classic rock, and especially classical jazz.  

Like any active middle schooler, Casey hated to practice piano for his piano teacher Robin Rabins, but when he saw her big upright bass in the room, he accepted her inspired bribe: a successful hour- long piano lesson in exchange for a ten-minute lesson on the bass.

After a few months, she felt there wasn’t much more she could teach Casey, and that he needed to meet up with Marshall Hawkins, the jazz bass maestro of Idyllwild, who had toured with Miles Davis and Herbie Hancock, and who taught at the Idyllwild Arts Academy.    

At 13, Casey began a fruitful mentorship with professional bassist Hawkins, and was accepted at the acclaimed jazz program to study with Hawkins at Idyllwild Arts Academy for his high school years.   Besides studying his beloved double bass, he also became adept at keyboard, electric bass, guitar, drums, accordion, sitar and again diving into a diverse selection of world instruments.

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Interview

Casey Abrams: New American Idol Contestant is a Messenger with a Jazz Message

Casey Abrams: New American Idol Contestant is a Messenger with a Jazz Message

Source: Jazz (Jazzers Jazzing) by Carl L. Hager

Before last Wednesday, I was like more than a few music fans in my instinctive dislike of the American Idol phenomenon. Cheap and showy, lowest-common-denominator entertainment, it was created in the same terrifying cauldron that Fox's 1989 Cops voyeurism and MTV's 1992 Real World success originally inspired, and which has since produced Survivor, Big Brother, Fear Factor, America's Next Top Model, etc., in addition to permutations like Glee, in a long term strategic response to the 1988 WGA strike, whose ...

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