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Grady Nichols
June 6: Woolaroc Museum and Wildlife Center
Doors Open at 6:00pm
Grady Nichols: 7:00pm
Manhattan Chamber Players: 8:30pm
Throughout a career spanning over two decades, Grady Nichols has crafted ten highly acclaimed albums and performed extensively, opening for such luminaries as Luciano Pavarotti, Ray Charles, Al Green, Wayman Tisdale and The Beach Boys. A riveting live act, his repertoire runs the gamut from his own original songs to pop/rock classics and Motown hits. His songwriting and musicianship have earned him the respect of his peers, and his albums have featured such acclaimed guest vocalists as Chicago’s Bill Champlin, Leigh Nash of Sixpence None the Richer, Andy Chrisman of 4Him and award-winning songwriter Zac Maloy.
“Tony Bennett once told me that what he tries to do as a jazz vocalist is sound like an instrumentalist and I thought, ‘Wow, I’m going to do the opposite of that,’” Nichols says of his approach to his artistry. “I’m going to sound like a vocalist. Obviously, as a horn player, you’ve got to have chops, practice technique and study the greats, but I also spent a lot of time picking vocalists that I liked and analyzing their phrasing and how they approach a lyric., and then Then I tried to approximate it as much as I could with how I would play that lyric. I try to communicate an emotion and state the melody as such that it sounds like somebody is singing it.”
That creative philosophy combined with his natural musical gift has made Nichols one of the most respected musicians in the country. A 2016 recipient of the Golden Hope Award, Nichols has also received the Legacy Tribute Award from the Oklahoma Jazz Hall of Fame and the Outstanding Achievement in Jazz honor from the prestigious Charlie Christian Music Festival. It’s all been much more than Nichols ever expected to come from his childhood obsession with the sax.
“Growing up on a farm in Arkansas, I really should have been a country artist,” Nichols admits with a grin. “Most guys who play jazz didn’t have a barn, so I’m kind of coming at this from a different place than I think a lot of instrumentalists are. Most sax players are traditionally West or East Coast guys. Everything you’ve experienced in your life comes out in your music and I love the saxophone.”
A chance meeting with Sanborn during his college years cemented Nichols desire to become a professional sax player. “What I loved about Sanborn was he talked a lot about having your own sound,” he recalls. “We had a great conversation. It wasn’t like a musician to fan discussion. It was player to player and he was just very encouraging. At the time I was like 19 or 20, and that really made a huge impression on me musically. It set me on a course of discovery. ‘What’s my voice? There already is a David Sanborn or a Kenny G,’ so I really worked on trying to find my own sound, my own voice so that if you heard a few notes, you would know it was me.”
Nichols succeeded in establishing his own unique sound. In 1996, he recorded his first album, Between You and Me. “I did four studio cuts and the rest was from a live performance because there really is nothing that could replace what playing in front of a live audience does to you, the energy and how much fun it is,” he enthuses. “Playing live versus recording in a studio is just two different mentalities. Right after I released the first album, Tulsa got a jazz station and at the time they were very hungry for people who did this kind of music. I had just put out this record, so they started playing me. I got management and then we started expanding where we got played and did another record and it did pretty well on radio, also.”
Nichols’ career continued to gain momentum. He’s played the most prestigious venues in the country and in the studio, he has worked with such noted producers as Chris Rodriguez, Jeff Lorber, Michael Omartian, Zac Maloy and David Hamilton. He’s made frequent forays onto Billboard’s Jazz chart with entries like “London Baby!” riding the chart for six months, and his Christmas collection, Falling in Love with Christmas, peaking at No. 2 on the smooth jazz.com holiday charts.
Mark Your Calendars: June 6-8, 2025 – 41st Annual OKM Music Festival!
Join us for the 41st Annual OKM Music Festival, a beloved tradition in Bartlesville, Oklahoma, celebrating the transformative power of music and the arts! From June 6-8, 2025, experience world-class performances from the world’s most renowned classical musicians.
June 6: Woolaroc Museum and Wildlife Center
Grady Nichols
Manhattan Chamber Players
June 7: Cascia Hall Performing Arts Center
Tulsa Honors Baroque Orchestra
Natasha Paremski
June 8: The Refinery
Eric Wu, Nick Du, Anbo Ni
Escher Quartet