Born in Elkins, West Virginia (pop. 12,000) in 1959, Neil started
playing trumpet at the age of 12. Although playing football,
basketball and running track were his first loves, the past 35 years
of trumpet playing have enabled him to travel to many wonderful
places and to make friends from all over the world.
Presently, Neil is living and working in Tokyo, Japan. After leaving
New York City in March 1998, he has been performing around Tokyo
with pianists: Yuichi Inoue, Makoto Kuriya, and Jonathan Katz,
drummers: Tommy Campbell, Jun Saito, Masahiko Osaka, Jimmy Smith,
Nobuyuki Fujii and Forris Fulford, bassists: Mark Tourian, Stan
Gilbert, Daiki Yasukagawa, Brent Nussey ,Nobuyuki Yano and Jeff
Curry, saxophonists: Ken Ota, Andy Wulf, Bob Zung, Steve Sacks,
Norihiko Hibino and James Mahone, trombonists: Fred Simmons and Pat
Hallaran, guitarists: Todd Carver, Aaron Blackman and Hiro Kubota,
and percussionist: Robbie Belgrade.
While living in Tokyo, Neil has recorded albums with saxophonist
Takeshi Ito (Double Circle-Kitty Records), pianist-producer Makoto
Kuriya (Antithesis 2-King Records and TV Anthology) Jeff Curry (In
Pieces) and many other recording sessions for producers Kuriya,
Curry and Norihiko Hibino.
Neil attended West Virginia University and Berklee College of Music
from 1977 to 1982. During this time, he studied trumpet with Roger
Sherman (Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra), Greg Hopkins (Berklee) and
Wes Hensel (Berklee).
In 1982, Neil was selected by audition to perform with the United
States Navy Band, Washington , D.C. (White House support group).
During the next 5 years, he performed hundreds of concerts each year
with the Navy`s Official Jazz Ensemble, "The Commodores." A big band
consisting of former members of the Buddy Rich Orchestra, Stan
Kenton Orchestra, Maynard Ferguson Big Band, Duke Ellington
Orchestra and Count Basie Orchestra, the "Commodores" performed
weekly concerts at the Smithsonian Air and Space Museum and the
American History Museum as well as official White House and Pentagon
events in Washington. The band also performed at many national and
international music events such as the International Jazz Educators
Association convention (Los Angeles), Mid-West Band Clinic
(Chicago), International Saxophone Symposium and the International
Trombone Symposium as well as national tours and dozens of concerts
up and down the east coast each year.
As a featured soloist with the "Commodores", Neil performed with Pete
Christlieb, Ernie Watts, Eddie Daniels, Duffy Jackson, Butch Miles,
Herb Ellis, Joe Pass, Chris Vadala, Bob Mintzer and many others.
During this time he also free-lanced in the Washington-Baltimore area.
Neil played at Blues Alley with the Bill Potts Big Band, the Jazz
Battalion Orchestra, performed nightly at the Shoreham Hotel with the
Doug Sorensen Orchestra, at the U.S. Naval Academy with the Randy
Sabin Orchestra from New York, weekly at Chelsea`s with the house band
(10-piece salsa orchestra), the Glenn Miller Orchestra, the Warren
Covington Orchestra, the Washington Bach Consort, as well as dozens of
recording sessions for TV and radio. He also performed at the National
Cathedral. Neil played trumpet for a lot of shows including guitarist
Gatemouth Brown, Pat Boone, Dianne Carroll, the Temptations, the Four
Tops, Little Anthony and the Imperials, Vanessa Williams, Ray Charles
and others. Neil played weekly at the Georgetown Seafood House with a
variety of players including bassist Keter Betts. Keter also joined
Neil for some trio sessions in Cumberland, Maryland with pianist Joe
Barbato. During this time, he was a frequent performer on the U.S.
Navy Band`s Recital Series, performing standard repetoire for trumpet
and piano.
While living in D.C., Neil studied trumpet with David Flowers
(National SymphonyOrchestra) at Catholic University and with the
world famous brass instructor,Carmine Caruso, in New York City.
