Post on 19-Jan-2016
Jazz at Lincoln Center’sRose TheaterFrederick P. Rose Halljalc.org
Please make certain your cellular phone,pager, or watch alarm is switched off.
Friday and Saturday Evening, May 23–24, 2014, at 8:00
Wynton Marsalis, Managing and Artistic DirectorGreg Scholl, Executive Director
JLCO Hosts: Christian McBride & Kurt RosenwinkelJazz at Lincoln Center OrchestraWYNTON MARSALIS, Music Director, TrumpetALI JACKSON, Music Director, DrumsRYAN KISOR, TrumpetKENNY RAMPTON, TrumpetMARCUS PRINTUP, TrumpetVINCENT GARDNER, TromboneCHRIS CRENSHAW, TromboneELLIOT MASON, TromboneSHERMAN IRBY, Alto SaxophoneTED NASH, Alto SaxophoneVICTOR GOINES, Tenor SaxophoneWALTER BLANDING, Tenor SaxophoneJOE TEMPERLEY, Baritone SaxophonePAUL NEDZELA, Baritone SaxophoneDAN NIMMER, PianoCARLOS HENRIQUEZ, Bass
with
CHRISTIAN McBRIDE, BassKURT ROSENWINKEL, Guitar
There will be a 15-minute intermission during this performance.
Please turn off your cell phones and other electronic devices.
Bloomberg is a Corporate Sponsor of this performance.
Jazz at Lincoln Center thanks its season sponsors: Bloomberg, Brooks Brothers, The Coca-Cola Company, Con Edison, Entergy, HSBC Premier, The Shops at Columbus Circle at Time Warner Center, and SiriusXM.
Jazz at Lincoln Center
The Music of Kurt Rosenwinkel
To be selected from the following:
arr. ALI JACKSON A Life Unfolds
arr. SHERMAN IRBY A Shifting Design
arr. ALI JACKSON Brooklyn Sometimes
arr. VINCENT GARDNER Déjà Vu
arr. ALI JACKSON The Next Step
arr. CARLOS HENRIQUEZ Spirit Kiss
arr. TED NASH Synthetics
All compositions by Kurt Rosenwinkel
—Intermission—
The Music of Christian McBride
To be selected from the following:
CHRISTIAN McBRIDE Bluesin’ In Alphabet CityNew arrangement of 1995 Jazz at Lincoln Center Commission
DAVID MANN In the Wee Small Hours of the Morning
JIMMY VAN HEUSEN I Thought About You
FREDDIE HUBBARD Thermo
CHRISTIAN McBRIDE Untitled Blues
CHRISTIAN McBRIDE Used ‘Ta Could
CHRISTIAN McBRIDE Youthful Bliss
All arrangements by Christian McBride
Jazz at Lincoln Center
Notes on the Programby Greg Thomas
The exploration of the music of ChristianMcBride and Kurt Rosenwinkel by the Jazzat Lincoln Center Orchestra with WyntonMarsalis furthers this season’s theme: “Alljazz is modern.” This phrase is often takento mean that musical styles throughout jazzhistory have contemporary currency, withclassic endurance.
Yet here we have a different angle fromwhich to view the modern import of jazz. Ifin fact all jazz is modern, then would not jazzcomposed and performed by post-babyboomers, by members of Gen X, also apply?
Born in Philadelphia in 1970 and 1972respectively, Kurt Rosenwinkel andChristian McBride are, based on peer influ-ence and critical acclaim, generational bea-cons. Even in his late-teens, when in theearly 1990s McBride hit the jazz scene likea comet, he impressed all, from his heroRay Brown, to Wynton Marsalis, who com-missioned his first big band composition in1995 (“Bluesin’ in Alphabet City”). Marsalisis the musical director for McBride’s por-tion of tonight’s program.
“At that time, Alphabet City was in a transi-tion phase, morphing from the kind ofmotorcycle gang, hooligan-type area to whatit is now,” says McBride. He has addedadditional parts for tonight’s show. The com-position captures the gritty texture of theLower East Side, as he felt it was back then.
