Julian Davis Reid & Circle of Trust
Cafe Coda 1224 Williamson St., Madison, Wisconsin 53703
media release: For this special night, we bring you Julian Davis Reid & Circle of Trust.
Julian Davis Reid, piano
Lenard Simpson, alto saxophone
Emma Dayhuff, bass
James Russell Sims, drums
https://www.juliandavisreid.com/
https://lenardsimpsonmusic.com/
Julian Davis Reid (M.Div., Candler School of Theology) is a child of God, the husband of Carmen and father of Lydia, a son and brother, and a Black artist-theologian of Chicago who uses words and music to invite us into the restful lives we were created to live. A musician, speaker, and writer, Julian is the founder of the ministry Notes of Rest®, which invites the weary into the rest of God practiced in the Bible and Black music. Julian also has musical releases out with several projects, including his own ensemble Circle of Trust, his jazz-electronic fusion group The JuJu Exchange (with Nico Segal & Nova Zaii), and his collaborative work with saxophonist Isaiah Collier.
His most recent releases are Candid under his own name, The Almighty with Isaiah Collier, and JazzRx with The JuJu Exchange. Julian has performed at the Montreal Jazz Fest, The Cleveland Orchestra’s Severance Hall, Lollapalooza, and the Berlin Jazz Fest, and he has worked or performed with Chance the Rapper, Jamila Woods, Tank and the Bangas, Derrick Hodge, Andrew Bird, Jennifer Hudson, and Abiodun Oyewole from The Last Poets. He is a Fellow of Theological Education Between the Times and consults with the boutique consultancy Fearless Dialogues. Julian writes about faith, music, Blackness, and rest on his Substack “The Notes of Rest Fellowship,” and his work has been covered in Forbes, Sojourners, Billboard, and Downbeat.
Hailing from the Southwest side of Chicago, Julian grew up playing classical, gospel, and jazz piano. He is a proud alum of Whitney Young High School and Merit School of Music, and sat under excellent private instructors, including Willie Pickens, Pharez Whitted, Steve Million, Kevin O’Connell, Ann Birman, Lucius Bell and Rev. Jim Bryson. He was confirmed in the St. Mark United Methodist Church.
Julian attended Yale College, where he earned his B.A. in philosophy (2013) and took classes in music theory. He served as keyboardist and musical director of Black Church at Yale for all four years and also led his own working jazz trio. His thesis explored the political lessons learned from being a member of a jazz quartet. After graduating, he served Yale as a campus minister through InterVarsity Christian Fellowship and as a non-denominational pastor for Black Church at Yale. He remained active on the New Haven jazz scene, mentored by bassist Jeff Fuller.
Tickets: $20 (Get tickets online or at the door)