Biography

Eddie Henderson is one of today's top and most original jazz trumpet
players.
Henderson was born in New York
City October 26, 1940. His father sang with the Charioteers, and his mother danced as one
of the Brown twins at the Cotton club. Louis Armstrong gave Eddie his first few
trumpet lessons at the age of nine.
Eddie moved with his family to San Francisco when
he was 14 years old. He studied at the San Francisco Conservatory of Music from
1954 to '56. Around 1956, Miles Davis was guest at Eddie Henderson's home during
a black Hawk Jazz Club gig and was impressed with Eddie's ability to perform
his famous "Sketches of Spain" without a fluff but encouraged Henderson to seek
his own originality.
Following Air Force service from 1958 to '61, Eddie became the first African American to compete for the National
figure skating Championship, winning the pacific and Midwestern titles.
The year 1961 was the beginning of Eddie pursuing dual careers-medicine
and music. After receiving a
bachelor of science in Zoology at the University of California at Berkeley in 1964,he got his M.D. at
Howard university in 1968. Eddie interned at San Francisco's French Hospital during 1968 and '69 and undertook a
two-year residency in psychiatry at the University of California hospital from 1969
to '71.
Henderson first got worldwide recognition for his jazz-trumpet playing from
the popular recordings he made with Herbie Hancock's Mwandishi group during the
early '70s. other jazz perfomers Eddie has played with include Pharoah Sanders,
Art Blakey, Elvin Jones, Johnny Griffin, Slide Hampton, McCoy Tyner, Benny
Golson, Max Roach, Jackie McClean, Dexter Gordon, Roy Haynes, Joe Henderson etc.