AFRO-AMERICAN MUSIC INSTITUTE CELEBRATES 36 YEARS
http://www.indiegogo.com/projects/building-today-for-tomorrow/x/267428
Pain Relief Beyond Belief
http://www.komehsaessentials.com/
From Blakey to Brown, Como to Costa, Eckstine to Eldridge, Galbraith to Garner, Harris to Hines, Horne to Hyman, Jamal to Jefferson, Kelly to Klook; Mancini to Marmarosa, May to Mitchell, Negri to Nestico, Parlan to Ponder, Reed to Ruther, Strayhorn to Sullivan, Turk to Turrentine, Wade to Williams… the forthcoming publication Treasury of Pittsburgh Jazz Connections by Dr. Nelson Harrison and Dr. Ralph Proctor, Jr. will document the legacy of one of the world’s greatest jazz capitals.
Do you want to know who Dizzy Gillespie idolized? Did you ever wonder who inspired Kenny Clarke and Art Blakey? Who was the pianist that mentored Monk, Bud Powell, Tad Dameron, Elmo Hope, Sarah Vaughan and Mel Torme? Who was Art Tatum’s idol and Nat Cole’s mentor? What musical quartet pioneered the concept adopted later by the Modern Jazz Quartet? Were you ever curious to know who taught saxophone to Stanley Turrentine or who taught piano to Ahmad Jamal? What community music school trained Robert McFerrin, Sr. for his history-making debut with the Metropolitan Opera? What virtually unknown pianist was a significant influence on young John Coltrane, Shirley Scott, McCoy Tyner, Bobby Timmons and Ray Bryant when he moved to Philadelphia from Pittsburgh in the 1940s? Would you be surprised to know that Erroll Garner attended classes at the Julliard School of Music in New York and was at the top of his class in writing and arranging proficiency?
Some answers can be gleaned from the postings on the Pittsburgh Jazz Network.
For almost 100 years the Pittsburgh region has been a metacenter of jazz originality that is second to no other in the history of jazz. One of the best kept secrets in jazz folklore, the Pittsburgh Jazz Legacy has heretofore remained mythical. We have dubbed it “the greatest story never told” since it has not been represented in writing before now in such a way as to be accessible to anyone seeking to know more about it. When it was happening, little did we know how priceless the memories would become when the times were gone.
Today jazz is still king in Pittsburgh, with events, performances and activities happening all the time. The Pittsburgh Jazz Network is dedicated to celebrating and showcasing the places, artists and fans that carry on the legacy of Pittsburgh's jazz heritage.
WELCOME!
MARY LOU WILLIAMS
The African American Jazz Caucus, Inc., is dedicated to protecting, preserving and sustaining the rich cultural heritage of jazz as an indigenous musical art form.
Website: http://www.aajc.us
Location: New York City
Members: 61
Latest Activity: Mar 24, 2018
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PRESERVING THE JAZZ LEGACY.
Jazz is an art form which has its origins, spiritual, heritage and cultural roots in Africa, African American communities and the African Diaspora. The African American Jazz Caucus, Inc. (AAJC), is proactively working to maintain the aesthetic integrity, heritage, legacy and historical facts germane to the music emphasizing "The Roots that have produced the Fruits" . We are engaged in creating programs and providing services to further jazz education and jazz audiences. The Caucus invites and encourages proactive members to share their expertise in our networking with national and international communities.
Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.
Opening speech at the 1964 Berlin Jazz Festival
"Humanity and the Importance of Jazz"
"God has wrought many things out of oppression. He has endowed his creatures with the capacity to create - and from this capacity has flowed the sweet songs of sorrow and joy that have allowed man to cope with his environment and many different situations.
Jazz speaks for life. The Blues tell the story of life's difficulties, and if you think for a moment, you will realize that they take the hardest realities of life and put them into music, only to come out with some new hope or sense of triumph. This is triumphant music.
Modern Jazz has continued in this tradition, singing the songs of a more complicated urban existence. When life itself offers no order and meaning, the musician creates an order and meaning from the sounds of the earth which flow through his instrument.
