Jack Cooper (musician)

Jack Cooper
Conducting the Mists recording session
April 4, 2014
Background information
Birth name John Thomas Cooper, Jr.
Born (1963-05-14) May 14, 1963
Whittier, California, U.S.
Origin La Habra, California, U.S.
Genres
Occupation(s)
Instruments
  • Saxophone
  • Clarinet
  • Flute
Years active 1981–present
Labels
Associated acts The Jazz Knights
Warner Brothers Publishing
Alfred Music Publishing
Jazz Orchestra of the Delta
The Michael Waldrop Big Band
Berlin Jazz Orchestra

Jack Cooper (Née John Thomas Cooper Jr., May 14, 1963) is an American composer, arranger, orchestrator, multireedist, and music educator. He has written music for internationally known pop, jazz, and classical artists including Aaron Neville,[1] Marc Secara, Jiggs Whigham, the Berlin Jazz Orchestra, Lenny Pickett, Joyce Cobb,[2] Donald Brown,[2] Young Voices Brandenburg, Bobby Shew,[3] Christian McBride,[4] the Westchester Jazz Orchestra,[5] the U.S. Army Jazz Ambassadors, the Dallas Wind Symphony,[6] and the Memphis Symphony Orchestra. His catalogue of music includes jazz through contemporary classical; he has worked for Columbia Pictures Publishing, Warner Brothers, and Alfred Music as a staff arranger since 1993.[7]

Early life, musical education and influences

Jack Cooper was born in Whittier, California on May 14, 1963, he was raised in nearby La Habra.[8] He is the younger brother of artist and stylist Cathy Cooper and also the grandson (x4) of Mrs. Harriet Blanton Theobald, "Mother of Greenville."[9][10] His mother, Georgie Cooper, was an accomplished classical pianist and he served as her page turner on piano and organ jobs.[11] His father was an amateur clarinet and sax player who gave Cooper his first instruments. First musically inspired by clarinetist Artie Shaw at age eleven, he later was taken by Charlie Parker's playing on the alto sax from his dad's 78's; he took up the flute in college.[12][13][14]

After graduating from Sonora High School and having first studied with Ernie Del Fante, Cooper attended Fullerton College where he studied composition and arranging with Tom Ranier and saxophone with Dave Edwards and Don Raffell (later studied with Peter Yellin in New York).[15] While at Fullerton College he recorded on the Down Beat award-winning LP, Time Tripping playing saxophone and woodwinds in FC's collegiate jazz groups. He later transferred to California State University, Los Angeles where he received a BA in Music education and clarinet in 1987 having studied with Vito Susca. Cooper also studied jazz composition with and was heavily influenced by Stan Kenton's former staff arranger Bob Curnow. "Since college, when I first began studying big band musical arrangements, (I) wanted to orchestrate for jazz ensembles."[16] Two years later he completed a MA in composition at C.S.U.L.A. and had studied with Byong-Kon Kim, George Heussenstamm, William H. Hill, and David Caffey.[17] Cooper was classmates at C.S.U.L.A. and worked closely with both Eric "Bobo" Correa and Grammy winning trombonist Luis Bonilla. He has collaborated closely on several musical projects over the last 20 years with Bonilla with the most recent one being Mists: Charles Ives for Jazz Orchestra.[18]

Later composition studies were with David Baker, Gerald Wilson,[19] Manny Albam, Karl Korte, and Richard Lawn; in 1999 he earned a DMA in composition from the University of Texas at Austin.[20][21]

His first notable professional work in Los Angeles as a multireedist was with the Kingsmen, Shari Lewis, Mateos Parseghian, the Tak Shindo Orchestra, Si Zentner, Steve Jam, the Dive, and the Last Mile.[7]

Armed forces and the West Point Jazz Knights

At age 25 (in 1989) Jack Cooper won an audition to work as a saxophonist and staff arranger for the United States Army Jazz Knights stationed at West Point, 40 minutes north of New York City.[22] For 6 years he toured, performed, and recorded extensively with the West Point Band's musical group to include A&E television appearances at the Hatch Memorial Shell with the Boston Pops, jazz festivals across the Northeastern United States, backing entertainers and jazz artists such as Bob Newhart, Lee Greenwood, Pete Yellin, Chris Vadala, Byron Stripling, and playing on and writing for demos and studio recordings.[7] He participated in the funeral of former President Richard M. Nixon in April 1994;[23] he was awarded the Army Commendation and Achievement medals while also rising to the rank of staff sergeant.

