Jazz duo going strong after 40 years

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As Dwight Bosman puts it, he and his brother Dwayne have been gigging since they were 14. Their love of music — specifically the jazz they have been playing for more than 40 years — came from their father, the late Lloyd Smith, a former sideman with Count Basie and Duke Ellington.

In the 1960s, St. Louis and East St. Louis were filled with jazz clubs. The Bosman brothers would take in as many performances as they could, often sitting in for a session or two.

Dwayne cut his teeth on the flute, Dwight the clarinet. But they are both best known as saxophone players.

After graduating from Florida A&M University, they landed a long-term gig at Busch Gardens in Tampa, with a group called The Desert Suns.

By 1981, they were back in St. Louis with their own group. Their engagement at the Moose Lounge lasted more than 15 years. They have toured extensively, including a European trip with Fontella Bass of "Rescue Me" fame.

But just as important for the twins is their work in youth music education. Dwight is band director at Central Visual Performing Arts School, and the brothers helped develop the Symphony Music School at the Herbert Hoover Boys and Girls Club.

Their sound is jazz but rooted in blues and gospel.

"We don’t think of ourselves as just musicians. We’re jazz artists. We paint a portrait each time," Dwight says. "We do different styles of music, and our influences transcend through the music. But there is a fine line between satisfying the audience and ourselves."

Continue reading here at the St. Louis Post Dispatch.
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