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Steve Feierabend is a native of San Diego, California, where he grew up
playing the clarinet, and then in high school he took up the saxophone.
In 1983, he graduated with honors from Berklee College of Music in
Boston, having studied with Joe Viola, Joe Allard, Jerry Bergonzi, Herb
Pomeroy, and others.
In 1996, Steve earned his Masters Degree in Jazz Performance at Rutgers
University in New Jersey, where he studied, taught, and performed with
Kenny Barron, Ralph Bowen, Ted Dunbar and Akira Tana.
Steve has performed internationally at festivals, clubs and concerts
with such artists as Mel Torme, Steve Allen, Charles McPherson, Pete
Christlieb, Brian Lynch, Kei Akagi, Hal Crook, Joe Diorio, Bill Cunliff,
Holly Hoffman, Mike Wofford, Ron Eschete, Rob Schneiderman, Peter
Sprague, Jack Costanzo, Bobby Caldwell, Frankie Lane, The Temptations
and The Four Tops, to name just a few.
Steve served as leader of his own group, Common Ground, whose CD
Manhattan Fantasy was released in 1990. It was voted "CD of the year" by
the Portland jazz society and received national recognition and review.
Steve's second CD, Revolving Doors, was released in
June of 2000 on Webster's Jazz Classics Label. It features eight of Steve's original
compositions performed in quartet and quintet settings, with special
guest Peter Sprague on guitar.
Bop Mambo, Steve's third CD, is the culmination of 15 years of
participation in the vibrant Southern California Latin jazz and Salsa
scenes. The music is creative, modern jazz blended with mambo, cha-cha,
bolero and Afro-Cuban 6/8 rhythms.
In 2002, Steve moved to the San Francisco Bay area and has become active
in the local jazz and salsa music scenes. Steve's most recent CD,
Converging Paths, features Bay Area musicians Akira Tana, John Wiitala,
Randy Porter, and special guests Eric Jekabson and Gene Burkert. This CD
marks a return to Steve's straight ahead jazz composition style and
includes arrangements of standard jazz classics as well.
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