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Bess Bonnier

One of the most important jazz musicians in Detroit, Bess Bonnier is one of the Detroit jazz artists who chose to stay at home. Some of her contemporary jazz friends - Barry Harris, Tommy Flanagan, Thad Jones and Sir Roland Hanna - left Detroit and found success in the wider world of jazz. Miss Bonnier has found her own success in the Motor City with a wide array of activities that has made her name synonymous with fine jazz piano. Detroit-born, Miss Bonnier (pronounced BONN-yer) came of age in the same 1950's Detroit that produced a veritable "Who's Who of Jazz," including Harris, Flanagan, the Jones brothers, Sir Roland Hanna, and so many others. After graduating from Northern High School with Tommy Flanagan, she studied Music and English at Wayne State University before striking off on her own as a pianist. She first gained a measure of national attention in the late 1950's when Argo Records released her album entitled Theme for the Tall One. That record, long out of print, has become a collector's item. n the 1960's, Miss Bonnier was the house pianist in the Jack Brokensha quartet in the latter's Detroit nightclub. During the 1970's she served as artist-in-residence at Detroit's prestigious Cass Technical High School and her video "Jazz History" course, created for Wayne State University's Adult Education Program, has been used over and over again since it was originally recorded. From 1977 to 1980, she was the artistic coordinator for the Detroit Institute of Art's popular Jazz at the Institute series which featured both local Detroiters and internationally-known jazz musicians. Her performance in the series have been broadcast over the National Public Radio jazz stations. Since 1982, Miss Bonnier, who has been called a "great jazz pianist" by Leonard Feather and a "jazz player of great feeling" by Ira Gitler, has been the regular solo pianist in the Detroit Institute of Art's Crystal Gallery (a re- creation of New York's Plaza Hotel Palm Court) each Sunday afternoon. By popular demand, her artistry sets the mood for the After Glow at the DIA's fabulous Elizabethan Wassail Feast each December. In addition to a non-stop schedule of private engagements and teaching workshops, Miss Bonnier has performed in several Montreux Detroit Jazz Festivals, played in the 1982 Kool Jazz Festival in Purchase, New York, and was one of the featured pianists, along with Barry Harris, Sir Roland Hanna and Tommy Flanagan, in the New York City program called the "Detroit Piano Summit"


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Obituary

Grosse Pointe resident Bess Bonnier, 83, died Thursday, Oct. 6, 2011.

Grosse Pointe resident Bess Bonnier, 83, died Thursday, Oct. 6, 2011.

Source: JazzStage Productions

Bess Bonnier began playing piano at an early age, taking her first professional job with a big band at 13. She joined the Detroit Federation of Musicians in 1946. Her career spanned more than six decades and included regular appearances with Jack Brokensha at his club in Detroit's New Center area, and at countless other clubs and hotels, concert and festival venues, private parties, events and local resorts. Highlights of her stage career include a performance in 1981 at the ...

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Obituary

Two Losses to Detroit Jazz: Bess Bonnier and Brad Felt

Two Losses to Detroit Jazz: Bess Bonnier and Brad Felt

Source: JazzStage Productions

One of the great and unusual combinations of jazz voices hereabouts was the big-horn/little- horn thing that Steve Wood|| and {{Brad Felt had going at least since the '80s, with Steve on sax (especially the relatively small soprano) and Brad on tuba or euphonium, romping through tunes like “Second Balcony Jump," a Jerry Valentine composition from the Billy Eckstine band. (Steve and Brad liked to give credit where it was due like that.) Steve sent out an e-mail Thursday afternoon ...

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