McBride has also newly arranged his“Youthful Bliss,” an early swinger with aLatin tinge from his second recording,Number Two Express. Of special interestfor trumpet fans is his arrangement of thechallenging “Thermo” by Freddie Hubbard,with whom he toured early in his career. “Ican’t wait to watch the trumpet section’sfaces when I throw that on ’em,” saidMcBride with impish glee.
So McBride’s role in tonight’s show is nosurprise. But the embrace of guitaristRosenwinkel—a first time with the electricguitar as a melodic lead in the Jazz at LincolnCenter Orchestra—was likely a shock orpleasant surprise to many in the jazz com-munity. Rosenwinkel’s compositional origi-nality and edgy instrumental voice lay on thetangent of what some critics call “main-stream” jazz. Some may even considerRosenwinkel’s music to be “post-modern.”
Be that as it may, Rosenwinkel himselfcounts tonight as “an honor.” The handfulof songs from his body of 120 compositionswill provide a glimpse into his approach,which isn’t based on specific forms such as32-bar AABA structures. His diverse selec-tions have arisen organically from melodiesor harmonies that come to him when freelyimprovising. The musical director for thisportion of the show is drummer AliJackson, who performed and toured inRosenwinkel’s band before joining the Jazzat Lincoln Center Orchestra.
Jackson says Kurt’s forms are “oblong,”going from section to section, with“unconventional phrasing” and shiftingdesigns, i.e., different measure lengthsand tonal centers. Rosenwinkel, ratherthan riffing on astral, cosmic metaphorsoften associated with his work, describeshis process of discovery in quite earthy,even archaeological terms.
“You’re brushing around the dig site, andyou keep brushing away and removingstuff to make it clearer. Then,” he says,“maybe you find a pyramid.”
His song “Brooklyn Sometimes” is anexample.
“I came up with the chords first, then con-structed the melody and the groove aroundthat, and then worked on the four sectionsof the song.” The title derives from histenure in the Park Slope section ofBrooklyn, seeing “how the sunset light in
Jazz at Lincoln Center
the evening glistened off the red brick ofthe brownstones, a beautiful moment thatonly happens sometimes.”
Other songs, such as “Déjà Vu,” from hislatest album Star of Jupiter, “…kind of flyout and emerge fully formed. I noticed thata melodic motif kept recurring at different
places in the song. It made me think aboutthe feeling of déjà vu.”
The song “Spirit Kiss” may best sum it up.“Every song feels to me kind of like a kissfrom the spirit,” Rosenwinkel says.Perhaps by the end of tonight’s perfor-mance, you’ll feel the same.
Meet the Artists
Bassist, composer, arranger, educator,curator, and administrator Christian McBride(Bass ) has been one of the most importantand omnipresent figures in the jazz worldfor more than 20 years. The Philadelphia-born bassist moved to New York City in 1989to further his classical studies at The JuilliardSchool, where he was quickly snatched upby Bobby Watson. McBride’s subsequentaccomplishments have been staggering. Asa sideman in the jazz world, he has workedwith Freddie Hubbard, Sonny Rollins, J.J.Johnson, Ray Brown, Milt Jackson, McCoyTyner, Roy Haynes, Chick Corea, HerbieHancock, and Pat Metheny. In the R&Bworld, he has played with and arranged forIsaac Hayes, Chaka Khan, Natalie Cole, LalahHathaway, and James Brown. In the pop/rockworld, McBride has collaborated extensivelywith Sting, Carly Simon, Don Henley, andBruce Hornsby. In the hip-hop/neo-soulworld, he has collaborated with The Roots,D’Angelo, and Queen Latifah. He has alsoworked closely with opera legend KathleenBattle, bass virtuoso Edgar Meyer, theShanghai Quartet, and the Sonus Quartet.