During this period in New York through 1995 he worked extensively backing other entertainers and artists such as Tony Martin, The Lettermen, Clint Holmes, Fred Travalena, Dennis Wolfberg, and worked as arranger and saxophonist for 3 years with the band Alma Latina. A notable work Cooper composed during this time was the jazz ensemble commission Double Helix which has been heard world wide as media and television music. Double Helix was the first of many works published of Cooper's by Columbia Pictures Publishing/Belwin and Warner Bros., composer Carl Strommen had introduced Cooper to the company.

Professional career

As instrumentalist

Cooper has played woodwind instruments professionally since the 1980s. His work includes backing Jennifer Holliday, Lady Rizo, Kenny Rogers, Macy Gray, Manhattan Transfer, Glen Campbell, Mitch Ryder (and Detroit Wheels) and playing woodwinds on national tours for the Producers, Sweet Charity, and A Chorus Line among many others.[7] He is known primarily as a "lead alto player," a role he has played for the Tommy Dorsey Orchestra, the Guy Lombardo Orchestra, the Temptations and the CD Coming Through Slaughter: The Bolden Legend.[24][25][26] He has also been a featured guest artist/soloist at the Western States Jazz Festival,[27] the Birmingham International Jazz and Blues Festival (U.K.),[28] the 45th International Horn Symposium,[29] and the Festival Virtuosi (2007) in Recife, Brazil.[30]

Cooper has been a featured artist and soloist with the Hot Springs Festival Orchestra, Memphis Symphony Orchestra, the IRIS Symphony Orchestra, and as chamber soloist internationally.[31][32][33] He is amongst a small group of musicians who have a playing career being able to cross over from jazz to classical to pop on several woodwind instruments.

As composer (highlights)

Cooper has served as a composer and arranger on more than 250 works since first writing music in the early 1980s, including solo instrumental pieces all the way through full symphonic works for orchestra and singers.[34] His writing style has been described as "propulsive and sassy on an initial listen, revealing subtle shadings and intricate nuances upon repeated listening. I might have guessed Don Sebesky...on a blindfold test."[35]

He was hired in 1992 as a staff arranger for Columbia Pictures Publishing/Belwin; his television and media music writing credits include The Jenny Jones Show, Danish Radio 2 (DR P2), E! Entertainment shows, Access Hollywood, JBVO: Your All Request Cartoon Show, American Restoration, Deal or No Deal, and Extra.[36] His music has been featured at numerous venues around the world to include the North Sea Jazz Festival and the Montreux Jazz Festival.[37]

Since December 1998 he has been the musical director, composer and chief arranger for the Jazz Orchestra of the Delta; in 2003 they produced the CD Big Band Reflections of Cole Porter featuring Cooper's original compositions and arrangements. Singer Sandra Dudley is utilized as the primary singer for the group. The CD includes commissions he had written for Gary Foster and Peter Erskine; Marvin Stamm serves as the guest soloist on this release.[7] He also serves as the musical director and chief arranger for Kathy Kosins and her show Rhapsody in Boop.

Serving as both composer and musical director, in February 2006 Cooper collaborated with choreographer Mark Godden to produce the ballet Two Jubilees commissioned by and for Ballet Memphis.[7] His musical influence on the ballet as composer and musical director was praised: critic Christopher Blank commented, "...if one were to consider a title that better unified the program's two very different ballets, a fitting substitute would be 'Jazz Orchestra of the Delta,' or even just the word 'Cooper.' Performing live for the dancers, the excellent 17-piece ensemble founded by Jack Cooper...was a marvelous treat midway through the ballet's (sic) season..."[16][38]

Though his catalogue has a great deal of varied music, his work emphasizes the big band genre.[16] His big band writing has been featured with many groups internationally on the professional and educational levels, "...this style of jazz music (sic) is my wheel house of expertise."[19][39] Two definitive CDs were recorded in 2014 that exemplify Cooper's adeptness as a jazz orchestra composer and arranger: Mists: Charles Ives for Jazz Orchestra and Time Within Itself.[40] Both are recognized internationally as exceptional examples of contemporary, progressive big band composition and orchestration. All About Jazz reviewer C. Michael Bailey notes about the Time Within Itself recording, "...Cooper is a star here in the same way that arrangers were in 1949 on Miles Davis' Birth of the Cool Recordings.[41]

Chamber and solo works

His Sonata for Trombone was commissioned in 1997 by the Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia Fraternity at the University of Texas at Austin. This work has been widely performed and recorded by trombone artists including Luis Bonilla, Mark Hetzler, Tom Brantley, Lance Green, Chris Buckholtz, and Michael Davidson (among others).[42] The work is recorded on two highly acclaimed recordings for Centaur Records and Summit Records.

