Roger Cicero

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German jazz vocalist Roger Cicero interpreted the sound and spirit of the swing era for contemporary audiences, upholding the family traditions established by his father, renowned jazz pianist Eugene Cicero. Born in West Berlin on July 6, 1970, Cicero grew up surrounded by jazz and its practitioners, and at age 11 made his professional debut in support of singer Helen Vita. He later studied voice, piano, and guitar at the Hohner Conservatory, and from 1989 to 1992 served as a regular member of the Eugene Cicero Trio while moonlighting with the German youth jazz orchestra Bundesjugenjazzorchester. After his father’s 1997 death, Cicero joined the groups Jazzkantine and Soulonge, making his recorded debut on the latter’s 2003 release The Essence of a Live Event. That same year, he founded the Roger Cicero Quartet as well as an 11-member big band, both of them adherents to traditional jazz idioms but with lyrics in their leader’s native German tongue. After releasing the 2006 album Good Morning Midnight in collaboration with pianist Julia Hülsmann, Cicero issued his solo debut, Männersachen, later that same year. Buoyed by the hit single “Ich Atme Ein,” the LP reached number three on the German charts. During 2009 Cicero made his film debut in “Hilde” which depicts the story of German singer and actor Hildegard Knef and in the same year he returned with his third album Artgerecht. His fourth record In Diesem Moment was released in 2011 and the track “Fur nichts auf dieser Welt” was selected by the German football association as the country’s official song during the Euro 2012 soccer tournament. ~ Jason Ankeny