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Bio
Chuck Stevens started playing guitar at age 11 in his hometown
of Bow, New Hampshire, with the dream of becoming a rock
guitarist. After quickly teaching himself to play and learning
his favorite songs, one year later, he began studying with
local classical guitar teacher James McGuire and Chuck began
studying formal technique and music theory through the guitar.
In the next few years, his interests turned to classical
guitar and also to improvised music and jazz, while at the
same time he was writing music for his rock band, Phil and
the Blank. When he was 15, his father bought him a Wes Montgomery
compilation and the Miles Davis album "Seven Steps
to Heaven." From this point on, his ears were open
and he began listening to every jazz album he could get
his hands on, and although he was listening to a lot of
classical music also, his practice of the guitar was geared
to learning to play jazz.
After spending his freshman year of college at Lawrence
University in Appleton, Wisconsin, and studying with renowned
composer/arranger Ken Schaphorst (who now heads the improvisation
department at the New England Conservatory), he transferred
to Rutgers University in New Brunswick, NJ. While there,
he studied with the guitarist who quickly became one of
his main influences, Vic Juris, as well as pianist Stanley
Cowell, trumpeter William "Prof" Fielder, and
saxophonist Ralph Bowen. While attending Rutgers, he began
working in clubs in New Jersey, New York, and Connecticut.
He also began writing for his own trios and quartets and
several of his compositions are available in the audio
samples page.
Since graduating, he has moved to New York and played with
such musicians as Frank Wess, Grant Stewart, Ralph Peterson
Jr., Joel Frahm, Pete Bernstein, Dr. Art Davis, Gene Bertoncini,
and Joe Magnerelli appearing in such venues as Blue Note,
Smalls, Smoke, and Kavehaz. In November 03, he appeared
in a three-guitar plus rhythm section series at the Steve
Getz Music Hall with fellow guitarists Vic Juris and Dave
Stryker entitled "Six-string legends." More recently,
in September 05, he was chosen as one of ten semi-finalists
in the highly selective 2005 international Thelonious
Monk Guitar Competition. Currently, he lives in New
York and plays regularly at local restaurants and jazz clubs.
He continues to build on his versatility and develop his
voice on the guitar.
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