McBride has become an astute andrespected spokesperson for the music. In
1997 he spoke on former President BillClinton’s town hall meeting “Racism in thePerforming Arts.” In 2000 he was namedartistic director of the Jazz AspenSnowmass Summer Sessions. In 2005 hewas officially named the co-director of theNational Jazz Museum in Harlem and thesecond creative chair for Jazz of the LosAngeles Philharmonic Association.
In 1998 McBride composed The Movement,Revisited, a four-movement suite dedicatedto major figures of the civil rights move-ment, commissioned by the Portland (ME)Arts Society and the National Endowmentfor the Arts. Ten years later in 2008, TheMovement, Revisited was expanded, re-written, re-vamped, and performed again inLos Angeles at Walt Disney Concert Hall.
Since 2000 McBride has led the ChristianMcBride Band, featuring saxophonist RonBlake, keyboardist Geoffrey Keezer, anddrummer Terreon Gully. Between therelease of their two CDs, 2002’s VerticalVision and 2006’s Live at Tonic, writer AlanLeeds called McBride’s band “one of themost intoxicating, least predictable bands onthe scene today.” In 2009 Christian releasedhis quintet CD Christian McBride & InsideStraight, a return to his undiluted “straight-ahead” roots featuring Steve Wilson,Warren Wolf, Eric Reed, and Carl Allen.
In 2011 he released Conversations withChristian, a recording of duets with GeorgeDuke, Angelique Kidjo, Dr. Billy Taylor, HankJones, Chick Corea, Eddie Palmieri, ReginaCarter, Ron Blake, Roy Hargrove, Russell
Christian McBride
Jazz at Lincoln Center
Malone, and more. McBride reachedanother milestone in 2011 with The GoodFeeling, his first big band recording.McBride’s first foray into big band com-posing and arranging was in 1995, when hewas commissioned by Jazz at LincolnCenter to write Bluesin’ in Alphabet City,featured on The Good Feeling and originallydebuted by the Jazz at Lincoln CenterOrchestra with Wynton Marsalis.
Guitarist, composer, and educator KurtRosenwinkel (Guitar ) is an undisputed trail-blazer. During an almost 25-year career, hehas collaborated with dynamic peers likeBrad Mehldau, Brian Blade, Mark Turner,Joshua Redman, and Chris Potter, andesteemed jazz elders like Joe Henderson,Paul Motian, and Gary Burton.
Born in 1970 in Philadelphia to musicalparents, Rosenwinkel first picked up theguitar at age 12. He attended Creative andPerforming Arts High School with futurePhilly greats like Christian McBride, JoeyDeFrancesco, and Ahmir “Questlove”Thompson of The Roots. After two yearsat Berklee College of Music, Rosenwinkelleft to tour and record with veterans GaryBurton and Paul Motian, the beginning ofa decade-long tenure with Motian’sElectric Bebop Band. Rosenwinkel movedto New York City in the early 1990s. Hiscollaborations with Jeff Ballard, BenStreet, and Mark Turner at Smalls jazz clubhelped develop an essential sound of theirgeneration’s musical landscape.
After winning the Composer’s Award fromthe National Endowment for the Arts in1995, Rosenwinkel recorded and indepen-dently released his debut album as a leader,East Coast Love Affair, in 1996, and followed
with Intuit in 1999. In 2000 Rosenwinkelreleased Enemies of Energy, his first projectfor Verve and a complete set of original com-positions. He joined Brian Blade’s Fellowshipband that year and appeared on thedrummer’s Perceptual album.
Feeling that his musical knowledge was anobstruction to genuine enjoyment of theart, Rosenwinkel obliterated what heknew by shedding an alternate guitartuning. That creative breakthrough pro-duced one of Rosenwinkel’s most seminalrecordings, The Next Step, featuring themodern classic “Zhivago.” Rosenwinkelalso introduced his voice as an intrinsicpart of his music.
