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China Forbes
China Forbes (vocals) was born and raised in Cambridge, Massachusetts where she graduated cum laude from Harvard and was awarded the Jonathan Levy Prize for acting. In New York she has performed on the theatrical stage, and in rock clubs as a singer-songwriter. She has written songs with Rick Nowells, and Billy Steinberg and Charlotte Caffey of the Go-Go’s. Her original songs can be heard on television and film and she sings the theme song to UPN’s Clueless as well as “Qué Será Será” over the opening and closing credits of Jane Campion’s film In the Cut. In 1998 she relocated to Portland, Oregon to sing full time with Pink Martini. China Forbes will release her long-awaited solo album, '78, on Heinz Records on February 26, 2008. www.chinaforbes.com
Thomas Lauderdale
Thomas Lauderdale (piano) was raised on a plant nursery in rural Indiana and began his formal musical education at the age of six. He has appeared with the Oregon Symphony, the Seattle Symphony, Chamber Music Northwest and the Oregon Ballet and has given recitals in Boston and New York. Thomas graduated cum laude from Harvard with a degree in literature and history, and is the founder and artistic director of Pink Martini.
Robert Taylor
Robert Taylor (trombone) grew up in Taylorville, Illinois, studied with almost every brass player of the Chicago Symphony and earned his degree in music from Northwestern University. He toured Europe with the American-Soviet Youth Orchestra under Leonard Slatkin and played with the Schleswig-Holstein Festival under Mstislav Rostropovich. Robert served as principal trombonist for the San Antonio Symphony for five years and is currently with the Oregon Symphony.
Gavin Bondy
Gavin Bondy (trumpet) is native to Portland, Oregon. His versatility and love of music has allowed him to work with bands and orchestras in a great variety of genres including classical, rock, country, funk, American folk, big band, salsa, free jazz, mariachi, and middle-eastern music. In between Pink Martini shows, he writes, arranges, and performs for a group he founded, the Shanghai Woolies, a band of renegade rock musicians who play hot jazz.
Brian Lavern Davis
Brian Lavern Davis (congas, drums and percussion) was raised in Portland, Oregon, and his musical studies have taken him to India, Japan, New York, Puerto Rico, Jamaica and Brazil. His teachers include Jorge Alabe, Jose Ricardo Santos & Ballet Folklorico do Bahia, Colin Walcott, Michael Spiro, Keith Terry, Los Muñequitos de Mantanzas, Bruno Moraes and Alex Rangel (from Mocidades Indepente de Padre Miguel) and Nana Vasconcelos. Brian is the founder (with Derek Reith and Andrew Hartzell) and director of the Lions of Batucada, an ever growing forty-some member Brazilian dance and percussion ensemble, and formed and directs the “Ainsworth Jr. Escola,” a 107-member Portland youth samba bateria. He has toured and/or recorded with Herbie Hancock, Kalapana, Upepo, Obo Addy, Dan Reed Network and the show “BataKetu” among others. He teaches body percussion and samba throughout the Northwest as part of the Young Audiences of Oregon and Washington program, and begins teaching at Portland State University in the Winter of 2005.
Derek Rieth
Derek Rieth (percussion) began his musical career focusing on Afro-Caribbean and Brazilian folkloric and popular drumming styles. His studies have taken him to Cuba, Brazil, New Orleans and New York. His teachers include Jorge Alabe, Boca “Rum” Bezerra, Regino Jiménez, Jesús Alfonso, Pello Gonzalez, Miguelito Bernal, Terecita Domé-Pérez, Michael Spiro, Scotty Wardinsky and Kpani Addy. In 1996, Derek, along with Brian Davis and Andrew Hartzell, co-founded the Lions of Batucada, a Brazilian-style percussion ensemble. Aside from his work with Pink Martini, he performs with Grupo Ire, Black Angel and Substrate. In addition, he works with Teatro Milagro, a community theater group, which presents music and dance traditions of the Caribbean, Central and South America.
Martín Zarzar
Martín Zarzar (drums) was born in Lima, Peru. He began to study drum-set and hand percussion at age thirteen, and his professional music career began at age fifteen in Portland, OR when he met the group Al Andalus, with whom he traveled, performed, and recorded. In 1996 he was awarded a scholarship to Berklee College of Music in Boston, MA, and he now holds a Magna Cum Laude Bachelor's Degree in Drum-Set Performance. He has traveled as a performer to Europe, Canada, South America, and within the United States, performing alongside Simon Shahin, Jamey Haddad, and Pink Martini, among others.
