Santi Debriano
Santi Wilson Debriano (born 1955 in Panama) is a jazz bassist.
Debriano was raised in Brooklyn, having moved there with his family at age four. He studied composition at Union College in New York, then attended the New England Conservatory of Music and Wesleyan University. He worked with Archie Shepp in the late 1970s and early 1980s, then moved to Paris and played with Sam Rivers for three years. He returned to New York City and has since worked with Don Pullen, Pharoah Sanders, Sonny Fortune, Billy Hart, Larry Coryell, Chucho Valdés, Hank Jones, Cecil Taylor, Randy Weston, Freddie Hubbard, Kirk Lightsey, and Attila Zoller.
Debriano has led several of his own units, including small groups in the late 1980s and Circlechant, a world music-influenced ensemble which has had among its members Helio Alves, Will Calhoun, and Abraham Burton.
Debriano was also the music director for arts at Dwight Morrow High School in Englewood, New Jersey, and was given an award for jazz education by New York University in 2001.
Discography
As leader
- Obeah (1987, Freelance)
- Soldiers of Fortune (Freelance, 1989)
- Panamaniacs (Evidence, 1997)
- Circlechant (HighNote, 1999)
- Artistic License (Savant, 2001)
- 3-Ololy (Bellaphon, 2006)
As sideman
- Stanley Cowell: Back to the Beautiful (Concord, 1989)
- Chico Freeman: Focus (Contemporary, 1994)
- Billy Hart: Amethyst (Arabesque, 1993), Oceans of Time (Arabesque, 1997)
- Louis Hayes: Louis at Large (Sharp Nine, 1996)
- Oliver Lake: Compilation (Gramavision, 1982–86)
- Charles McPherson: Come Play with Me (Arabesque, 1995)
- David Murray: Black & Black (DIW, 1991)
- David Murray: Long Goodbye: A Tribute to Don Pullen (DIW, 1996)
- Jim Pepper: Dakota Sound (Enja, 1987)
- Bob Thiele Collective: Louis Satchmo (1991)
References
- Craig Harris, Santi Debriano at Allmusic