A review of Sonata for Alto Saxophone described it as belonging with "such landmark 'jazz/classical' pieces as the Phil Woods Sonata, on any recital or concert program that explores (both) these worlds."[43] The work was commissioned by Paul Haar and first premiered in July 2000 at the 12th World Saxophone Congress in Montreal, Canada.[44]

One of the Missing – for those lost in Iraq for euphonium was commissioned in 2007 and premiered in 2008.[45] It is a protest piece that shows the composer's anti-war stance against the Iraq War; the title is taken from the anti-war/Civil War short story and film adaptation of Ambrose Bierce.[46] The work was also used on the soundtrack of a 2011 Canadian television film broadcast on the Vision network.[47]

Cooper's Violin Sonata was premiered on May 27, 2018 as part of the Barnstedter Kapellen Konserte series in Barnstedt, Germany; recording of the work for commercial release was on June 26/27 at Greve Studio in Berlin.[48][49]

Berlin, Germany

From June 2015 through August 2016 Cooper resided in the Charlottenburg-Wilmersdorf borough of Berlin, Germany and continues to commute between the U.S. and Germany and makes his home in both Schöneberg, Berlin and Memphis, Tennessee. He serves as a staff arranger, musical director and production assistant for Marc Secara and the Berlin Jazz Orchestra and the Young Voices Brandenburg for live performances and recording sessions.[50][51] He also assisted in arranging for the Collegium musicum Potsdam Symphony Orchestra and the Compass Big Band.[52][53][54] Cooper has conducted music and performed in venues of Berlin such at the Wühlmäuse Theater, Heimathafen Neukölln and Kunstfabrik Schlot.[55] He also served as a Visiting professor and Artist-in-residence at the SRH Hochschule der populären Künste.[56] He has worked closely with German jazz, pop and Schlager personalities such as Marc Secara, Jiggs Whigham and Marc Marshall.[57][58] Also, further premieres of the music have been with the BJO and Peter Kraus on September 18, 2017 at the Wühlmäuse Theater in Berlin.[59]

Awards and special recognition

Jack Cooper is the 2010 recipient of the Distinguished Achievement in the Creative Arts Award from the UMAA.[60] He was chosen in 2003 as a nominee for the annual NARAS Premier Player Awards and also was awarded a $10,000 grant from the Aaron Copland Fund Recording Program that same year.[61][62] He is also the recipient of numerous ASCAP composer awards since 1996.[63] As a presenter he has been honored as the key-note speaker for the Modern Language Association, scholar and main presenter for four different National Endowment for the Humanities series on American Music, and the Hawaii International Conference on Arts & Humanities.[7]

Teaching and education career

Jack Cooper has been teaching at the collegiate level for over the past 20 years. Before his appointment to the University of Memphis as director of jazz studies in 1998, he had taught privately and worked as a clinician for the U.S. Army Jazz Knights. He has served as an invited clinician, guest artist, and conductor in Recife (Brazil), Birmingham (U.K), Berlin Germany, Graz Austria and Bogotá Colombia.[64] He has also served as guest conductor for the Missouri All-State Collegiate Jazz Orchestra, the Arkansas All-State High School Jazz Ensemble, and the Arizona All-State High School Jazz Ensemble.[65] He has also served as an educational clinician/artist for Alfred Music Publishing making appearances at state educational music conventions throughout the United States.[7]

Timeline of professional/musical career

Audio Recordings

As composer, arranger, conductor or producer (and instrumentalist on select tracks)

As instrumentalist

Film, television, DVD, video

As instrumentalist/actor

As composer/arranger/conductor/musical director

Books, educational media, articles as reviewer

Other artists worked with (partial list)

Discography (select, reviewed)