Phil Baker
Phil Baker (bass) toured with Diana Ross for nine years and appeared with her on “The Tonight Show” and for her legendary concert “Diana Ross - Live At Central Park.” He has also performed with jazz legends Eddie Harris, Joe Henderson, Bobby Hutcherson, Sonny Stitt, Diane Schuur and Ernie Watts; and at “Motown 25” with Michael Jackson, Smokey Robinson, Marvin Gaye and Linda Ronstadt. He toured with Gino Vannelli and played on his “Yonder Tree” CD. Recently he has appeared with Nat Adderley, Scott Hamilton and Joe Lovano. Having appeared on literally hundreds of jazz, rock, pop and blues albums, Baker is one of the West Coast's premiere bass players.
Timothy Nishimoto
Timothy Nishimoto (vocals and percussion) grew up in Los Angeles and started singing and performing at the age of two (winning a dance contest at the age of five!) in church choirs with his family. Throughout high school and college, he continued singing and performing in vocal jazz ensembles, barberstore quartets and theatrical productions. He graduated with a degree in Business from Cal State Long Beach, and opened Vino Paradiso Wine Bar and Bistro (www.vinoparadiso.com) in Portland in 2005. In the early days of Pink Martini, he performed with the band as a guest vocalist, and has been a permanent member since 2003.
Nicholas Corosa
Nicholas Crosa (violin) first appeared as a soloist at age 11 with the Portland Festival Symphony. His international debut occurred in 1996 when he performed a recital series as a guest of the Conservatory of Music of the City of Buenos Aires, in Argentina. He has since performed as a soloist with such orchestras as the Oregon Symphony, the Vancouver Symphony, the Aspen Concert Orchestra, the Aspen Young Artists Orchestra, the Portland Youth Philharmonic, the Hilton Head Orchestra and other ensembles and chamber music recitals internationally. He was a scholarship student of the late Dorothy De Lay and Won Bin Yim at the Juilliard School in New York. As of May 2005 Nicholas has been performing as part of Pink Martini.

Pansy Chang
Pansy Chang (cello) is presently Assistant Professor of Violoncello at Miami University of Ohio. She has performed in North America, Europe, and Israel. She has appeared with the Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center and Chamber Music Northwest, on Bob Sherman’s “Listening Room” WQXR New York, and in both the Yale Spectrum Series and the Yale Faculty Artist Series in New Haven. Concerto appearances include performances with the National Symphony Orchestra in Washington, DC, the Oregon Symphony, and regional orchestras in the Washington, DC and Portland metropolitan areas. In 1992 Ms. Chang was awarded a Fulbright Grant for study in the United Kingdom, and was a semi-finalist in the 1993 Leonard Rose International Cello Competition.
Dan Faehnle
Ohio native Dan Faehnle (guitar) was until recently based in Portland, OR and established relationships with such legendary jazz artists as Leroy Vinnegar, Chuck Israels, Dave Frishberg and Dick Berk. He has also worked with noted musicians as Joey DeFrancesco, Eddie Harris, Clark Terry, Zoot Sims, and Jeff Hamilton. Other significant colleagues have been Mel Brown, Ron Steen, Nancy King, Dave Friesen and Rebecca Kilgore. In 2000, Faehnle stepped into the guitar chair with Diana Krall, performing on numerous world tours, television shows, radio and media events. As an integral part of the Diana Krall quartet for three years, Dan garnered accolades from such publications as the New York Times, Los Angeles Times, JazzTimes and Downbeat magazines, as well as many international publications. His solo recordings include My Ideal and Ohio Lunch (Heavywood Music).
Claude Giron
Claude Giron (cello) began playing cello and piano at the age of six. In 1991, she received first prize in cello (class of Roland Pidoux) and chamber music (class of Michel Strauss) at the “Conservatoire Supérieur de Musique de Paris.” She then attended Yale University under Aldo Parisot, where she graduated in 1993 with a Masters of Music, and in 1994 with an Artist Diploma. From 1994 to 1998, she was a member of the Orchestre Philharmonique de Radio-France, and she is currently a member of the Orchestre de Paris. She frequently performs chamber music in France, Europe and the United States.
Brant Taylor
Brant Taylor (cello) was born in New York and raised in San Antonio, and made his first public appearance as a soloist at the age of 12. He has performed recitals and collaborated with leading chamber musicians throughout North America, Europe, and Asia in addition to appearing as soloist with orchestras in Texas, Michigan, Florida, Pennsylvania, New York, Switzerland and the Dominican Republic. From 1992-96, Brant was cellist of the award-winning Everest Quartet, top prizewinners at the 1995 Banff International String Quartet Competition. He was a member of the Saint Louis Symphony Orchestra in 1997-98, and joined the Chicago Symphony Orchestra in September of 1998. Brant enjoys performing with Pink Martini for several reasons, not the least of which is that it provides some welcome musical contrast to his “day job.” When not playing the cello, he enjoys drinking wine and flying airplanes, though not at the same time.
