Wednesday, October 7, 2015

jazz news - NYC


 


Jonathan Batiste, National Jazz Museum in Harlem's Artistic Director at Large brings his legendary energy and great music to the intimate and historic 
Alhambra Ballroom in Harlem on October 28 at 8pm to benefit 
the National Jazz Museum in Harlem.


$500 Preferred seating and reception
$250 Preferred seating and reception
$150 Preferred seating
$100 Preferred seating
$75 General seating

Click here to purchase tickets or call 212-348-8300.

Join the Facebook event here.
 

WE ARE MOVING!

After 15 years at our East 126th Street location, we are very proud to announce that we are moving to 58 West 129th Street, right off of Malcolm X Boulevard!

Our planned move in date is late 2015,  please visit our website for more details!

We've started an Indiegogo campaign to purchase new computers, stock our exhibit and office spaces with new furniture and make our new location technologically cutting-edge. We invite you to become a part of this new era by contributing to the cause! Numerous perks await you (and of course our undying love and appreciation)! Please tell your friends.

 




The National Jazz Museum in Harlem's latest exhibit,
More Than A Tinge: Latin Jazz is now open to the public at
the Bronx Museum for the Arts!

The curatorial team of author/composer Ned Sublette, historian Rene Lopez, producer Robert Sancho and NJMH Director Loren Schoenberg also created the museum's acclaimed Bebo Valdes exhibit in 2014.
Wednesday, October 7

7:00-8:30 pm

Desert Island Discs: Ron Carter
Location: 
The New School 
55 W. 13th Street

Host: Ted Panken

FREE TO THE PUBLIC

"Ron is an innovator and a great storyteller. Probably 99.9 percent of the bass players out here play stuff from Ron. There's Paul Chambers, and you can go back to Pettiford, Blanton and Israel Crosby, and a few people after Chambers-but a lot of it culminated in Ron, and then after Ron it's all of us. Ron to me is the most important bass player of the last fifty years. He defined the role of the bass player."-Stanley Clarke

Still going strong and maintaining an active touring schedule at 78, Ron Carter remains the gold standard of jazz bass playing. Generations of musicians have closely analyzed Ron Carter's ingenious bass lines on the studio albums and live recordings he made between 1963 and 1968 with Miles Davis, Wayne Shorter, Herbie Hancock and Tony Williams, who considered it their mandate to relax the rules of the 32-bar song form as far as possible while still maintaining the integrity of the tune in question. They've paid equivalent attention to the several dozen iconic Blue Note and CTI dates on which the bassist accompanied Shorter, Joe Henderson, McCoy Tyner, Freddie Hubbard, Stanley Turrentine, Milt Jackson and Antônio Carlos Jobim. They're on intimate terms with Carter's creative, definitive playing with a host of trios-grounding Bobby Timmons' soul unit in the early '60s; performing the equilateral triangle function with Williams and Hancock or Hank Jones, and with Billy Higgins and Cedar Walton; or navigating the wide-open spaces with Bill Frisell and Paul Motian-on which he incorporates a host of extended techniques into the flow with a tone that has been described as 'glowing in the dark.' They're cognizant of his uncanny ability to shape-shift between soloistic and complementary functions with such duo partners as Walton, Jim Hall, Kenny Barron, Richard Galliano, Rosa Passos and Houston Person. Not least, Carter's admirers know his work as a leader, with an oeuvre of more than 30 recordings in a host of configurations, most recently the Golden Triangle, with pianist Donald Vega and guitarist Russell Malone; the Ron Carter Quartet, with pianist Renee Rosnes; and the Ron Carter Big Band.

Join the Facebook event here.
Wednesday, October 14

7:00-8:30 pm

Javon Jackson Meets Art Blakey and Others 

Hosted by Javon Jackson
Location:
 
The New School 
55 W. 13th Street

FREE TO THE PUBLIC

Javon Jackson's musical world includes many diverse influences, including a long stint with the legendary Art Blakey. This series will explore many corners of music through the eyes and ears of a distinguished saxophonist, Javon came into international prominence as a member of Art Blakey and the Jazz Messengers, touring and recording with the legendary drummer. In addition to Blakey, Jackson has toured and recorded with Elvin Jones, Freddie Hubbard, Betty Carter, Cedar Walton, Ron Carter, Donald Byrd, Dr. Lonnie Smith, Richard Davis, Bobby Hutcherson, Curtis Fuller and Stanley Turrentine.

As a recording artist, Jackson has appeared on over 125 recordings. Additionally, he has developed a formidable career as a leader, recording and touring throughout the world. Javon's current musical group, The Javon Jackson Band, incorporates many styles including jazz, funk, R&B and rock.

Lucky 13, Javon Jackson's thirteenth recording as leader, is a combination of five recently composed originals, one cover from the songbook of Stevie Wonder and three selections with the iconic soul jazz pianist, vocalist and composer Les McCann. Jackson and McCann have been touring together for the past five years and quoting Jackson, "Les is a living legend and it is a blessing to have him on tour with the Javon Jackson Band." Their live experience is captured beautifully from a performance of "Compared to What" in Washington, DC at the Kennedy Center in 2008 included on Lucky 13. The trio for this recording are three young lions that as Jackson puts it emphatically, "All three have dynamic careers ahead of them." This trio consists of Joel Holmes-piano, Corcoran Holt-bass and McClenty Hunter-drums.

