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Topics: International Speakers Bureau, Inc. |
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Biography: Growing up in Montreux, Switzerland, "the home of the Montreux Jazz Festival" Bugnon started playing classical piano at age six. Guided by his father, a jazz guitarist and classical opera singer, Bugnon acquired a love for a wide range of music from Scott Joplin, Thelonious Monk, and Bill Evans to Herbie Hancock, McCoy Tyner, and Joe Sample. Once a year for an entire month, Montreux becomes the crossroads of the musical world, and Bugnon went to his first concert at age seven to see none other than Aretha Franklin! He studied at the Paris Conservatory and the famous Mozart Academy in Salzburg, Austria. At age nineteen, he moved to the U.S. and attended the Berklee School of Music. While a student at Berklee, he performed with local bands at clubs in and around the Boston area. During that period, he also performed in church with many gospel groups. In 1985 he moved to New York where he spent four years working as a session musician and touring with urban and jazz luminaries such as Patti Austin, Freddie Jackson, James Ingram, Earth Wind and Fire, and Keith Sweat. Bugnon began his recording career in 1989 with his debut album, LOVE SEASON which reached the pop charts and the Top 40 of the R&B charts as did his 1990 recording, HEAD OVER HEELS. He intrigued his fans again in 1991 with 107 DEGREES IN THE SHADE, THIS TIME AROUND (1993), and TALES FROM THE BRIGHT SIDE (1995). Five years later, Alex Bugnon signed with Narada Jazz and recorded his sixth album, ALEX BUGNON...AS PROMISED, followed in 2001 with SOUL PURPOSE, which remained on Billboard's Contemporary Jazz chart for 23 weeks. In 2003, Alex recorded for the first time in Atlanta with some of that city's greatest musicians and titled his album SOUTHERN LIVING. "After exploring all of the sophisticated and progressive funk that helped me find my sound, I knew I needed to get back to a sound that was more laid back and straight to the point, where the songs, rather than fancy production, are the focus," he says. "With the success of artists like Norah Jones and Alicia Keys, it's clear to me that, like myself, people are tired of the overproduced, heavy machine-oriented music that excited them in the past. These are complicated times we live in, and it's inspiring to see a trend towards making life simpler and focusing on the more important things." * In partnership with Agency for the Performing Arts |
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