A fan of hip-hop and artists like TheNotorious B.I.G., Rosenwinkel worked withhip-hop veteran Q-Tip (of A Tribe CalledQuest) on his next Verve release,Heartcore. The two collaborated on Q-Tip’sRenaissance, which led to Q-Tip co-pro-ducing Rosenwinkel’s experimental album.
Following his chapter closer for Verve—2005’s Deep Song with Joshua Redman,Brad Mehldau, Larry Grenadier, AliJackson, and Jeff Ballard—Rosenwinkelbegan a new phase with The Remedy.Released in 2008, it is a live documentationof Rosenwinkel performing at the VillageVanguard, a venue at which Rosenwinkel’sperformances are highly anticipated.
His next album, Reflections, is a collectionof mainly ballads and standards. An under-the-radar use of Q-Tip’s “Vivrant Thing” asthe rhythmic foundation on the Shorterclassic, “Fall,” showcases Rosenwinkel’sknack for recruiting extraordinary and styl-istically fluid drummers.
Rosenwinkel followed that with a starklycontrasting project in 2010 with OrquestraJazz de Matosinhos (OJM), a Portugal-based big band. A stunning re-visitation ofsome of Rosenwinkel’s finest work, OurSecret World celebrates his significance as
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a composer and leader, and his ever-expanding technical command.
Rosenwinkel released Star of Jupiter, histenth album as a leader, in 2012, featuringAaron Parks, Justin Faulkner, and EricRevis. Rosenwinkel lives in Berlin and cur-rently teaches at The Jazz Institute Berlin.
Wynton Marsalis (Music Director, Trumpet)is the managing and artistic director of Jazzat Lincoln Center and a world-renownedtrumpeter and composer. Born in NewOrleans, Louisiana in 1961, Marsalis beganhis classical training on trumpet at age 12,entered The Juilliard School at age 17, andthen joined Art Blakey and the JazzMessengers. He made his recording debutas a leader in 1982, and has since recordedmore than 60 jazz and classical recordings,which have won him nine GRAMMY®
Awards. In 1983 he became the first andonly artist to win both classical and jazzGRAMMYs® in the same year and repeatedthis feat in 1984. Marsalis is also an interna-tionally respected teacher and spokesmanfor music education, and has received hon-orary doctorates from dozens of U.S. uni-versities and colleges. He has written sixbooks; his most recent are Squeak, Rumble,Whomp! Whomp! Whomp!, illustrated byPaul Rogers and published by CandlewickPress in 2012, and Moving to HigherGround: How Jazz Can Change Your Lifewith Geoffrey C. Ward, published byRandom House in 2008. In 1997 Marsalisbecame the first jazz artist to be awardedthe prestigious Pulitzer Prize in music for hisoratorio Blood on the Fields, which wascommissioned by Jazz at Lincoln Center. In2001 he was appointed Messenger ofPeace by Mr. Kofi Annan, Secretary-General
of the United Nations, and he has also beendesignated cultural ambassador to theUnited States of America by the U.S. StateDepartment through their CultureConnectprogram. Marsalis was instrumental in theHigher Ground Hurricane Relief concert,produced by Jazz at Lincoln Center. Theevent raised more than $3 million for theHigher Ground Relief Fund to benefit themusicians, music industry-related enter-prises, and other individuals and entitiesfrom the areas in Greater New Orleans whowere impacted by Hurricane Katrina.Marsalis helped lead the effort to constructJazz at Lincoln Center’s home—Frederick P.Rose Hall—the first education, perfor-mance, and broadcast facility devoted tojazz, which opened in October 2004.