Also, he studied 18th century counterpoint at George Washington
University, jazz improvisation with Barry Harris at his New York
City Jazz Workshop and ear training and improvisation with pianist
Marc Copland (former student of Lennie Tristano). In addition, Neil
went to weekly jam sessions at the famous D.C. jazz club, the One
Step Down. At the One Step, he jammed with players such as
saxophonist Gary Thomas, drummer Winard Harper, bassist Ed Howard,
guitarist Paul Bollenback, saxophonist Marty Nau, pianist Peter
Adleman,bassist Butch Warren and many others.
During the 90`s, Neil spent several years living in his hometown in
West Virginia. During this time, he worked as a consultant and
part-time instructor at Davis and Elkins College. Teaching trumpet
and running improvisation classes were just a few of his
responsibilities at D & E College. As a consultant, Neil created
music festivals, produced concerts, scheduled hundreds of daytime
school concerts and workshops in West Virginia, Virginia and
Maryland for elementary, junior high school, high school and
university students. He performed at dozens of these events each
month.
Neil brought a lot of musical friends to West Virginia to perform
for young students. Many of the players included drummer Roger
Humphreys, guitarist Jimmy Ponder, drummer Greg Humphreys, pianist
Dave Budway, guitarist Marty Ashby, trombonist Jay Ashby, trumpeter
Claudio Roditi, drummer Daduka Fonsceca, pianist Bob Thompson,
bassist Dwayne Dolphin, vocalist Meredeth Joseph, saxophonist Don
Aliquo, guitarist Shawn Purcell, bassist Paul Thompson, drummer
Allison Miller and so many others.
In 1995, Neil took his trio (Joe Barbato - piano and Dave Pellow -
bass) and quartet (included Gene Ludwig -hammond B-3 organ and Rich
Norwood - tenor sax) to Switzerland to perform at the Montreux Jazz
Festival. In addtion to performing at Montreux, they performed at
the Verbier Music Festival and at the Brissago Jazz Festival at Lake
Maggio. In December 1995, Neil took his quintet (pianist Joe
Barbato, drummer Allison Miller, tenor saxophonist Rich Norwood and
bassist Jim McIntyre) to Russia for a 3 week tour. As part of their
tour, they performed in St. Petersburg at the famous Jazz
Philharmonic Hall and for the opening of the Ellington Hall with
Russian jazz legend David Goloschokin. The band played in
St.Petersburg, Moscow, Ufa (with the great tenor player Oleg
Kirejev), Novosibirsk and many other cities throughout the western
part of Russia, Siberia and the Url Mountains.
In September 1997, Neil moved to New York for 7 months. While living
in New York, he played with the Japanese drummer Fukushi Tainaka.
Also, he sat-in with players such as Donald Harrison, Roy Hargrove,
Roy Campbell, David Kikoski, Rodney Green, Dwayne Burno, Ted Curson
and others at clubs such as Small`s, St. Marks, Lennox Lounge, the
Blue Note and the Savoy. One of the highlights of Neil`s musical
life came at a small Manhattan club called Nightingales. Saxophonist
Arnie Lawrence invited Neil to be a part of his Sunday night
sessions which included guitarist Cornell Dupree, members from the
James Brown Band, B.B. King`s band, the Spin Doctors, Blues Traveler
as well as brazilian percussionists, tap dancers, poets, celloists
and others. Those sessions were incredible times of creativity,
improvisation and communication. In 1998, as Neil was leaving New
York for Tokyo, Arnie was leaving New York after 40 years of studio
sessions, performing, and teaching (he started the jazz program at
the New School) to go to Jerusalum, Israel to open up the
International Center for Improvised Music. Recently in Tokyo, Neil
has started a similar series of totally improvised sessions using
players from many different genres of music. He calls these sessions
the "Groove" Project, where the emphasis is on the "groove",
improvisation, communication and just having a "good time."
Recently, Neil has been playing with a variety of people in Tokyo
including the Tommy Campbell "'Session" Band, duo with Jonathan
Katz, the Mark Tourian Quintet as well performing with his own
bands. Neil has been performing and touring with his own East/West
Unit (Hakuei Kim-piano, Jeff Curry-bass and Masashi Tomikawa-drums),
Neil Stalnaker Quartet (Yuichi Inoue-piano, Tsutomu Kuroda-bass and
Mike Reznikoff-drums), "n3" (Jeff Curry-bass and Mike
Reznikoff-drums) and Duo with pianist/composer Tom Pierson. .