Paul K. Ward, Pianist

“FINDING MY WAY INTO MUSIC HAS BEEN A LIFE JOURNEY.

“Music can’t be taught all at once, because the student has to meet it halfway. I started lessons when I was a boy, and my time loving, learning about, and performing music has been a major theme in my life.

“I’ve arranged, composed, recorded, accompanied, and performed around the world, but the center of my attention is always the music’s demands on me. I’m especially grateful to play music that people enjoy, whether it’s because the music speaks to them directly, or through the filter of memory — ideally both!

“My heroes have been Bill Evans, George Shearing, Oscar Peterson, and — lately, Emmet Cohen and Brad Meldhau. They all share the same integrity about approaching their music, while knowing that the best outcome is to invite the audience along. Everyone wins when that goes well.”

Paul K. Ward was born and raised in Ashland, Virginia, to a brilliant college music professor father and a gorgeous and tenacious singer/dancer/actress — and later nutritionist — mother. He wouldn’t have his musical soul without the two of them.

Paul earned his undergraduate degree in mathematics from Davidson College (North Carolina), and his global executive masters of business administration from TRIUM. He is certified in investment banking from the Investment Banking Institute. Living now in Portland, Oregon, with his wife of 21 years, Angela, he now consults, produces music and video, and performs jazz and popular music on stages big and small.

Paul has served on the board of a longtime non-profit in Portland, Cerimon House, which supported music, fine arts, storytelling, and community-building, and then moved to the position of Executive Director of Artichoke Music, one of the longest-lived music venues (and later, non-profit) serving the American Folk Music scene, and serving as both a school and a store for the Portland area.

Since moving on from Artichoke Music, Paul has been involved in teaching young piano students, building national music education relationships, recording music in his studio, and co-producing audio books (the latter in partnership with Ooligan Press, a division of the Portland State University’s graduate program in publishing), and has recently taught an innovation management class in the PSU MBA program along with James Latham, focusing on the lessons in leadership and creativity offered by jazz musicians that can inform new processes for sustainable business growth.