It is no wonder that so much of the search for identity among American Negroes was championed by Jazz musicians. Long before the modern essayists and scholars wrote of "racial identity" as a problem for a multi-racial world, musicians were returning to their roots to affirm that which was stirring within their souls.
Much of the power of our Freedom Movement in the United States has come from this music. It has strengthened us with its sweet rhythms when courage began to fail. It has calmed us with its rich harmonies when spirits were down.
And now, Jazz is exported to the world. For in the particular struggle of the Negro in America there is something akin to the universal struggle of modern man. Everybody has the Blues. Everybody longs for meaning. Everybody needs to love and be loved. Everybody needs to clap hands and be happy. Everybody longs for faith. In music, especially this broad category called Jazz, there is a stepping stone towards all of these."
Started by Travis Klein. Last reply by Bob Garvin Nov 12, 2017. 7 Replies 0 Likes
I'm only 67 years old so I don't relate well to jazz before the hard bop era. One thing I know is that the period between the mid 50's and mid 60's produced the music that is most pleasing to…Continue
Started by Dr. Nelson Harrison Dec 9, 2012. 0 Replies 3 Likes
Peter "LaRoca" Sims is a legendary drummer. Not very well known among jazz fans, very few musicians can boast of having their jazz first concert recorded in one of Sonny Rollins’ masterpieces (A…Continue
Tags: interview, music, jazz, pittsburgh, network
Started by Dr. Nelson Harrison. Last reply by Roberta Windle Jun 16, 2011. 1 Reply 2 Likes
June 7, 2011Dr Larry RidleyAn accomplished musical force with decades of experience as a…Continue
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To preserve Jazz is to preserve an art form of African American Life.
In this incredible journey of Jazz that I have started to walk, I have had the opportunity to work with some of the top Jazz artist in PGH, such as Harold Young, Dr. Nelson, and Sean Jones and too many to name. I've meet others like Clark Terry, Kurt Elling, Dianne Reeves and countless other. I'm lovin' this walk in this beautiful legacy.
“EddieVinson: Folks Called Him Mr. Cleanhead” By Kirk Silsbee
Two years ago Eddie Vinson took partin a sax summit show at the Music Machine in West Los Angeles. In the artist’slounge before the show, the participants—Red Holloway, Plas Johnson, Big JayMcNeely and Vinson—chowed down on a soul food buffet. Holloway balanced a plastic plate on hisstomach and made an idle comment between mouthfuls. “You know,” he said, “what would really setthese greens off? A big piece ofcornbread and some hot sauce.”
Vinson, elegantly attired in athree-piece suit, reached into the breast pocket of his sharp suit jacket. With an impish grin, he silently produced abottle of Tabasco. The tiny room exploded into laughter. It was the same kind of sly humor that he putacross in his best-known blues lyrics. They were full of hasty backdoor exits, frustrated spinsters,kidney-stew girlfriends, big brass beds, the manifold wonders of great biglegs, and the erotic wonder of a bald head.
Vinson passed away last July 2nd. A September 30th tribute concertat the Biltmore Bowl will feature Willie Dixon, Harry ‘Sweets’ Edison, TeddyEdwards, Jimmy Witherspoon, Papa John Creach, Mickey Champion, Plas Johnson,the Bernie Pearl Blues Band, Gerald Wiggins, Phil Upchurch, among others. The talent spans the spectrum of blues andjazz—the two camps Vinson’s feet were solidly planted in.
He was no blues provincial. In 1974, Vinson heard a Weather Report albumat the Berlin apartment of Kansas City trumpeter Carmell Jones and wasable to identify Wayne Shorter’s tenor saxophone. “Hmmm,” he said to Melody Maker journalist Valerie Wilmer, “he sure listened to a lotof John Coltrane.”
Vinson was born in 1917 in Houston, Texas,and played in local territory bands, most notably the Milt LarkinOrchestra. That outfit carried pianistWild Bill Davis (the future organ pioneer) and a reed section that housedVinson, Arnett Cobb and Illinois Jacquet—three messengers who would take thesaxophone blues into jazz in important and distinct ways. All three would work in the modern jazzidiom, yet to a man, they remained firmly grounded in the blues.