Year Album Primary artist
producer
conductor
composer
arranger
instrumentalist
Type Label U.S. Canada U.K. Germany Review
Rating
1983 Time Tripping instrumentalist Studio Trend AM PM Down Beat
1st Place Winner
1988 Monstrosity! instrumentalist
composer
# CSULA 888 Los Angeles Times
1994 Mainstream arranger Studio/Live FC Down Beat
1998 Games arranger UNI Down Beat

best CDs of the 1990s
2003 Big Band Reflections of Cole Porter Primary artist
producer
Studio Summit JazzWeek
August 22, 2003
#88
Jazz Journal
very positive
All About Jazz
Upside Out composer
(title track)
Sea Breeze JazzWeek
February 6, 2004
#164
All Music Guide
2004 Memphis Jazz Box producer
instrumentalist
composer
arranger
Studio/Live Icehouse Commercial Appeal
2009 Coming Through Slaughter: The Bolden Legend instrumentalist Studio Galloping Cow Exclaim!
very positive
Down Beat
2010 The Chamber Wind Music of Jack Cooper Primary artist
producer
Centaur Fanfare Magazine
very positive
2014 Mists: Charles Ives for Jazz Orchestra Primary Artist Planet Arts JazzWeek
October 6, 2014
#59
Roots Music Report
October 26, 2014
#8
BBC Radio 3
November 1, 2014
playlist choice
Jazz Podium
Highly recommended
All About Jazz

Chicago Tribune 2014 Top 10 Jazz
2015 Time Within Itself composer
arranger
conductor
Origin Records JazzWeek
April 13, 2015
#71
Jazz Journal
All About Jazz
2015 Local Color composer UNI All About Jazz
2015 Blues, Ballads and Beyond composer Summit Classical Musical Sentinel
very positive
All About Jazz
2016 I Can Do All Things composer JDW Music Roots Music
Report
#4
Amazon 'Vine Voice'
2018 Origin Suite composer
arranger
conductor
Origin Records JazzWeek
February 26, 2018
#67
Jazz Journal
All About Jazz

