Tiger Okoshi °75 As the story goes, Tiger Okoshi came upon Berklee while on honeymoon in Boston, and, one might assume, at that point the honeymoon was over. He and his wife and put the ned in their return plane tickets ney toward the trumpeter’s tuition. ce, Okoshi began to play the trum- because his school had a spare e likelihood that mere coinci- dence had t dims by the t he had a longtime fasci- begun when, at the Music. Once sit in with such die Hubbard. ’80, Roy Haynes sin H’88, Steve Bennett H 74, Michael Franks, 5, Bela Fleck, Peter Erskine H’92, e Stylistics, and Brad Delp of the Boston. Okoshi’s own fusion ensemble, u, has included Mike Stern, Bill Frisell 7, and Vinnie Colaiuta *75 and has recorded a number of albums for JVC, including Tiger’s Baku, Mudd Cake, Face to Face, Children of Gravity, and That Was Then, This Is Now. He has scored films for Cambridge Studios and WGBH- TV, and was the subject of a 1988 documentary produced by Eleanor Jewett for ‘"GBH, Tiger’s Jazz. Okoshi has been recognized by the Hit Record Awards, the Boston Music Awards, Boston magazine’s Best of Boston, and the Collegiate Jazz Festival (Notre Dame University). John Repucci Boston-bred bassist John Repucci earned his B.M.Ed. from Lowell State College and studied at Boston University. He now serves as Bass Department Assistant Chair at Berklee. Repucci, the regular bass player in Herb Pomeroy’s band since 1983, has performed with Lionel Hampton, Milt Jackson H’89, Urbie Green, Helen Humes, Morgana King, Ray Bryant, Anita O’Day, Lee Konitz, Mae Arnette, and Arnett Cobb, among others. Repucci plays with the Tony Lada ["72] and Larry Monroe [’70] group and appears on their recent recording At Long Last, a collection of Cole Porter tunes. He was the bassist for Monroe’s earlier outfit, the Ted Pease [’66]/Larry Monroe Big Band. His work with the Paul Schmeling Trio includes the 1994 CD Stardust and a recently recorded tribute to Frank Sinatra. Repucci joined the Berklee faculty in 1972, and has authored several texts on bass technique. Ray Santisi °54 A testament to the pianist’s appeal, Peter Wolf, singer/songwriter formerly of the blues/rock J. Geil’s Band, told the Boston Globe last winter that he tends to be a loner at Christmas but he never misses Ray Santisi’s midnight mass party. Santisi is, indeed, one of the most sought profes- sors at Berklee, where he has taught for more than 40 years. He has been a featured pianist in perfor- mance and on record with Stan Getz, Joe Williams H’88, Milt Jackson H’89, Zoot Sims, Al Cohn, Clark Terry, and Mel Torme, among others; and is known as the “keyboard wizard” of the Herb Pomeroy Orchestra. He has toured Scandinavia, Japan, Europe, and the U.S. extensively. Santisi has recorded with Capitol, Prestige, Sonnet, Roulette, and United Artists; is the author of Jazz Originals for Piano; and a National Endowment for the Arts awards and grants recipient for per- formance and composition. Tommy Smith ‘86 Tenor saxophonist Tommy Smith began playing at the age of 12 in school on a Scottish housing estate near Edinburgh. By the time he was 15, Smith earned acceptance to Berklee where he co-formed Forward Motion; and three years later, on the rec- ommendation of Chick Corea, Gary Burton enlist- ed him in his own band. Smith signed to Blue Note Records in 1989, and hosted a six-part television series on BBC-TV the same year, playing with such guests as Chick Corea, Tommy Flanagan, Bobby Watson, John Taylor, and Gary Burton. He explored his classical interests with a commission from the Scottish Ensemble for a saxophone con- certo with string orchestra in 1990, and has since written several acclaimed compositions. Smith recorded four discs for Blue Note—his first pro- duced by Gary Burton, featuring Eddie Gomez, Jack DeJohnette H’90, Mitch Forman, and John Scofield *73—before moving to Linn Records in 1993. The year he changed labels, Smith served as Composer-in-Residence at the Glasgow International Jazz Festival where his Sonata for Piano and Saxophone premiered. He is now a member of the Joe Locke Quartet with Eddie Gomez and Cindy Blackman ’80, and recently