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Artist
Piet Noordijk (Rotterdam, May 26, 1932 - Hellevoetsluis, October 8, 2011) was a Dutch saxophonist. Piet Noordijk studied at the Rotterdam Conservatory between 1950 and 1954. He graduated cum laude on clarinet. On alto saxophone, he is self-taught. In the beginning of the Fifties, Noordijk (1932) got hooked on jazz music. His main influence was Charlie Parker. During the German occupation it was forbidden to listen to jazz music in public. That didn’t prevent Noordijk’s elderly brothers from playing jazz at home. Music was what kept the Noordijk family going. After the war, Piet started studying the clarinet at the Rotterdam Conservatory. To his disappointment, he couldn’t play jazz at the Conservatory. He had to wait until the Fifties, when he started playing in nightclubs, with a varied repertoire. He got more and more studio jobs, and he ended up working as a studio musician. In the Sixties, Noordijk played with the legendary Mischa Mengelberg/Piet Noordijk Quartet. He still considers the concert they gave at the Newport Jazz Festival to be a milestone in his career. In 1965 he was awarded the Wessel Ilcken Award, an important jazz award in The Netherlands. In the Seventies Piet Noordijk worked with all kinds of bands. In 1978 he became lead alto player with the Metropole Orchestra, and a much sought-after soloist. He played under conductors such as Enrico Morricone, Robert Farnon, Rogier van Otterloo, Jerry van Rooyen, Rob Pronk and Henk Meutgeert. He remained with th