Maureen Love
Maureen Love (harp) was born and raised in Los Angeles, California. She began private lessons on the harp at age nine and later received a music scholarship to the University of Southern California where she was chosen as soloist to perform Ravel's Introduction and Allegro with the USC orchestra. She has performed extensively on the West Coast doing solo and ensemble work and teaches private instruction in harp. Maureen has recorded with several artist including her cousin, Brian Wilson of Beach Boy's fame, and more recently with her brother, Mike Love on his solo album. She also has several recordings of her own. Over the last several years Maureen has performed, recorded, and toured extensively with Pink Martini on the West Coast, Europe, Turkey, London, Hong Kong, Japan, New York, as well as with the San Francisco Symphony, the Seattle Symphony and the Hollywood Bowl Orchestra.
Jeffrey Budin
Jeffrey Budin (trombone) was born and raised in Los Angeles, California. Currently principal trombone with the San Francisco Ballet Orchestra, he has also held principal trombone positions in the Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra, the Orchestre Symphonique de Montreal, the Orquestra de la Ciutat de Barcelona and the Honolulu Symphony Orchestra. He performs regularly with the San Francisco Symphony, San Francisco Opera, the Bay Brass and at the Saint Barts Music Festival. Mr. Budin studied composition, arranging, film scoring, jazz improvisation and trombone at the Dick Grove School of Music and Northwestern University. He is currently on the faculty of the San Francisco Conservatory and can be heard on numerous recordings with the Pittsburgh, Montreal, the San Francisco Symphonies, as well as on many film soundtracks.

Paloma Griffin
Paloma Griffin (violin) born in Fresno, California, is currently a member of the Oregon Symphony. An avid chamber musician, she has collaborated with Portland-based ensembles Third Angle and her string trio, called “3.” Paloma has performed both chamber music and solo recitals throughout the United States and Europe, in Carnegie Hall, San Francisco’s Herbst Theater, Live on Radio on France, BBC Radio England and WGBH Boston. In addition to the Oregon Symphony, she has appeared with the New World Symphony and the Fresno Philharmonic.
Doug Smith
Doug Smith (vibes and percussion) grew up in Arlington, Massachusetts and received a scholarship from the University of Oregon where he studied percussion performance. He was a member of the 1985 world champion Garfield Cadets Drum and Bugle Corps. Doug is a board member of Ethos Inc., a non-profit, which brings after school music education to under privileged youth in the Portland area. He also leads his own band, Substrate, and is developing educational materials for his company, therhythmlab.
Jonas Tauber
Jonas Tauber (upright bass) was born in Switzerland and raised in a musical family. His father, a violinist/doctor, provided his early music education on cello and piano. After graduating from the Eastman School of Music, he held positions as principal cellist in the Boulder Philharmonic, The Cedar Rapids Symphony Orchestra and the Classic East Orchestra in Peterborough, England. He was a freelance cellist for three years in New York where he collaborated Itzhak Perlman, John Hollenbeck and Hans Tammen, among others. Upon moving to Portland to perform as a cellist with Pink Martini, he found they needed a bassist instead and welcomed the opportunity to learn a new instrument. He continues to play bass in the Portland area with other classical and jazz musicians.
David Eby
David Eby (cello) grew up in Pittsburgh and studied cello performance at the Eastman School of Music and Indiana University under Paul Katz and Janos Starker. A lover of music outside of the classical repetoire, he has studied jazz and improvisation. His composition, Celtic Passage for Solo Cello is available through Latham Music Enterprises. He is currently studying Yoga and is intrigued with how the power of music can be used for upliftment and higher consciousness.
John Wager
John Wager (bass) grew up in Portland and studied jazz saxophone at the Mt. Hood Community College. A multi-instrumentalist, he has studied and/or taught himself flute, clarinet, guitar, piano, drums and percussion. John has performed or recorded with several bands including Bazuka Jazz, Tony Starlight and Mel Kubik.
Richard Rothfus
Richard Rothfus (drums and bongos) became interested in music at an early age with the influence of his musician mother. He has performed for several rock bands including Snake Eyes and The Storm. Richard also performs regularly with The Lions of Batucada. His influences include Schubert, Santana and Slayer.
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