While traveling through the Southwest with the band,Vinson met a lasting source of influence. In 1939, during an after-hours jam session in Shreveport, Indiana,he first heard the alto saxophone of Charlie Parker. Although three years Parker’s senior andalready a competent altoist, Vinson woodsheded with Parker for two weeks toinvestigate the younger man’s advances.
A short 1936 tour with Chicago blues singer LilGreen and her accompanist, guitarist Big Bill Broonzy, interrupted Vinson’sLarkin tenure. It also gave Vinson oneof his few discernible vocal sources. Heliked Broonzy’s plaintive blues songs, especially the sardonic “Just a Dream,”which Vinson would record several times over the years. In the Larkin band, Vinson had sung for themusicians’ amusement after-hours, but the Broonzy experience must havecrystallized something in him. Hisvocals became a part of the Larkin show.
Former Duke Ellington trumpeter CootieWilliams was in the process of assembling his own orchestra in 1942 and he cameto Houston insearch of Cobb. Williams caught aperformance of the Larkin Orchestra and, as a result, knew that he wantedVinson’s blues singing as part of his own band.
The Cootie Williams Orchestra was oneof the greatest, yet most underappreciated jazz orchestras of the 1940s. Relentlessly blues-based, on up-tempo jumptunes it was absolutely ferocious, with roaring brass and reed sections thatviciously riffed against each other. Fewbands could match its intensity and jazz lore has it that the Williams crewvanquished the orchestra of Cootie’s old boss, Ellington, at the SavoyBallroom, Harlem’s showcase and laboratory forcutting-edge social dancing. Mostsingers would have wilted under the heat that band could generate. Vinson not only sang the blues withprojection but he somehow conveyed insouciance as well. A short film of the Williams Orchestra from1944 features Vinson singing his hit “When My Baby Left Me,” a slow blues. The hands-in-the-pockets informality and thelazy yodeling of words suggested a man who had stopped off at a tavern on theway home from work.
Vinson’s hit records with the Williamsorganization—“”Cherry Red Blues,” “Somebody’s Got to Go” and “Juice HeadBaby”—made him a major factor in the urbanization of the blues during the WorldWar II years. He was an authentic bluesperformer who was also conversant with the developments that bebop had broughtto jazz.
Cornetist Bobby Bradford heard Vinson several timesin Dallas,beginning in 1946. He notes that Vinson“always had good rhythm sections and guys who could play jazz. You could hear Eddie playing the bop phraseson his horn. What I hear in his playingis somebody who could get over the horn but who embraced some of the harmonicthings and some of the lines that the bopper were doing. He probably fused those things into hisplaying by about 1944.”
Vinson was not only a capable instrumentalist but asa songwriter he contributed immutably to the blues canon. Prematurely bald, Vinson came by his monikerof ‘Mr. Cleanhead’ honestly. Hairstraightening for the black community was a dangerous chore that involved theapplication of a lye solution to the scalp. The step-by-step procedure is vividly—and painfully--recounted in The Autobiography of Malcolm X. Vinson knew Malcolm (then known as DetroitRed) as a sandwich vendor on a New York railway. Vinson would attribute his hair loss to excessive straightening, or“conking” as it was known, and Malcolm later cited Vinson’s hair loss as reasonfor wearing his own hair natural.
Vinson turned his clean pate intomusical autobiography and self-advertisement, with his perennial “Clean HeadBlues”:
Folkscall me Mr. Cleanhead, just because my head is bald (TWICE),
Butwith the stuff that I use, I don’t need no hair at all!
If it wasn’t for you women, I’d have my curly locks today (TWICE),
ButI’ve been hugged, kissed and petted, ‘til all my hair been rubbed away!
His 1950s recordings were almostalways in the rhythm ‘n blues vein and Vinson’s producers weren’t keen on himcutting jazz instrumentals on his sessions. Yet jazz musicians have long ascribed two Miles Davis standards--“TuneUp” and “Four”--as Vinson originals.
