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Mike Heffley
trombonist/composer, journalist, arts administrator, and ethnomusicologist
Mike Heffley is a writer, composer, and jazz scholar.
He has a Ph.D. in ethnomusicology from Wesleyan University
and is the author of several books.
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Mike Heffley is a musician and scholar of the highest caliber. His work as my teaching assistant
in both my performance ensemble and music history class was consistently effective in getting
across the most challenging intellectual material to the brightest students (as well as those far
removed from the subject), and in drawing out the best performances and understanding of difficult
music. As a scholar, he has established an extended body of writings that give real insight into
creative music and creative music science. He is also the author of the first serious theoretical
treatise on my music, published in 1996. His second book, on trans-Germanic music, will contribute
invaluably to knowledge about the impact of trans-African musics in Eurasia.
Anthony Braxton
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Mike Heffley was born and raised in the San Francisco Bay Area. His father, a Hollywood film actor
and author, and his mother, grandmother, aunt, and uncle all contributed to a childhood steeped in
the arts and letters, cultivating his interests and talents from the beginning. He began playing
guitar and singing at age 10, and started on piano and trombone at 13. Always an avid reader, he
began writing fiction and nonfiction in adolescence. He has been busy at music and writing in one
way or another ever since.
At age 17, he won a summer scholarship to the Berklee College of Music in Boston from Down Beat
magazine for his performance of arrangements of his own compositions with a band of older
professionals. When he returned, he began playing with Bay Area musicians including drummer Oliver
Johnson (longtime Steve Lacy drummer) and reeds player Rafael Garrett (John Coltrane bandmate, AACM
cofounder). He later moved to Eugene, Oregon, where he married and had a daughter, Geneva, whom he
raised as a single father.
By 1988, he had gained wide exposure in the Northwest as both musician and music journalist, and
began a professional relationship with composer-reedsplayer Anthony Braxton. After recording with
him the internationally acclaimed Black Saint CD Eugene (1989), Braxton served, with Northwestern
University Music Department Dean Dr. Bernard Dobroski, on Heffley's Master's degree committee,
through Antioch University. Heffley then was brought into Wesleyan University's world famous World
Music Program, where Braxton then chaired the music department. Braxton was awarded the 1994
MacArthur "Genius" award in 1994; shortly thereafter, Heffley's first book, The Music of Anthony
Braxton (Greenwood Press, 1996) was published.
During his years as a graduate student, Heffley continued to compose, perform, and record his own
music, as well as collaborate with Braxton and other major artists in New York and Connecticut
venues. He also continued to present and collaborate with other major artists in major venues,
writing grants and receiving a total of over $100,000 for musical events. Finally, he evolved from
a music journalist to a music scholar, receiving the coveted DAAD grant from the German government
to produce a study of new and improvised music in Europe, which led to a contract with Yale
University Press to produce his second major monograph on music (Northern Sun, Southern Moon:
Europe's Reinvention of Jazz, 2005). He has presented his papers at music conferences (College
Music Society, International Society of Music Educators, Society for Ethnomusicology, Darmstadt
Jazzforum, Leeds College of Music, others) throughout America, Germany, Finland, Czechoslovakia,
and in Vienna, Austria and Harare, Zimbabwe. In 2006, he was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship to produce a third book on music.
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