Updated: August 13, 2025
Born: June 4
David Janeway was born in Rochester, New York. He began studying classical piano at the age of six after moving to Detroit in 1960. Early influences included Harold McKinney, Marcus Belgrave, Bill Evans and Denny Zeitlin. After moving to New York City in 1978, Janeway studied with the late Albert Dailey for two years.
During this time he worked and recorded with Angel Canales and Orchestra Sabor and other Latin/Jazz artists such as Art Farmer, The Supremes, Michal Urbaniak, Spanky Wilson, David "Fathead" Newman, Jr. Cook, Sonny Fortune, Billy Hart, Tom Harrell, Danny Gottlieb, Louis Smith, Dakota Staton, Pete Yellin, Valery Ponomarev, Benny Golson, Harvie S and others.
He has performed at Mezzrow, Smalls, Zinc Bar, Birdland, Jazz Forum, Zanzibar, Visiones, Sonny's, Village Gate for the Salsa Meets Jazz series, J's, Sweet Basil, Sweet Rhythm, Cleopatra's Needle and other NYC clubs. Janeway performed at the NYC Salsa Festival at Madison Square Garden in 1980, the Detroit Jazz Festival along with other festivals and clubs throughout the US and Europe.
Janeway has recorded five trio albums. His first, “Excursion,” released in 2004 features Harvie S and Steve Davis and is comprised of both standards and originals. His second trio CD, “Secret Passages,” (New Direction, 2017) features Frank Tate on bass and Chuck Zeuren, drums and features a mix of originals and standard arrangements.
For the past several years Janeway can be heard with his current piano trio featuring Billy Hart and Cameron Brown and as a sideman with various artists such as Patience Higgins, Eliot Zigmund, Ray Blue, Tito Puente Jr., Marianne Solivan, Peter Brainin and others. This trio released their first CD, “Distant Voices” on Steeplechase Records (SCCD 33145) 9/15/21 and serves as a tribute to the many jazz pianists that have inspired and influenced Janeway throughout his career.
Janeway recorded “Inside Out”, (Timeless Records, SJP 402/1993) as a leader and features Sonny Fortune, Billy Hart, Chip Jackson and Valery Ponomarev. (See reviews).
Janeway created the Hastings Jazz Collective in 2008. Made up of friends/veteran NYC jazz musicians, Tim Armacost, Jay Azzolina, Harvie S and Ron Vincent, this working band is a composer’s workshop that represents the cutting edge of contemporary mainstream and latin/jazz. Their newly released CD, “Shadow Dances” (2019, New Direction Music), is available through Amazon, iTunes, CD Baby and youtube.
He created, directs and performs in “Hastings on Jazz”, a free summer jazz concert series held in Hastings on Hudson, NY each year. Recent performances include “Salsa Meets Jazz” with Bobby Sanabria and bands with Ray Blue, Tim Armacost, Harvie S, Eliot Zigmund, Marianne Solivan, Gary Smulyan, Vincent Herring, Freddie Hendrix, Valery Ponomarev, Peter Brainin and many others.
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David Janeway: Forward Motion

by Dan McClenaghan
New York City-based pianist David Janeway began his music journey studying classical music at age five. The move to the Big Apple happened in 1978, and became a permanent move in 1986. He has been a busy presence there for four decades, in various ensemble configurations. Still, he gravitates--especially on recordings--toward the piano trio, with Distant Voices (Steeple Chase, 2021), Interchange (Steeplechase, 2024) and now with Forward Motion, where he is joined by bassist Cameron Brown and drummer Billy Hart. ...
Continue ReadingPeter Hand: Blue Topaz

by Jack Bowers
Peter Hand has a hand in almost everything on Blue Topaz, playing masterful guitar, writing seven of the album's ten engaging numbers and arranging all of them. He also spliced together a pair of blue-chip ensembles for his first small-group recording after three well-received big-band albums, and invited his longtime friend--and legendary tenor saxophonist--Houston Person to sit in on two tracks. Person had also guested on one of the guitarist's big-band recordings, Out of Hand (2014). Hand's ...
Continue ReadingDavid Janeway: Interchange