See also

References

  1. Cannon Center for the Performing Arts, September 30, 2011, The Shadow of Your Smile arranged for orchestra by Jack Cooper for Aaron Neville
  2. 1 2 Sparke, Jon W. BPACC Showcase flows in with tribute to Ellington, The Commercial Appeal, August 28, 2009. Jack Cooper, musical director/arranger for Joyce Cobb and Donald Brown
  3. Shew, Jazz Orchestra Bring Out Best in Each Other. Austin American-Statesman, April 28, 1997, pp. E3, Music for Shew by Jack Cooper, also on the 2001 CD Showcase
  4. McBride stresses work, luck, Austin American-Statesman, April 1, 1997, Page E2. Music for McBride by Jack Cooper, also on the 2009 CD Voices
  5. The Westchester Jazz Orchestra, commissioned work and premiered September 24, 2005
  6. Scene for Brass commissioned by the Dallas Wind Symphony and premiered on September 14, 2004
  7. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 "Jack Cooper : Search Results". Alfred.com. Retrieved October 19, 2017.
  8. "History of La Habra". Lahabramasons.com. January 8, 2015. Retrieved October 19, 2017.
  9. Jack Cooper's mother is Georgie Blanton Finlay Cooper from Greenville, Mississippi who is direct lineage to Harriet Blanton Theobald
  10. Blanton-Smith Collection, University of Mississippi. Department of Archives and Special Collections. University, MS 38677, USA
  11. "Festival of Song" LP, Georgie Cooper - pianist
  12. Focus on the Arts WUMR Radio interview with D.J. Malvin Massey (reviewed from recording), talking about Cooper's background in music, February 2004
  13. Cooper's adeptness as a clarinetist is demonstrated on "Memphis Blues" and "Tiger Rag" from the CD release Ninety Years of Making Music in Memphis: The University of Memphis
  14. Cooper adeptness on the alto sax is demonstrated on his composition "The Protagonist" on Youtube
  15. Alumni Biographical page, Fullerton College Music Department
  16. 1 2 3 Blank, Chistopher. Ballet Memphis takes a jazzy step – Choreographer Mark Godden swings to a new set of beats by Big Band jazz arranger Jack Cooper. The Commercial Appeal, February 10, 2006.
  17. Cooper, Jack. "Solace" a Three Movement Composition for Saxophone Soloist and 18 Piece Jazz Orchestra. Los Angeles: California State University, 1989. M.A. THESIS
  18. April 4, 2014, recording completed at Systems Two Recording in Brooklyn, New York of Cooper's 8 adaptations/orchestrations of Charles Ives music, Luis Bonilla producer. Released August 22, 2014 on the Planet Arts Records label
  19. 1 2 "Gerald is 95 now, I had studied with him in Los Angeles...", Jack Cooper. interview with Kacky Walton, Checking on the Arts, Natl. Public Radio, WKNO-FM, Memphis, October 9, 2013.
  20. Alumni Biographical page (jazz) Archived January 6, 2013, at Archive.is, The University of Texas, Butler School of Music
  21. Cooper, Jack T. Three Sketches for Jazz Orchestra Inspired by Charles Ives Songs. University of Texas at Austin, 1999. Thesis (D.M.A.) OCLC 44537553
  22. Department of the Army Enlistment and Honorable discharge records from Cooper, Jack T., orders 196–1 dated November 30, 1989 and orders 33–5, dated February 22, 1995
  23. "Nixon Funeral Departure Stewart Air Base, Apr 26 1994". C-SPAN.org. Retrieved October 19, 2017.
  24. Lover Man, The Memphis Jazz Orchestra, Jack Cooper, solo/lead alto sax, June 2, 2013.
  25. Jeremy Shrader (March 18, 2010). "NMHSummerWind.mov". YouTube. Retrieved October 19, 2017.
  26. Dave Lisik (October 1, 2012). "Coming Through Slaughter I, Dave Lisik Orchestra, Tim Hagans, Donny McCaslin, Matt Wilson". YouTube. Retrieved October 19, 2017.
  27. "Western States Jazz Festival, Los Angeles, CA. clarinet and composer – guest artist on main concert, 1 March 2013". Frequency.com. Retrieved October 19, 2017.
  28. "Cooper featured with the Midland Youth Jazz Orchestra, Fat Chops Big Band, Great Birmingham Trombone Company, 6–9 July, 2013" (PDF). Visitbirmingham.com. Retrieved October 19, 2017.
  29. "私が糖尿病予防で日頃から気をつけていることは運動と食事". ihs45.org. Retrieved October 19, 2017.
  30. "Festival Virtuosi, Recife, Pernambuco, Brazil". Virtuosi.com.br. Retrieved October 19, 2017.
  31. Ellis, Bill. Ma, Stern Resonate Far Beyond The Musical Score, The Commercial Appeal, September 20, 2000. Cooper – alto saxophone and clarinet soloist, IRIS Orchestra
  32. Sparks, Jon W. 'Nut ReMix' brings energy to new Cannon Center setting; The Commercial Appeal, November 23, 2014. Cooper – tenor saxophone soloist on Ellington/Strayhorn Nutcracker adaptations, MSO Big Band
  33. "St Martin in the Bull Ring » Sat 6th July Concert: Oksana Poleshook, International Russian Concert Pianist". Bullring.org. Retrieved October 19, 2017.
  34. Please refer to list of published works in article
  35. Jazz, All About. "Jack Cooper: Big Band Refections of Cole Porter". All About Jazz. Retrieved October 19, 2017.
