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JB Floyd

Corpus Christie.[1]

add backs[edit]

On the date of the commencement for Floyd's Bachelor of Music, May 30, 1948, he was the youngest in the class, 2 days shy of turning 19.


  • 1952: The 1949 National Guild Award led to a sponsored formal New York solo recital debut at Town Hall, which occurred Wednesday, 8:30 PM, April 9, 1952. Schonberg, then a music critic for the New York Times, attended Floyd's performance and wrote a favorable review the next day.[3]

Floyd, under the management of impresario Norman Joseph Seaman (1923–2009), performed again at Town Hall, April 5, 1963.

In the 1970s, Floyd established a multimedia performance group, the Stereopticon, that was supported by the Smithsonian Institution and the National Endowment for the Arts.[2]

Selected discography[edit]

  • Suitable for Framing. David Rosenboom, JB Floyd, and Trichy Sankaran, A.R.C. Records (1975). OCLC 979580623 (all editions).
  • Vol. 18, CDCM Computer Music Series, The Composer in the Computer Age–III. Centaur Records (1994). OCLC 31869526 (all editions). (Note: CDCM is an acronym for the Consortium to Distribute Computer Music).
  • Vol. 19, CDCM Computer Music Series, The Composer in the Computer Age-IV: A Larry Austin Retrospective, Centaur Records (1995). OCLC 778855783 (all editions).
  • Salvatore Martirano: "O, O, O, O, That Shakespeherian Rag. New World Records (1996). OCLC 162136581 (all editions).
  • A Transporting Transmittance (CD), Mutable Music, label of Thomas Buckner (May 2003); OCLC 166266796 (all editions).[4]
  • In Crossing The Busy Street (CD), Mutable Music (2009); OCLC 457181264.
  • Another Time And Place (CD), Mutable Music (2011); OCLC 773026916 (all editions).
  • JB Floyd Trio at the Catacombs (jazz). JB Floyd (piano); Fred Atwood (bass); Dave Merrifield (drums); Tony Calzaretta, vocalist. Claremont Records (1966). Claremont Jazz Series CLP–666, Castle Production, Lake Geneva, Wisconsin.

Selected publications[edit]

Bibliography[edit]

Annotations[edit]

Discography references[edit]

  1. J.B. Floyd:

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ "Teachers ... " March 1959.
  2. ^ a b Cite error: The named reference NorthTexan 2011 Dec 20 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  3. ^ Cite error: The named reference NYTs 1952 Apr 10 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  4. ^ Couture.

References[edit]

  • J.B. Floyd Trio (1966). At the Catacombs (LP vinyl record). Lake Geneva, Wisconsin: Castle Production. Claremont Records. Claremont Jazz Series – CLP–666 – via Discogs release no. 10524085 J.B. Floyd (piano); Fred Atwood ( Fred Connell Atwood; born 1937) (bass); Dave Merrifield ( David Kay Merrifield; born 1937) (drums); Tony Calzaretta ( Anthony John Calzaretta; born 1940), vocalist (Claremont was a label of Vernon Charles Castle; 1928–2008).{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link)


  • Kay, Ernest (editorial director) (1984). "Floyd, James Robert". In Kay, Ernest (ed.). International Who's Who in Music: And Musicians' Directory (10th ed.). Cambridge, England: International Biographical Centre, a division of Melrose Press Ltd Note: This publication has been criticized for a lack of accuracy, objectivity, and omissions. However, for the purpose of identifying aspects of Floyd's career, the biographical information jibes with, and provides sort of a composite of other sources. As is the case with this and other "Who's Who" publications, a consensus of Wikipedia editors suggest that one should neither (i) infer notability from such publications, nor (ii) rely solely on them for biographical facts.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link) ISBN 0-9003-3277-8, 978-0-9003-3277-7. ISSN 0307-2894. OCLC 11828662 (all editions).