While his first three CD's have met with good success, and have enabled
him to make a mark on the national jazz scene, these are but the latest
moves in a 24-year career for pianist, composer, and arranger Eric Gould.
As a bandleader, he has shared the stage with some of jazz's brightest
stars, opening for Earl Klugh, Azymuth, Larry Coryell, Wayne Shorter,
and the New York Jazz All-Stars, and performing on television with Louie
Bellson and James Moody. He has performed and recorded in collaboration
with world-reknowned instrumentalists such as Jimmy Heath, James Newton,
Bobby Watson, Antonio Hart, Winard Harper, Cindy Blackman, Vanessa Rubin,
Cecil Bridgewater, Talib Kibwe (T.K. Blue), Don Braden, Robin Eubanks,
and Leon Lee Dorsey in addition to leading his own trio in performances
from the Midwest to the East Coast. Gould has been a guest soloist with
the Canton Symphony Orchestra and the Cleveland Philharmonic Orchestra.
His debut CD, "On the Real" rose to number 11 on the national
jazz radio charts in the first quarter of 1999. His second CD, "Miles
Away
Wayne in Heavy" rose to number 10 on the national charts
and to number 45 (out of over 2500 releases) for the year 2000. His third
CD, "Who Sez?" has sold well from coast to coast.
Gould has composed music for various other ensembles as well. The Cleveland
Chamber Symphony premiered his piece "Midnight Excursion" in
2003. In 1996 his piece for string quartet entitled "He Speaks in
Shadows" was performed by the critically acclaimed Cavani String
Quartet at Merkin Concert Hall in New York, at the Chamber Music America
Festival in New York, and at the Britt Music Festival. His arrangement
of the same piece for jazz quintet and orchestra was commissioned by the
Canton Symphony Orchestra for a performance that took place in March,
2001. He was awarded a Meet the Composer Grant from Arts Midwest in 1994,
and was selected as a member of their touring roster in 1985. He has also
been a recipient of an Ohio Arts Council Individual Artists Fellowship
for Composition.
As an educator, Gould is currently on the faculty at Cleveland State
University. He has also conducted numerous workshops, residencies, and
classes, in addition to private instruction, festival organization, and
arts management consultation. In his roles as Executive Director and Managing
Consultant of the Excellence in Music Initiative in Cleveland, Ohio Gould
played a substantial role in the development of the preparatory music
program at Cuyahoga Community College.
His television credits include the 1984 PBS series entitled "North
Coast Jazz," which featured his duo "Umoja," and a 2000
BET series entitled JazzEd TV that featured his Tri-C JazzFest concert
with Cecil Bridgewater. He is the co-producer and host of an educational
television show for the Smithsonian Institution entitled "Duke Ellington:
Beyond Category" that aired in November, 1999 to over 4 million viewers
at schools across the country.
In 2000, Gould served as a consultant for the Thelonious Monk Institute
of Jazz National Curriculum Project. Gould has served as an advisory panelist
for the National Jazz Service Organization, the Cleveland Orchestra, the
Cleveland Music School Settlement, the Society for Public Access Computing
(in the early days of the internet), and the Cleveland Arts Initiative
Task Force. He served as Co-Chair of the Jazz/Special Projects grants
panel for the National Endowment of the Arts in 1994 and as an individual
artists grants panelist for the Arts Commission of Greater Toledo in 1986
and 1987. He holds a Master of Music degree in Composition from Cleveland
State University, where he studied with Edwin London, Rudolph Bubalo,
P.Q. Phan, and Andrew Rindfleisch.
Eric Gould currently resides in Shaker Heights, Ohio, where he is active
in composing, performing, teaching, recording, production, and arts management
consultation.
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