Dr. Ed Calle | |
---|---|
Birth name | Eduardo J. Calle |
Born | Caracas, Venezuela |
Genres | Jazz |
Occupation(s) | Musician, composer |
Instrument(s) | Saxophone, Clarinet |
Ed Calle (born Eduardo J. Calle) is a musician from Miami, Florida. He was born in Caracas, Venezuela.
Calle plays the saxophones, flutes, clarinets, EWI, and keyboards, engineers projects, and performs vocals. He also composes and arranges music. Calle has served as Chairperson of Arts & Philosophy at Miami Dade College North Campus and is currently Tenured Full Professor of Music Business and Production at Miami Dade College.
During his career he was three times nominated for Latin Grammy Award. First in 2005 for Ed Calle Plays Santana, in 2007 for In the Zone, and in 2014 for "Palo! Live". Calle was nominated for a Grammy Award in 2015 for "Palo! Live".[1]
Calle He has participated in multiple recording projects, which stand out:
Tita Vivar - Tiempos De Regocijo Héctor Alejandro Cid Pérez - El Glorioso Evangelio (in the song "a")
Political Activity
In January 2017, Calle posted on Twitter calling to impeach President Barack Obama and referring to him as "The Kenyan."[2] Aligning himself with the Birther Movement, Calle later said in a statement titled "Response to Twitter Mob" he later issued on his personal site, "that America impeach someone whose posted birth certificate has been carefully analyzed and determined a forgery by at least two independent experts...”[3]
Solo discography
- Dr. Ed Calle Presents Mamblue, 2015 - Mojito Records
- In the Zone, 2006 - Mojito Records
- Ed Calle Plays Santana, 2004 - Pimienta Records
- Twilight, 2001 - Concord Records
- Sunset Harbor, 1999 - Concord Records
- Double Talk, 1995 - Columbia Records
References
- ↑ Músico Ed Calle asegura que ganar Grammy es motivo de "orgullo" para hispanos
- ↑ Dworkin, Scott (2017-01-01). "This professor just called the President a Kenyan-He teaches @ Miami Dade College-a majority minority college #resist #trumpleaks @MDCollegepic.twitter.com/MVjPT3oICV". @funder. Retrieved 2017-07-07.
- ↑ "Miami music professor's tweet to impeach 'the Kenyan' strikes discord on Twitter". miamiherald. Retrieved 2017-07-07.