Vinson’s bands employed, at one timeor another, trumpeters Clark Terry and Johnny Coles, trombonist Slide Hampton,tenor saxophonists Eddie ‘Lockjaw’ Davis and John Coltrane, and pianists RedGarland, Wynton Kelly and Randy Weston. Bradford recalls a typical Dallasappearance by the Vinson band: “The sets they would play usually lasted fromnine to one in the morning. The firstcouple of hours they’d play stuff for the dancers and Eddie’s blues hits, like“Just a Dream,” “Kidney Stew,” “I Took the Front Door In,” and “Old MaidBoogie.” But after about eleven, they’dstart to play standards and jazz. Healways had good jazz players and he could play it too, as well as the blues.”
When Coltrane joined Vinson’s band, hehad been playing a Charlie Parker-derived style of alto saxophone. Vinson needed a tenor, not another alto, soColtrane changed his horn. It was duringthat period of 1947 to 1948 that Coltrane began to search for his own identityas a saxophonist. According tobiographer J.C. Thomas in Chasin’ theTrane (Doubleday, 1975), Vinson and Coltrane “developed an entertainingroutine to keep their chops together and grab the audience’s attention. Eddie would play a long, loping blues line onalto, with John filling in on tenor behind him; then they would exchange horns,each flipping his sax to the other and immediately duplicating what had justbeen played, only this time on the other’s horn.”
Vinson had touched another buddingmodernist in the late 1940s. When hisband appeared in Tallahassee, Florida, two youngbrothers--Julian and Nat Adderley--made a point of attending. In 1976, after his older brother’s passing,Nat was specific about Vinson’s impact on Cannonball. “When he first came to town,” Nat stated, “Cannonwent over, asked Eddie if he could play and Eddie said sure. For about seven years Eddie would come totown and he’d get together with Cannon. Eddie was another one of those teacher-kind of guys: he could teach whathe knew and he knew a helluva lot. Andhe could play the hell out of the alto.” In 1959, Cannonball told writer Ira Gitler that it was Vinson who taughthim how to play right-handed trills on the alto: “He taught me how to do thatand how to do it in different ways, different keys.”
The commercial success of theCannonball Adderley Quintet made it one of the most bankable bands in jazz inthe early 1960s. Riverside Records gaveCannonball a free hand in recording worthy artists. (Among Adderley’s many productions was amemorable pairing of Bud Powell and Don Byas, and debut albums by ChuckMangione and Nancy Wilson.)
At a chance Kansas City encounter with Vinson in the summer of 1961,Adderley learned that Vinson was at a career low point and hadn’t recordedsince 1957. Adderley oversaw a finealbum for Riverside,though its shelf life was short. Landmark has just reissued the album, originally titled Back Door Blues, now rechristened Cleanhead & Cannonball. It’s a gem that balanced Vinson’s great bluesvocals with his estimable jazz playing in the company of the Adderley band(cornetist Nat, pianist Joe Zawinul, bassist Sam Jones and drummer LouisHayes).
Vinson probably never recorded with a better modernjazz crew. The Quintet could play theblues at its dirtiest, swing the demanding bop instrumentals like “Vinsonology”and “Canonizing,” and expertly back the vocals. Lest anyone needs reminding, this album shows Joe Zawinul to be arighteous blues pianist. (Nat anddrummer Louis Hayes heard him capably accompany Dinah Washington, so when Bobby Timmons vacatedthe Adderley piano chair, Zawinul was a logical candidate.) Cannonball graciously limited himself toplaying juicy blues obbligatti behind Vinson’s vocals on old favorites like“Back Door Blues,” “Kidney Stew,” “Person to Person” and “Hold It!” He let the date be Vinson’s showcase, yetEddie’s sound and instrumental agility were strikingly similar toAdderley. Vinson’s tone was a littlemore rugged, while Cannonball’s was a bit sharper and streamlined.
The vocals are all prime Cleanhead. He was a bit of an oddity in that—like LouisJordan--he was one of the few blues saxophonists who sang. Vinson’s guttural tones seem to emanate fromthe back of the throat and chest. Likehis alto sax playing, he was quite comfortable in the lower range. He often tied off falsetto phrases withlaryngitic pigtails as the voice cracked when Vinson reached too high. This became something of a trademark for him. The big surprise is a ballad, “Audrey,” sung bel canto with nothing but earnestness. It’s a reminder that Vinson’s waters ran verydeep.
