Photo: Daryl Gott | On Sept. 7th , Gift of Jazz is presenting a tribute to revered jazz saxophonist Art Pepper, in honor of the 100th anniversary of his birth. The show will start with a talk by his wife and manager, Laurie Pepper, who also wrote Straight Life, the acclaimed and unflinching bio about Art and his life and music. Following her talk, the Daryl Gott Quartet will play a set of Pepper’s music.
The show, co-produced by Five Points Live, is a benefit for Gift of Jazz, a non-profit that furthers the playing, promotion and preservation of the art of jazz in the Rocky Mountain Region.
Tickets and more info are available at
https://tickets.venuepilot.com/e/a-blind-tiger-tribute-to-art-pepper-with-the-daryl-gott-quartet-2025-09-07-dazzle-denver-1080-14th-st-5ddeb6
Dazzle Denver is located at 1080 14th Street, Denver, CO. This is near the Colorado Convention Center in downtown Denver (not on 14th Avenue).
A Blind Tiger Tribute to Art Pepper with the Daryl Gott Quartet: Daryl Gott – Saxophone; Eirik Haugbro – Bass; Jack Dunlevie – Piano; and Brian Claxton – Drums.
With a special pre-concert talk by Laurie Pepper
Sunday, September 7, 2025
4:30 p.m. Doors | 5:00 p.m. Show
All ages
Event Schedule
Pre-Concert Talk with Laurie Pepper: 5:00 p.m. – 6:00 p.m.
*Some content of this talk may contain sensitive subjects including abuse, suicide or self-harm. Please take care and feel welcome to arrive at concert time.
*with your ticket you may attend either or both events
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Alto Saxophonist ART PEPPER was one of the few alto players to resist the style and tone of Charlie Parker. From the beginning, Art’s playing combined a tender delicacy of tone with a purity of narrative line.
Art Pepper was born in Gardena, California on September 1, 1925 and began playing clarinet at age 9. By age 15 Pepper was performing in Lee Young’s band at the Club Alabam on Central Avenue, the home of jazz in pre-war Los Angeles. He joined Stan Kenton’s band, touring the U.S. and gaining fame, but was drafted in 1943 serving as an MP in London and performing with some British jazz bands. He returned to the States and to Kenton, touring and recording. In 1952 he placed second only to Charlie Parker in the Down Beat jazz poll. Art left Stan Kenton in 1951 to form his own group, occasionally recording for Rogers and others. He signed with Contemporary Records in 1957.
Unfortunately the pull of drugs was a part of Art’s life and story. Although some users managed to get through and over their addictions, Art, survivor of a rocky childhood (alcoholic neglectful mother, alcoholic violent father), unbalanced from the get-go, never did quite triumph over his, though he may have fought them to a draw. In 1952 he began a long series of hospitalizations and incarcerations.
All this history makes a pretty gripping story as it’s told by Art with his wife Laurie Pepper in their book, Straight Life (DaCapo). Straight Life is called “the Most Harrowing Jazz Memoir Ever” by JazzTimes. The book is considered to be unadulterated, raw truth-telling with no sugar coating – something that was shocking then and is even more shocking now. Despite the tumult of Art Pepper’s life, the music he managed to make during irregular bursts of freedom was enthralling. The rigor and abandon with which he lived his life were present in every note he played.
Art Pepper died June 15, 1982 of a cerebral hemorrhage. But the 1979 publication of Straight Life and accompanying press had revived Art’s career. With Laurie’s help, he spent the last years of his life trying to make up for lost time, making each performance a life-or-death occasion, touring worldwide with his own bands, recording over a hundred albums, writing songs, and winning polls.
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LAURIE PEPPER was born in 1940. She attended U.C. Berkeley, but dropped out. During the 1960s she was a professional photographer working for newspapers, magazines, and record companies. In 1969, she met Art Pepper. Between 1973 and his death in 1982 she managed all his tours, his bands, and his recordings. She started and still manages his music publishing company—Arthur Pepper Music—and runs a record label—Widow’s Taste—featuring his live recordings. She has written four books—Straight Life (with Art Pepper); ART: Why I Stuck with a Junkie Jazzman, Me and My Mother (and Others), Every Woman Alone, and dozens of liner notes/essays on music. Laurie lives in Los Angeles.
DARYL GOTT was born and raised in Denver, CO, and his musical family nurtured and supported his love of music. Daryl began playing piano as a young child and took up saxophone in the fifth grade. Throughout high school he took part in the mentorship program of Colorado Conservatory for the Jazz Arts where he was exposed to a high level musicianship and made lifelong connections with musicians he still plays with. Daryl also studied with Rich Chiaraluce throughout this time. He went on to study at The City College of New York where he studied with the likes of Jon Gordon, John Patitucci and Jason Rigby among others. Daryl moved back to Denver and received his Masters degree in 2018 in Jazz Performance and pedagogy from the University of Colorado at Boulder, studying under John Gunther.
[Our thanks to COMBO member Marty Jones for alerting us to this event!]
Photo: Daryl Gott | By Jack Sasson | From Daryl’s Facebook page
https://www.facebook.com/photo/?fbid=10227709929027974&set=ecnf.51305566