by Dan McClenaghan
Unearthing and releasing old music--even sounds sourced from decades old tapes--has become common in jazz. Pianist Bill Evans (thank you. Zev Feldman) has enjoyed something of a twenty-first-century renaissance. Pianist Fred Hersch released @ The Village Vanguard (Palmetto Records, 2018), recorded in 1997; and 2021 saw the posthumous release from pianist Masabumi Kikuchi, Hanamichi (Red Hook), recorded in 2013. Pianist David Janeway has been on the scene since the late 70s; he offered up the marvelous Distant Voices ...
Continue ReadingDavid Janeway: Distant Voices

by Dan McClenaghan
In 2017 pianist David Janeway offered his Secret Passages, a trio outing featuring bassist Frank Tate and drummer Chuck Zeuren. He proves, in 2021, that he can change partners without losing an ounce of swing or even a shot glass of verve. It is Cameron Brown on bass this time out, with Billy Hart sitting in the drum chair. Both are serious, elevate-the-music guys, while Janeway continues with his sprightly cerebralism and crystalline-touch way of making music. Distant ...
Continue ReadingDavid Janeway: Hastings Jazz Collective/Shadow Dances

by Dan McClenaghan
Sail twenty miles up the Hudson River from New York City and you find Hastings-On-The-Hudson, a vibrant artists' colony situated on the river's shore. Among the town's artists you'll find jazz pianist David Janeway, a New York City transplant via Detroit, Michigan. The Hastings Jazz Collective is Janeway's brainchild. He presents the all-star group's debut with Shadow Dances. Though he claims the title musical director" of this contemporary mainstream jazz quintet, he also stresses the leaderless aspect" of the group's ...
Continue ReadingDavid Janeway Trio featuring Frank Tate and Chuck Zeuren: Secret Passages

by Dan McClenaghan
New York City jazz pianist David Janeway and his trio sound as if they're trying to be a force for good in the universe. Secret Passages rides a relentless traditional momentum, rolling along with a positive vibe under the influence of a big push on the refresh button. Oscar Peterson and Bud Powell operated this way, with desinctively different styles. The bass and drum team--Frank Tate and Chuck Zeuren, respectively--walk a joyful line between supportive and interactive in ...
Continue ReadingDavid Janeway Trio: Excursion

by Michael P. Gladstone
Pianist David Janeway, with only a handful of albums under his belt, bursts out of the pack with the exciting Excursion. He is accompanied by veteran bassist Harvie S. and drummer Steve Davis. Excursion also features a guest appearance from trumpeter Charles Moore, who provides an eerie and effective Miles Davis vibe on Janeway's ballad, Another Chance."
These dozen tracks are comprised of half originals from the pianist and the remainder from the Great American Songbook and jazz ...
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A skilled composer and pianist capable of creating music that is imaginative, sensitive, and often exciting." —David Franklin, Cadence "...welcome your ears to David Janeway. You'll enjoy this new recording talent." — Sid Gribetz, WKCR, Jazz Times "This is pleasant contemporary jazz that is easy to enjoy." —Michael Nastos, The Ann Arbor News
2021 Reviews of Distant Voices CD:
"This is an excellent recording, and the more you listen, the more compelling the music becomes. This could easily be one of the Top Ten Jazz CD's of 2021, and maybe one for the ages." -Michael Nastos, Hot House, WCBN, Ann Arbor, MI
Bill Evans
pianoHerbie Hancock
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vocalsBenito Gonzalez
pianoThe Jazz Explorers
band / ensemble / orchestraErnesto Cervini
drumsNate Birkey
trumpetRay Anderson
tromboneEric Frazier
percussionKen Hatfield
guitarNeal Miner
bass, acousticFalkner Evans
pianoSayuri Goto
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