Vinson spent the 1960s in Kansas City and Houston, though he returnedto Los Angelesat the end of the decade to take part in a Johnny Otis TV special. “Midnight at the Barrelhouse” was a watershedevent that began the reconsideration of the early rhythm and blues giants. Taylor Hackford (in his directorial debut)oversaw the one-hour special where Otis and his orchestra backed Vinson, BigJoe Turner, T-Bone Walker, Esther Phillips, Charles Brown and Roy Milton. It was a cavalcade of pre-rock and roll bluesthat gave the featured performers new visibility.
Vinson settled into a late 1970s residence at theRubiyat Room on Western Avenuethat coincided with a new label association with Pablo Records. Norman Granz recorded him in the company ofstars like Count Basie, Big Joe Turner, Clark Terry, Sarah Vaughan, and MiltJackson. These recordings consciouslyemphasized the jazz side of Mr. Cleanhead. In effect, Granz was just extending what Adderley and Riverside had begun in 1961.
L.A. Reader, Sept. 23, 1988
JAZZed MAGAZINE Issue: January, 2009
JAZZ FORUM
By now most of you are aware that the International Association for Jazz Education (IAJE) ceased to
exist as of April of 2008. To many this may represent an end to having a place
where educators, students, performers and jazz fans alike could meet at the
annual IAJE Conference to exchange ideas, learn about the latest in music
technology and above all honor our Jazz Masters. However, for the African
American Jazz Caucus, Inc., it represented more than that. It was a place where
African American educators and students could gather to address issues and
concerns that are unique to Historically Black Colleges and Universities
(HBCUs) and communities at large. It was also a place to showcase the
outstanding talent that is being developed at these institutions and
communities. For these reasons, the African American Jazz Caucus, Inc. is more
than ever committed to moving forward with its mission of preserving and
promulgating jazz. One of the ways that the AAJC aims to communicate its
commitment and latest news within our organization will be through this
bi-monthly forum. Our thanks go out to JAZZed Magazine for granting us this
opportunity.
For those who are not yet familiar with us, the Black Jazz Music Caucus (BJMC) was organized in 1977 as
an independent affiliate of the National Association of Jazz Educators (NAJE).
The two founders were the late Anderson White and Dr. Larry Ridley. The mission
and relationship with NAJE were to ensure that the African American jazz community
was represented in conference activities. A few years later, NAJE changed the
name of the organization to the International Association for Jazz Education
(IAJE). In 2000, Dr. Larry Ridley was appointed the BJMC Executive Director by
its President, Badi Murphy. The membership voted to change the name to the
African American Jazz Caucus (AAJC) and Dr. Ridley secured not-for-profit 501c3
status for the AAJC from the IRS, in 2001.
That same year, the AAJC organized the AAJC/HBCU Student All-star Big Band™ to showcase, in an
international forum, the outstanding talent that exists and is being cultivated
by jazz educators at HBCUs. Band members are selected via an annual blind
audition conducted by an independent panel of jazz professionals/educators. The
process is managed by the AAJC HBCU Jazz Directors Committee- Dr. Russell
Thomas, Chairman, Jackson State University;
Dr. Ira Wiggins, Vice Chairman, North Carolina
Central University;
Dr. Howard Harris, Texas Southern University; Professor James Patterson, Clark Atlanta
University; Dr. John Lamkin, University of Maryland
Eastern Shore and Professor James Holden, Virginia State
University. If selected,
the students are given the opportunity to perform at high visibility venues,
during the academic year. The band's first performance was at the 2002 IAJE
conference in Long Beach,
CA. Jazz Legend, Gerald Wilson was the conductor. He is now our Conductor
Emeritus and a recipient of the NEA Jazz Master Award.