Recently commissioned by the Syracuse International Film Festival, Javon composed a full length score for the Alfred Hitchcock film, "The Lodger". An early outing by the master of suspense, "The Lodger" is a silent film based on the story of the hunt for Jack the Ripper. Javon debuted his original score at the festival and one composition from that score, "Sun Up", is performed on Lucky 13 by Jackson and the trio.

Join the Facebook event here.
Tuesday, October 20

7:00-8:30 pm

Jazz and Contemporary Culture: Jazz and Classical Music

Host: Greg Thomas

Guest: Mark O'Connor
Location:
The New School 
55 W. 13th Street

FREE TO THE PUBLIC
Mark O'Connor and Courtney Bryan Mark O'Connor, student of American fiddle pioneer Benny Thomasson and French jazz violin icon Stephane Grappelli, is a premier American master of violin, integrating jazz improvisation with other virtuoso violin styles into a whole new American approach to strings performance. Courtney Bryan, a New Orleans native, is a prolific and eclectic composer, pianist, and arranger with compositions ranging from solo works to large ensembles in jazz and new music idioms, film scores and more. In April 2015, the world premiere of her composition of SANCTUM for orchestra and recorded sound took place at Jazz at Lincoln Center as part of the American Composers Orchestra Blues Symphony & Beyond.

Photo Credit: Jim McGuire
Join the Facebook event here.
Friday, October 30

7:00-8:30 pm

A MUSICAL MOSAIC: The World of Legendary Jazz Record Producer Michael Cuscuna
Location: 
 Jazz at Lincoln Center, 10 Columbus Circle

Host: Michael Cuscuna

Guest: Dan Morgenstern

FREE TO THE PUBLIC

Michael Cuscuna has been one of the key figures in the reissue boom of the 1980s and 90s. When he produces a reissue, the emphasis is on coherent packaging, the reissuance of complete sessions and consistent high quality. Cuscuna played drums, saxophone and flute early on but his goal from the start was starting his own record label. He broadcast a jazz program on WXPN, worked for the ESP company in the late '60s and wrote for Jazz and Pop Magazine and Downbeat. Cuscuna left radio in the early '70s and became a producer for Atlantic (he had earlier produced a George Freeman date for Delmark), working with Dave Brubeck and the Art Ensemble of Chicago. Other jobs included a brief stint at Motown, reissuing Impulse records for the ABC label, producing sets for Arista and Muse and working on the five-LP Wildflowers sessions for Alan Douglas. Cuscuna was involved in the Freedom and Novus labels with Steve Backer in the late '70s. During 1975-81 he ran an extensive program in which he unearthed scores of important sessions for Blue Note. In 1983 Cuscuna and Charlie Lourie founded Mosaic, which has since been recognized as the #1 reissue label, reissuing complete sessions in lavish limited-edition box sets. In addition to Mosaic, Cuscuna has continued making major contributions to other reissue programs (including GRP's Impulse series and Blue Note's ongoing program) and has often been voted Producer of the Year in Downbeat's Critics Poll.

Guest: Historian Dan Morgenstern. We will explore the birth of the second wave of jazz independent labels. Learn why labels such as Commodore, HRS and Blue Note came into existence and found their niche. Within a few years, they were established and acclaimed internationally. They became the home for Charlie Parker, Lester Young, Thelonious Monk and others, and played a large role in the evolution of the music.
Join the Facebook event here.
Educational Programs

Our GUIDED GROUP VISITS are designed to suit the needs of the visiting adults, tourists, children, teens and student groups. We can accommodate a variety of group sizes for a one-hour program that can include a performance, a film, a lecture demonstration, or a lesson in jazz history to compliment school curriculum.


To schedule a visit go to www.jmih.org/education
or call 212-348-8300 ext. 102.
Membership

Special Offer to NJMH Members:
 
Become a Member or Renew Membership and receive discounts on tickets to our Fall Benefit Concert featuring Jonathan Batiste on October 28.
 
Members will receive 20% discount on $75 and $100 tickets

Members seeking a discount should call the museum at 212-348-8300 ext 103 to receive the discount
 
Join our growing community of local and international JAZZ lovers and play a vital role in our mission to promote and preserve our nation's JAZZ heritage and offer innovative educational programs that interpret and celebrate the rich history of JAZZ

For more information on our membership levels of giving and benefits please call (212) 348-8300 Ext. 103 or visit our website
Stay Connected
Like us on Facebook   Follow us on Twitter
All programs are free unless noted otherwise.
These programs are supported, in part, by public funds from the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs, in partnership with the City Council, and the New York State Council on the Arts with the support of Governor Andrew Cuomo and the New York State. 
Come Visit Us!
    The National Jazz Museum in Harlem's Visitors Center is closed pending our move to 58 W 129th Street. Please visit our website,jmih.org, for the latest information on when we will reopen.
The Jazz Museum in Harlem is a 501(c)3 charitable organization.
All donations are fully tax deductible.
Copyright © 2014 The National Jazz Museum in Harlem.
All Rights Reserved.

No comments:

Post a Comment