The Family Tradition:
Vocals: Irene Blackman
Vocals: Shakar Brumfield
Piano/Vocals: Chris Rob
Bass/Vocals: Barry “SunJohn” Johnson
Bass: Kyle Blackman
Lead Guitar: William “Spaceman” Patterson
Rhythm Guitar/Vocals: Nate Turley
Trumpet: JS Trumpet
Sax/Vocals: Kath Barnes
Drums: Rah Harrison
With special guests: original musicians from the Blackman album
Don “Minister of Funk” Blackman (1953-2013) was a jazz/funk pianist and singer/songwriter born and raised in Jamaica, Queens, New York. He had a successful and legendary career in the entertainment industry. He began his career in the early 1970s playing with jazz, funk and soul greats such as Earth, Wind and Fire, Roy Ayers, and Parliament/Funkadelic, to name a few. He joined jazz fusion drummer Lenny White’s band Twennynine, penning songs on their 1979 album Best of Friends, stemming hits like “Peanut Butter” and “Morning Sunrise”. Blackman released his debut solo album in 1982 with Arista records titled ‘Don Blackman’ which featured such hits as “Holding You, Loving You”, “Heart’s Desire”, and “Since You’ve Been Away So Long”. His album is considered iconic by many musicians and DJ’s, and is heavily sought after and studied by artists of today. He has appeared on albums by Janet Jackson, The Fat Boys, Kurtis Blow, David Sanborn, Najee, Bernard Wright, Sting, Mary J. blige, Kaytranada, Snoop Dogg, Tupac Shakar, Jay-Z, and the list goes on. Blackman has also written and produced scores for commercials, television, and movies. He is notably a composer of the theme song and soundtrack of the classic children’s TV show “Gullah Gullah Island”. Don Blackman’s musical legacy lives on through many artists, including his children Irene Blackman and Kyle Blackman, who continue to pay tribute to their father by performing and releasing new music around the world.
Bernard Wright (1963-2022) bridged and blurred genres throughout a career that encompassed jazz, R&B, hip-hop, contemporary gospel, and reggae, but he was known most for jazz-funk, what he viewed as a hybrid of two equally valid art forms. Taken under the wings of fellow Jamaica, Queens natives Weldon Irvine, Don Blackman, and Lenny White, Wright was a seasoned touring keyboardist and session musician by the time he debuted as a teenaged leader with ‘Nard (1981). After his second album, Funky Beat (1983), he reached his commercial peak with Mr. Wright (1985), home to the Top Ten R&B single “Who Do You Love.” After that trio of LPs, Wright cut gospel albums and as a sideman moved fluidly across styles, collaborating with the likes of Marcus Miller, Miles Davis, and godmother Roberta Flack. Long before his death in 2022, he became known as a mentor for bands such as Snarky Puppy.
Casey Benjamin (1978-2024) was an American saxophonist, vocoderist, keyboardist, producer, and songwriter whose untimely death in 2024 at the age of 45 shocked and saddened the entire jazz community, especially within his hometown of Jamaica, Queens. Among many other credits and accolades, he was a member of the Robert Glasper Experiment which won two Grammy Awards for their albums Black Radio 1& 2. He was one half of the funk pop new wave duo HEAVy with vocalist Nicky Guiland.