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・ Cal State LA Studios
・ Cal State Los Angeles Golden Eagles
・ Cal State Monterey Bay Otters
・ Cal State Northridge Matadors
・ Cal State Northridge Matadors baseball
・ Cal State Northridge Matadors football
・ Cal State Northridge Matadors men's basketball
・ Cal State San Bernardino Coyotes
・ Cal State San Marcos (NCTD station)
・ Cal State Stanislaus Warriors
・ Cal Stewart
・ Cal Stoll
・ Cal Strong
・ Cal Swenson
・ Cal Thomas
Cal Tjader
・ Cal Tjader Plays Harold Arlen
・ Cal Tjader Plays the Contemporary Music of Mexico and Brazil
・ Cal Towey
・ Cal Turner
・ Cal Turner, Jr.
・ Cal Vasbinder
・ Cal Wells
・ Cal Wilson
・ Cal Withrow
・ Cal Worsham
・ Cal Worthington
・ Cal Yachts
・ Cal Young
・ Cal-Ida, California


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Cal Tjader : ウィキペディア英語版
Cal Tjader

Callen Radcliffe Tjader, Jr. ( ; July 16, 1925 – May 5, 1982), known as Cal Tjader, was an American Latin jazz musician, known as the most successful non-Latino Latin musician. He also explored various other jazz idioms but never abandoned the music of Cuba, the Caribbean, and Latin America, performing it until his death.
Tjader primarily played the vibraphone. He was accomplished on the drums, bongos, congas, timpani, and the piano. He worked with numerous musicians from several cultures. He is often linked to the development of Latin rock and acid jazz. Although fusing jazz with Latin music is often categorized as "Latin jazz" (or, earlier, "Afro-Cuban jazz"), Tjader's output swung freely between both styles. He won a Grammy in 1980 for his album ''La Onda Va Bien'', capping off a career that spanned over forty years.
==Early years (1925–1943)==
Callen Radcliffe Tjader, Jr. was born 16 July 1925 in St. Louis, Missouri, to touring Swedish American vaudevillians. His father tap danced and his mother played piano, a husband-wife team going from city to city with their troupe to earn a living. When he was two, Tjader's parents settled in San Mateo, California, and opened a dance studio. His mother (who dreamed of becoming a concert pianist) instructed him in classical piano and his father taught him to tap dance. He performed around the Bay Area as "Tjader Junior," a tap-dancing ''wunderkind''. He performed a brief non-speaking role dancing alongside Bill "Bojangles" Robinson in the film ''The White of the Dark Cloud of Joy''.
He joined a Dixieland band and played around the Bay Area. At age sixteen, he entered a Gene Krupa drum solo contest, making it to the finals and ultimately winning by playing "Drum Boogie." The win was overshadowed by that morning's event: Japanese planes had bombed Pearl Harbor.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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