Born in
Louisiana
to parents of Greek and Irish descent, raised between
Boston,
Los Angeles, Hawaii
and
Seattle, Layla Angulo began
playing the piano at age five, the saxophone at age ten, and was performing in
jazz clubs by the time she was fourteen.
Growing up, Layla was introduced to a wide variety of music.
Her grandfather played the upright bass and was a big influence on why she
began playing music. Both of her parents
are artists and each have a great respect and love for all music. Her mother taught her how to dance and they
listened to everything from traditional Greek music to jazz. While spending the summers with her father in
Boston, Layla heard music ranging
from Mexican Rancheros and salsa to classical and jazz. Her father frequently sat with her and, as an
exercise, asked her to analyze the emotions happening inside the music they
listened to.
Layla really fell in love with jazz in Boston
and at the same time grew up surrounded by a huge Latino population in her community. Early in her high school years she was
introduced to Charlie Parker and has been infatuated by the be-bop icon ever
since. After high school she continued
her studies at Cornish College
of the Arts, learning from and performing with Hadley Caliman (Dexter Gordon,
Freddie Hubbard, Mongo Santamaria) and with Julian Priester (Herbie Hancock,
Duke Ellington, Max Roach). Layla's
biggest influences have been Charlie Parker, Cannonball Adderley, Stan Getz
and, Paquito D'Rivera.
After college she moved to Spain
where she played and performed with Spanish and European musicians. She came to appreciate and admire the many
styles and influences in the beautiful Galicia
region, from Celtic and Moorish to African and Middle Eastern. Layla came away from that experience with an
unquenchable desire to make her own music. In furthering her musical
development, Layla became enamored of the giants in arrangement and composition
such as Duke Ellington, Dizzy Gillespie, Tito Puente and "Machito,"
to name a few.
Returning from Europe, Layla was
moved by what she heard in Afro-Peruvian music.
Her study of composers such as Chabuca Granda, and Susana Baca led to
her to writing music that mixed jazz with Afro-Peruvian rhythms. After the release of her first CD, Layla
expanded her interests in World rhythms and began a study of the complex
rhythms of her Greek ancestry as well as experiments in mixing World rhythms
and jazz.
Layla has performed as a special guest with 2005 Grammy
Award Nominee Paoli Mejias. She has also performed with George Clinton and the
P-Funk All Stars, George Clinton Jr., and the Joe Santiago's Salsa All Stars,
including Giovanni Hidalgo and
many others. She toured in Sicily
where she performed sold-out concerts with some of Italys finest jazz
musicians. In 2005, the song La Rumbera
was Semi-Finalist in the world-famous International Songwriting Competition
(ICS) and in 2006 La Rumbera received an Honorable Mention in the ISC. Layla not only composes for herself and
group, but also has written numerous songs and albums for other artists.
With the release of two Latin Jazz CDs, and an intensely
loyal and growing fan base, Layla and her band create a thrilling musical
experience wherever they perform whether it is a quintet or her large 13 piece
as can be heard on her latest CD, Live at the Triple Door. It has received high praise from not only the
Seattle Times and the Stranger, but is being played on a regular basis in Radio
Stations across the world.
The fierce enthusiasm and encouragement of her fans keep
pushing Layla to reach for even higher musical planes. She is back in the studio recording her next
CD with some of the most well-known and highly respected musicians in the
business, including Orlando 'Maraca' Valle, David Torres, Paoli Mejias), Oscar
Stagnaro, Roberto Quintero, Dario Eskanazi, and Tony Escapa.
As one of a handful of women instrumentalists performing in
the genre, Layla may very well be the only female saxophonist, vocalist and composer
of authentic Latin, Afro-Peruvian and World Jazz.