Current:Home > reviewsPianist Jahari Stampley just won a prestigious jazz competition — he's only 24 -OceanicInvest
Pianist Jahari Stampley just won a prestigious jazz competition — he's only 24
View
Date:2025-04-28 14:03:24
It's been quite a birthday for Jahari Stampley. All right around the same time, he turned 24 and released his first album, called Still Listening. On Sunday, he won one of the biggest awards in jazz.
"It's just overwhelming and also just amazing," Stampley told NPR after judges awarded him first place at the Herbie Hancock Institute of Jazz International Competition. "I just have a respect for everybody that participated in the competition. These are all people I've always looked up to and loved when I was growing up."
Stampley was only 14 when he started playing the piano. Soon, he was winning high school competitions. After graduating from the Manhattan School of Music in 2021, he toured with Stanley Clarke. But Jahari Stampley could've started his career even earlier. His mother is a storied Chicago jazz figure. D-Erania Stampley runs a music school and has been nominated for Grammys in seven different categories.
"She never forced me to play music," Stampley says affectionately of his mother. "She just silently would play records or do certain subtle things to try to push me in that direction. And I think that's a big part of why I became a better musician, because I genuinely love to play and I genuinely love music. I started it because I loved it, you know?"
The esteem in which the younger Stampley holds his mother is obvious. "She's just really a genius," he says with pride. "She knows how to fly planes. She just became a literal certified pilot, and she just did her first cross-country flight. She can do anything."
The two recently toured together as part of a jazz trio, with the elder Stampley playing synthesizers and saxophone, and Miguel Russell on drums and synths. Videos of mother and son performing together show a pair bespectacled and serene.
This year marks the first time the Herbie Hancock Institute of Jazz has produced its international competition since the onset of the pandemic. The competition has undergone various rebrandings and locale changes over the years, but continues to be widely regarded as a launching pad for stars.
Critic Giovanni Russonello, who covered Stampley's performance for The New York Times, wrote that "with his tall, wiry frame hunched over the piano, [Stampley's] style arrived like a lightning bolt...His playing felt unforced, as if powered from an internal engine. This was an artist you wanted to hear again, and to know more about."
Stampley, whose ease with contemporary idioms extends to his design of iPhone apps, says he hopes to model his career on heroes such as Jon Batiste, who in 2022 became the youngest jazz musician in recent memory to win a Grammy for album of the year, and on Herbie Hancock himself.
"I've always loved someone like Herbie," Stampley said. "Not only can he embody the spirit of jazz and jazz itself, but he never limits himself into a bubble of anything that he creates artistically. And I feel like for me as an artist, I just always think about playing honestly. I think I won't limit myself to just jazz per se, but I want to expand beyond in the same way that I feel the people that I love have done, for example, like Jacob Collier or Jon Batiste or, you know, Herbie."
Edited for the web by Rose Friedman. Produced for the web by Beth Novey.
veryGood! (172)
Related
- Woman dies after Singapore family of 3 gets into accident in Taiwan
- 'Wait Wait' for January 13, 2024: With Not My Job guest Jason Isbell
- Families of hostages held in Gaza for 100 days hold 24-hour rally, beg government to bring them home
- Beverly Johnson reveals she married Brian Maillian in a secret Las Vegas ceremony
- Trump wants to turn the clock on daylight saving time
- Eagles WR A.J. Brown out of wild-card game vs. Buccaneers due to knee injury
- These 30 Secrets About Stranger Things Will Turn Your World Upside Down
- Texas Gov. Greg Abbott denies he's advocating shooting migrants crossing Texas-Mexico border
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- Supreme Court to decide whether cities can punish homeless residents for sleeping on public property
Ranking
- What do we know about the mysterious drones reported flying over New Jersey?
- A global day of protests draws thousands in London and other cities in pro-Palestinian marches
- Explosive device kills 5 Pakistani soldiers in country’s southwest
- Finneas says working with sister Billie Eilish requires total vulnerability
- Megan Fox's ex Brian Austin Green tells Machine Gun Kelly to 'grow up'
- Eagles WR A.J. Brown out of wild-card game vs. Buccaneers due to knee injury
- Steve Sarkisian gets four-year contract extension to keep him coaching Texas through 2030
- Supreme Court to decide whether cities can punish homeless residents for sleeping on public property
Recommendation
Most popular books of the week: See what topped USA TODAY's bestselling books list
Scientists to deliver a warning about nuclear war with Doomsday Clock 2024 announcement
'All of Us Strangers' is a cathartic 'love letter' to queer people and their parents
Oklahoma City-area hit by 4.1-magnitude earthquake Saturday, one of several in Oklahoma
The city of Chicago is ordered to pay nearly $80M for a police chase that killed a 10
Hall of Fame NFL coach Tony Dungy says Taylor Swift is part of why fans are 'disenchanted'
Would you buy this AI? See the newest technology advancing beauty, medicine, and more
A global day of protests draws thousands in London and other cities in pro-Palestinian marches