The participation in the blind auditions for the HBCU Big Band has grown to include students from as
many as fifteen HBCUs. In the Fall of 2007, 52 students auditioned for the 2008
Band. They represented the following institutions:
Hampton University (VA), Elizabeth City State University (NC), Lincoln University (PA), Morehouse
College (GA), Fayetteville State University (NC), Jackson State University
(MS), Texas Southern University (TX), North Carolina Central University (NC),
University of Maryland Eastern Shore (MD), Clark Atlanta University (GA), South
Carolina State University (SC), and North Carolina A & T State University
(NC).
Featured guest soloists with the band have included stellar jazz artists, Ed Thigpen; Jimmy Owens;
Marcia Miget; Joe Chambers, Oliver Lake and NEA Jazz Masters Jimmy Heath and
Jimmy Cobb. AAJC Board member, Professor Larry Dwyer, Director of Jazz Studies
and Assistant Director of Bands, University of Notre Dame, facilitated the
band's performances in 2006 and 2008 at the 48th and 50th anniversaries of the
Notre Dame Collegiate Jazz Festival. Since 2006, noted bassist, arranger,
composer, Artistic Director, John Clayton has granted scholarships, to selected
outstanding student members of the band to attend the Summer Centrum Jazz
Workshop, in Port Townsend, WA.
The AAJC Jazz Dance Band began under the direction of the legendary saxophonist and arranger Jimmy Coe.
The current director is David Hardiman, Professor of Music, Emeritus, City
College of San Francisco. For many years, the AAJC Jazz Dance was always a
standing room only highlight of the IAJE Conferences. In addition, the AAJC
ProJam Session, at the IAJE Conferences, always served as memorial tributes.
The purpose was to acknowledge noted jazz legends that passed during the
previous year.
AAJC also produced an annual jazz presentation with a religious theme as the final event of the IAJE
Conferences. The purpose was to emphasize the role of the church in the
spiritual roots and heritage of the African Diaspora. The service has featured
major works by Dr. Willis Kirk, President Emeritus, City College of San
Francisco; Dr. Howard Harris, Texas Southern University; singer, Ruth Naomi
Floyd and Dr. William Smith, North
Carolina Central University.
Noted AAJC member jazz photographer Jim Alexander's creative work has become a staple at AAJC events. His work can be seen at www.jimalexanderphotography.com
The AAJC presented outstanding panels and workshops at the IAJE Conferences featuring, NEA Jazz
Master, Barry Harris; Dr. James Ammons, former Chancellor of North Carolina
Central University, now President of Florida A&M; Dr. Karen Chandler, College of Charleston, SC, and noted journalist, Jack McCray,
Charleston Post & Courier. Performance appearances throughout the
conferences were given by NEA Jazz Masters Billy Higgins, Frank Foster, Ron
Carter, Dr. David Baker, Jimmy Cobb and jazz artists Cedar Walton, Stanley
Turrentine, Hank Marr, the Harlem Renaissance Band, Everett Green, and Jamey
Aebersold.
In 2006, Dr. Larry Ridley and Dr. James Ammons, then Chancellor of North Carolina Central University, Durham, NC,
conceived the idea of creating the first Jazz Research Institute and Jazz Hall
of Fame at a Historically Black College and University (HBCU). The project was
approved by the NCCU Board of Governors, in the spring of 2007.
The First Annual North Carolina Central University/African American Jazz Caucus Jazz Research
Institute (NAJRI), HBCU Jazz Conference/Festival, was held June 20 – 23, 2007,
in Durham.
Among the outstanding participants were writer, A.B. Spellman, pianist Kenny
Barron and trumpeter Jimmy Owens.
The Second Annual Conference was held April 16 – 19, 2008. Noted participants included NEA Jazz
Masters, Dr. Billy Taylor and Dan Morgenstern. The AAJC also produced the First
Annual NAJRI Jazz Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony at the Conference on April
17, 2008. The inductees were: John Coltrane; the Honorable Congressman John
Conyers, Jr., (D-MI); Lou Donaldson; Tal Farlow; Albert Heath; Jimmy Heath;
Percy Heath; Thelonious Sphere Monk; Max Roach; Nina Simone and Dr. Billy Taylor.
Outstanding music for this celebration was provided by the Cedar Walton Trio.
