1 hr 24 min

EP. 8: Living a Life of Improvisation with Reuben Rogers Touching Greatness with Allan Jay Santos

    • Self-Improvement

Reuben is a jazz bassist who has played alongside of some music’s most renowned artists including Wynton Marsalis, Joshua Redman, Charles Lloyd, Roy Hargrove, Marcus Roberts, Nicholas Payton, Mulgrew Miller, Jackie McLean and Dianne Reeves, and so many others.

He’s played on more than 300 recordings including his own outing as a bandleader with the 2006 release of The Things I Am.

While he is constantly sharing his artistry in new settings, styles and challenges, Reuben’s career is remarkable for the longevity of many of his artistic relationships.

He maintains musical partnerships reaching back to his earliest mentors. He enjoys rewarding long-term collaborations with several artists, including notable tenures with Joshua Redman, the Aaron Goldberg Trio and Charles Lloyd. These are relationships that have lasted a decade or more.



In this conversation, we talk about:


The importance of relationships
The 3 things that make up part of his personal philosophy 
The choice of less and leaving space
Trusting in your preparation 
How constraints can create breakthroughs
Choosing to relate to himself as an artist
Focusing on your “body of work”
What the greatest bandleaders have taught him about leadership



Charles Lloyd has said of Reuben:

"Reuben has a great talent and ability to play in the now with wonderful intelligence and a beautiful inventiveness. He is deeply passionate and brings humor and a warm humanity to the whole situation."



I have no doubt you’ll feel Reuben’s presence, his passion, his humor, his wisdom and his humanity in this conversation.

Please enjoy.

---

Reuben:

Reuben's Website

Select Spotify album links:

The Things I Am

Corridors - 2023 Kendrick Scott release featuring Reuben Rogers and Walter Smith III

YouTube:

Joshua Redman Trio with Reuben Rogers and Kendrick Scott - Jarasum Int'l Jazz Festival 2017



Allan-

Sign up for the ⁠Newslette⁠r!

⁠Allan's Website⁠

IG: ⁠@allanjaysantos⁠

FB: ⁠allan.santos1

Reuben is a jazz bassist who has played alongside of some music’s most renowned artists including Wynton Marsalis, Joshua Redman, Charles Lloyd, Roy Hargrove, Marcus Roberts, Nicholas Payton, Mulgrew Miller, Jackie McLean and Dianne Reeves, and so many others.

He’s played on more than 300 recordings including his own outing as a bandleader with the 2006 release of The Things I Am.

While he is constantly sharing his artistry in new settings, styles and challenges, Reuben’s career is remarkable for the longevity of many of his artistic relationships.

He maintains musical partnerships reaching back to his earliest mentors. He enjoys rewarding long-term collaborations with several artists, including notable tenures with Joshua Redman, the Aaron Goldberg Trio and Charles Lloyd. These are relationships that have lasted a decade or more.



In this conversation, we talk about:


The importance of relationships
The 3 things that make up part of his personal philosophy 
The choice of less and leaving space
Trusting in your preparation 
How constraints can create breakthroughs
Choosing to relate to himself as an artist
Focusing on your “body of work”
What the greatest bandleaders have taught him about leadership



Charles Lloyd has said of Reuben:

"Reuben has a great talent and ability to play in the now with wonderful intelligence and a beautiful inventiveness. He is deeply passionate and brings humor and a warm humanity to the whole situation."



I have no doubt you’ll feel Reuben’s presence, his passion, his humor, his wisdom and his humanity in this conversation.

Please enjoy.

---

Reuben:

Reuben's Website

Select Spotify album links:

The Things I Am

Corridors - 2023 Kendrick Scott release featuring Reuben Rogers and Walter Smith III

YouTube:

Joshua Redman Trio with Reuben Rogers and Kendrick Scott - Jarasum Int'l Jazz Festival 2017



Allan-

Sign up for the ⁠Newslette⁠r!

⁠Allan's Website⁠

IG: ⁠@allanjaysantos⁠

FB: ⁠allan.santos1

1 hr 24 min