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Sunny JainDrums / Dhol / Percussion

"Jain has arrived at an intriguing amalgam that alternately swings in straight 4/4 fashion and mesmerizes while injecting bits of Indian music along the way." - Jazztimes

From the resounding hall of the 2007 Nobel Peace Prize Concert in Oslo, Norway, to the intimate setting of Smalls Jazz Club in New York City, to the thunderous applause of India’s festival stages, Sunny Jain is an internationally respected drummer, composer and educator.

Born to Punjabi immigrant parents and raised in Rochester, NY, Jain has become a highly recognized musician who’s group, Sunny Jain Collective, has been touted as a leading voice for the new music Indo Jazz (a movement of first-generation South Asians equally steeped in the jazz tradition and the music of their cultural heritage). With 3 critically acclaimed CD releases (and another 20 as a sideman), multiple tours throughout the world, and numerous of media accolades, Jain is an Indian-American musical trailblazer.

Jain’s talents have put him in high-demand as the regular drummer for the famed Sufi-rock band, Junoon, Steve Blanco Trio, and Samita Sinha’s KAASH. He has also performed with several world-renowned artists such as Kiran Ahluwalia, Joey Baron, Kenny Barron, Ron Blake, Seamus Blake, Marc Cary, Samir Chatterjee, Gerald Cleaver, Kermit Driscoll, Ted Dunbar, Kyle Eastwood, Terreon Gully, Roy Hargrove, Norah Jones, Lonnie Plaxico, Dewey Redman, Jon Regen, Robyn Schulkowsky, Martha Wainwright, and Kenny Wollesen, just to name a few.

In 2002, the U.S. Department of State, in conjunction with the Kennedy Center, selected Sunny Jain for its prestigious Jazz Ambassador’s program. As a Jazz Ambassador, Jain traveled to West Africa to present concerts and workshops for dignitaries and community members on the blues. Jain earned the Arts International Award twice, in 2003 and 2005, to support touring international touring efforts. In June 2005, Jazz Hot magazine (France) featured Jain in their drummer issue, along with Lewis Nash, Horacio 'El Negro' Hernandez and Winard Harper. He was noted as a rising star for his fusion of jazz and Indian music. In September 2006, Traps magazine highlighted 3 New York City world jazz drummers: Sunny Jain, Francisco Mela, and Dafnis Prieto. Again in 2006, Jain received the Chamber Music America New Works grant, which commissions adventurous composers to write new music for their projects. He closed out 2007 with a milestone performance with the famed Sufi-rock group Junoon at the Nobel Peace Prize concert in Oslo, Norway. Jain was awarded a grant in 2008 from the Aaron Copland Recording Fund to support his next CD release.

Sunny Jain also plays the indigenous drum of Punjab, dhol (double-sided, barrel shaped drum slung around the neck). Jain made his professional debut as dholi playing in the first ever Indian Broadway show, Bombay Dreams (2004). He has since gone on to perform with Masala Bhangra fitness guru, Sarina Jain (“The Indian Jane Fonda”), jazz legend Dewey Redman with Asha Puthli, and will make his Hollywood debut playing dhol in the upcoming movie, Accidental Husband, starring Uma Thurman, Colin Firth, Isabella Rossellini, and directed by Griffin Dunne. In 2006, Jain started the first and only Indian marching band in the States. Red Baraat Marching Band brings to the States the energy and excitement of the musical festivities found at Indian weddings. Comprised of dhol, percussion and horns, this NYC-based group plays traditional baraat songs, Punjabi songs, as well as classic Bollywood numbers and originals (www.jainsounds.com). In 2007, Jain became the first ever artist endorser for India’s largest and oldest musical manufacturer, Bina (www.binaswar.com).

As an educator, Jain has been invited to numerous institutions to present masterclasses on such topics as composition, music business, Indian rhythms, South Asians in music, improvisation, and jazz history. In February 2007, Alfred Publishing released Jain’s instructional book, The Total Jazz Drummer. Another instructional book demonstrating the application of Indian rhythms to the drumset is slated for 2008. Jain is on faculty at the National Guitar Workshop and Horace Mann. He holds a B.M. in Jazz Performance from Rutgers University and an M.A. in Music Business from New York University.