Don Burrows
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Donald Vernon Burrows, AO, MBE (b. August 8, 1928) is an Australian jazz and swing musician, playing the clarinet, saxophone, and flute. His best-known group is the Don Burrows Quartet: Don Burrows (multiple woodwind), George Golla (guitar), Ed Gaston (bass) and Alan Turnbull (drums). Burrows has played with world-renowned musicians such as Frank Sinatra, Dizzy Gillespie and Nat King Cole, Oscar Peterson, James Morrison, Tony Bennett, the Sydney Symphony, Stéphane Grappelli, and Cleo Laine.
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[edit] Biography
Don Burrows was born in Sydney, Australia on August 8th, 1928.
1973 was a watershed year for Burrows in which he received the first gold record won by an Australian jazz musician for his record Just the Beginning; instigated the first jazz studies program in the southern hemisphere at the New South Wales Conservatorium of Music and was awarded Member of the Order of the British Empire (MBE).[1] In 1979 he was appointed as chair of the jazz studies department at the conservatorium.
He was invited to perform at the Montreux Jazz Festival in 1972 and later the Newport Jazz Festival
He has performed to normally classical music audiences through tours with Musica Viva and Australian Broadcasting Corporation concert series. Burrows fronted the nationally televised show The Don Burrows Collection for six years. He has an extensive recording career in his own right with his groups, and has performed on many more albums with other artists.
In the 1980's he associated closely with the then young James Morrison, helping Morrison to form his style and develop into the world famous musician he later became. For a time the Don Burrows quartet had a regular weekly lunchtime gig at a major Sydney hotel bar, where high flying stock brokers of the 1980's would meet to hear the hottest jazz in town and schmooze clients. It was perhaps in this period that Don's national fame was at it's height - the master Jazz musician and the young rising star of Morrison performing weekly for a rich and powerful audience whilst a hectic schedule of national tours, special events and television appearances took them to the rest of the country.
In the 2000's Don Burrow's public profile has receded somewhat as he performs less than he used to.
In 2005 he toured with a small band including renowned Australian jazz pianist Kevin Hunt [2], Burrows is using his photographic images with his music, in a show called Stop, Look and Listen.
[edit] Awards
- Member of the Order of the British Empire (MBE), 1973
- Officer of the Order of Australia (AO), 1987[3]
- Life member of the New South Wales Conservatorium of Music, 1988
- Named one of the Australian Living Treasures, 1989, 1999
- Sir Bernard Heinze Award, for his service to Australia, 2000
- Honorary Doctorate in Music, Sydney University, 2000
- Honorary Doctorate in Music, Edith Cowan University, Perth, 2001
- Honorary Doctorate in Education, Central Queensland University, 2004
- Queen Elizabeth Jubilee medal
- Inducted into the Australian jazz Bell Awards Hall of Fame, 2007[4]
- Special Ambassador of Photography to Children, Photographic Imaging Council of Australia
[edit] Social matters and interests
Burrows lives in Paynesville on the Gippsland Lakes of Victoria.
He has had a lifelong hobby of black and white photography, beginning in his 20s as an active participant in the Sans Souci and Caringbah camera clubs in Sydney. He sees the creativity of music and photography having significant similarities.
[edit] References
- ^ It's an Honour - Member of the British Empire
- ^ Award-winning jazz performer Kevin Hunt
- ^ It's an Honour - Officer of the Order of Australia
- ^ For jazz Hall of Fame, it's plain and simple: is Don, is good - Entertainment