The legendary pianist was accompanied by David Williams, contrabass and George
Fludas, drums.
The AAJC is actively involved in supporting the initiatives espoused in House Concurrent Resolution
57, "...it is the sense of the Congress that Jazz is hereby designated as
a rare and valuable national American treasure to which we should devote our
attention, support and resources to make certain it is preserved, understood and
promulgated." This Resolution was introduced by the Honorable Congressman
John Conyers (D-MI) and Senator Allen Cranston (D-CA). It was passed
unanimously by both Houses of Congress in 1987. As a part of this effort, AAJC
Executive Director, Dr. Larry Ridley served as the moderator of the 2007 Jazz
Issues Panel and as a panelist in 2008 at the Congressional Black Caucus
Conferences, in Washington,
DC.
This year, the AAJC, in partnership with the Schomburg
Center of the New York
Public Library, will mark the beginning of Black History month by presenting
the 2009 AAJC/HBCU Student All-star Big Band in concert. The performance will
take place at 3:00 p.m., Sunday, February 1st in the Schomburg Langston Hughes
Auditorium, 135th Street
and Malcolm X Boulevard.
Please join us in celebrating Black History Month, in Harlem!
Tickets: Members, $16; Non Members, $20. For ticket charge call the Schomburg Shop at (212) 491-2206.
Working together works!
E-mail: AfAmJzCaucus@aol.com
For further information: (212) 979-0304
The preceding copy was provided by The African American Jazz Caucus, Inc.
JAZZED MAGAZINE Issue Date: 2009, May |
A Jazz History and Education Model of the Charleston Jazz Initiative "Corner Pocket," "Whirly Bird," "Trouble in Mind,"
"Ballin' the Jack," "Tuxedo Junction," "Since I Fell Written by the nearly 50-year veteran of the Basie band, Charlestonian Freddie Green's "Corner
Pocket" is a tune he composed which was later popularized by Sarah There's also Cat Anderson, Jabbo Smith, Bubber Miley, Fud Livingston, Jimmy Hamilton, Freddy
Jenkins and many more...nearly 65 bandleaders, sideman and composers uncovered Charleston is a hot jazz city today and by all accounts, it was this way in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Its
story begins in 1891 and is one of vision, charity, entrepreneurship, The Jenkins Orphanage, one of the longest-operating black orphanages in the country, was founded in
1891 by Reverend Daniel Joseph Jenkins, a Baptist minister. Three years later What happened in 1894 at the orphanage was the beginning of a seminal American jazz story – the
birthing of the Jenkins Orphanage Bands that just one year later in 1895, had Jenkins not only trained its orphans and later, other students of music, to read and play all kinds of
music, but by the turn of the 20th Century, the institution had developed a The Jenkins bands toured extensively in the United States
and in Europe, played at the inauguration of Another important institution in Charleston was the Avery Normal
Institute (now the Avery In the infancy of their musical careers, musicians from Jenkins, especially brass players, were
recruited into the bands of Ellington, Count Basie, Lionel Hampton, Louis So, we at CJI believe that New Orleans
could not have been the only crucible for American swing. When Louis While it may be risky to say that elements of jazz emerged in Charleston
in the 1890s with the founding of the Jenkins Orphanage Bands, we at CJI All of this is being chronicled by CJI – a research initiative based at the College
of Charleston – in the Arts CJI's mission is to document the untold jazz history in Charleston,
the South Carolina Lowcountry, and its movement throughout the United States, Europe CJI's focus is to document the social history of Charleston's
jazz legacy as well as its musical history. It is my belief that examining Charleston's jazz legacy did not end during the heyday of the Jenkins bands. It continues in the modern-day jazz
landscape of this historic city – in "live jazz" heard in South Carolina's jazz story is an American jazz story. Biographer Jeffrey Green reminds us why: "Look carefully at the
careers of the boys and girls who were raised in the Old Marine Dr. Karen Chandler is associate professor of Arts Management, School of the Arts at the College of Charleston and co-founder and principal
of the Charleston Jazz Initiative. A classically trained pianist, she has The preceding copy was provided by The African American Jazz Caucus, Inc. |
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