  36. IMDb Listing, Jack Cooper, also refer to Double Helix
  37. UNI Jazz Ensemble Band One, playing The Cage (arr. Jack Cooper) at the North Sea Jazz Festival, July 10, 1998
  38. Blank, Christopher. Spirit of jazz sets stage for tribute – Ballet premieres divergent pieces, The Commercial Appeal, February 13, 2006.
  39. Yokohama Aoba Jazz Band Japan and Big Band de Sarreguemines France are examples of international groups using Cooper's music.
  40. Jack Cooper Interprets Ives On New CD, U of Memphis CCFA Newsletter "Voices" Winter 2015
  41. Jazz, All About. "Notable and Nearly Missed 2015". All About Jazz. Retrieved October 19, 2017.
  42. "Sonata for Trombone, Eastern Trombone Workshop, 16 March 2011, Washington D.C., Michael Davidson – trombone soloist". Usarmyband.com. Retrieved October 19, 2017.
  43. Dempsey, David. Sonata for Saxophone, Saxophone Journal, Jan./Feb. 2012, pp 14
  44. XII° Congrès Mondial du Saxophone, July 9th, 2000, World Premiere of the Sonata for Alto Sax (Université du Québec à Montréal) Montréal, Québec, Canada 536.pair.com
  45. "One Of The Missing, ITEA International Conference in Cincinnati, Ohio, 2008". Iteaonline.org. Retrieved October 19, 2017.
  46. Today, section 2.2.4 of Euphonium Repertiore, Wikipedia – The Free Encyclopedia
  47. Teens Gone Wrong, Volume 1,, television series Vision of Youth Ministry, VisionTV 2011
  48. GEIGE UND PIANO, Barnstedter Kapellen Konserte, May 27, 2018, Barnstedt Germany
  49. YouTube. Cooper Sonata for Violin and Piano. Live performance in Berlin, Germany. Greve Studio. June 26, 2018
  50. "Berlin Jazz Orchestra - Home". Berlin Jazz Orchestra. Retrieved October 19, 2017.
  51. "Bob Mehr's Memphis Music Beat: "Beale Street Saturday Night" comes back and more". Commercialappeal.com. Retrieved October 19, 2017.
  52. "Concerts". Cm-potsdam.de. Retrieved October 19, 2017.
  53. Bastian Lee Jones (July 4, 2016). "Bastian Lee Jones interviews Dr. Knut Andreas (Klassik am Weberplatz Potsdam)". YouTube. Retrieved October 19, 2017.
  54. "Compass Big Band Berlin". Facebook.com. Retrieved October 19, 2017.
  55. Kunstfabrik Schlot Berlin concerts, January 27, 2016 and March 9, 2017, five new arrangements played of Cooper's
  56. "hdpk begrüßt Jack Cooper als ersten "artist in residence"". Hdpk.de. Retrieved October 19, 2017.
  57. klavieresque (July 3, 2016). "'SONGS OF BERLIN' Marc Secara, Jiggs Whigham, Berlin Jazz Orchestra, arr. and cond. Jack Cooper". YouTube. Retrieved October 19, 2017.
  58. ""In dieser Stadt" Marc Secara, Jiggs Whigham Berlin Jazz Orchestra, arr. and cond. Jack Cooper". YouTube. June 14, 2016. Retrieved October 19, 2017.
  59. "Marc Secara and the Berlin Jazz Orchestra with Peter Kraus, September 18, 2017" (PDF). Wuehlmaeuse.de. Retrieved October 19, 2017.
  60. "2010 recipient of the Distinguished Achievement in the Creative Arts Award". Emephis.edu. Retrieved October 19, 2017.
  61. Ellis, Bill. Premier Player Awards To Honor, The Commercial Appeal, March 1, 2003
  62. "Aaron Copland Fund Awards $500,000 in Recording Grants". Newmusicbox.org. May 29, 2003. Retrieved October 19, 2017.
  63. U of M Music Professors Awarded ASCAP Awards, Memphis Daily News - Newsmakers, VOL. 117, NO. 161, Wednesday, September 10, 2003
  64. "Events". jazz.kug.ac.at. Retrieved October 19, 2017.
  65. Hot House arr. Jack Cooper- 2012 Arizona All State Jazz Band conducted by Jack Cooper
  66. "Origin Suite" from Origin Records, Jack Cooper composer/arranger, Allmusic.com
  67. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 "Jack Cooper - Credits - AllMusic". AllMusic. Retrieved October 19, 2017.
  68. Enriching Life With Jazz CD, Love For Sale, arr. Jack Cooper (4:51) OCLC 774893336
  69. Jazz, All About. "Bob Lark Alumni Band / Bob Curnow / JazzMN Big Band". All About Jazz. Retrieved October 19, 2017.
  70. Peanuts for Christmas – Die Big Band Der Lübecker Hochschulen, released 4. December 2012, MP3 CD, Winter Wonderland, arr. Jack Cooper (4:25)
  71. Juletona – Trondheim Ballroom Orkester, Trondheim Norway, December 2, 2013, MP3 CD, Winter Wonderland, arr. Jack Cooper (4:25)
  72. Sounds of the Season CD, "Oh Holy Night" arranged by Jack Cooper
  73. Jack Cooper-solo tenor sax, Valerie chose... the University of Memphis, uofmemphisvideos
  74. Jack Cooper-solo tenor sax, Cathy chose... the University of Memphis, uofmemphisvideos
  75. Experiencing jazz Students CD ROM, McGraw Hill. Content on website for Routledge Publishing OCLC 68712015, 764304925
  76. U or Memphis School of Music, UOM137-FY1112/3M
  77. Baur, John. Practical Music Theory, Chapter 19 – analysis of Jack Cooper's arrangement of What a Wonderful World, Kendall Hunt Publishing Company. 2014. pp. 287–289, ISBN 978-1-4652-1790-5
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