Ali Jackson (Music Director, Drums ) devel-oped his talent on drums at an early age. In1993 he graduated from Cass Tech HighSchool and in 1998 was the recipient ofMichigan’s prestigious Artserv EmergingArtist award. As a child, he was selected asthe soloist for the “Beacons Of Jazz” con-cert which honored legend Max Roach atNew School University. After earning anundergraduate degree in music composi-tion at the New School University forContemporary Music, he studied underElvin Jones and Max Roach. Jackson hasbeen part of Young Audiences, a programthat educates New York City youth on jazz.He has performed and recorded withartists including Wynton Marsalis, Dee DeeBridgewater, Aretha Franklin, GeorgeBenson, Harry Connick, Jr., KRS-1, MarcusRoberts, Joshua Redman, Vinx, Seito KinenOrchestra conductor Seiji Ozawa, DianaKrall, and the New York City Ballet. His pro-duction skills can be heard on George
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Benson’s GRP release Irreplaceable.Jackson is also featured on the WyntonMarsalis Quartet recordings The MagicHour (Blue Note, 2004), and From thePlantation to the Penitentiary (Blue Note,2007). Jackson collaborated with jazz greatsCyrus Chestnut, Reginald Veal, and JamesCarter on Gold Sounds (Brown Brothers,2005) that transformed songs by indie alter-native rock band Pavement into unique vir-tuosic interpretations with the attitude ofthe church and juke joint. He has been amember of the Jazz at Lincoln CenterOrchestra since 2005. Jackson currentlyperforms with the Wynton MarsalisQuintet, Horns in the Hood, and leads theAli Jackson Quartet. He also hosted“Jammin’ with Jackson,” a series foryoung musicians at Jazz at Lincoln Center’sDizzy Club Coca-Cola. He is also the voiceof “Duck Ellington,” a character in thePenguin book series Baby Loves Jazz thatwas released in 2006.
Walter BlandingWalter Blanding (Tenor Saxophone) wasborn into a musical family on August 14,1971 in Cleveland, Ohio. He began playingthe saxophone at age six and by age 16, hewas performing regularly with his parents atthe Village Gate. Blanding attendedLaGuardia High School of Music and Art andPerforming Arts and continued his studies atthe New School for Social Research wherehe earned a B.F.A. in 2005. His 1991 debutrelease, Tough Young Tenors, was acclaimedas one of the best jazz albums of the year,and his artistry began to impress listenersand critics alike. He has been a member ofthe Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra since1998 and has performed, toured and/orrecorded with his own groups and with suchrenowned artists as the Cab CallowayOrchestra, Roy Hargrove, Hilton Ruiz, CountBasie Orchestra, Illinois Jacquet Big Band,Wycliffe Gordon, Marcus Roberts, WyntonMarsalis Quintet, Isaac Hayes, and manyothers. Blanding lived in Israel for four yearsand had a major impact on the music scene
while touring the country with his ownensemble and with U.S. artists such as LouisHayes, Eric Reed, Vanessa Rubin, and othersinvited to perform there. He taught music inseveral Israeli schools and eventuallyopened his own private school in Tel Aviv.During this period, Newsweek Internationalcalled him a “Jazz Ambassador to Israel.
Chris CrenshawChris Crenshaw (Trombone) was born inThomson, Georgia on December 20, 1982.Since birth, he has been driven by and sur-rounded by music. When he started playingpiano at age three, his teachers and fellowstudents noticed his aptitude for the instru-ment. This love for piano led to his first gigwith Echoes of Joy, his father Casper’sgroup. He picked up the trombone at 11 andhasn’t put it down since. He graduated fromThomson High School in 2001 and receivedhis bachelor’s degree with honors in jazzperformance from Valdosta State Universityin 2005. He was awarded Most OutstandingStudent in the VSU Music Department andCollege of Arts. In 2007 Crenshaw receivedhis Master’s degree in Jazz Studies fromThe Juilliard School where his teachersincluded Dr. Douglas Farwell and WycliffeGordon. He has worked with Gerard Wilson,Jiggs Whigham, Carl Allen, Marc Cary,Wessell Anderson, Cassandra Wilson, EricReed, and many more. In 2006 Crenshawjoined the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestraand in 2012 he composed “God’sTrombones,” a spiritually-focused workwhich was premiered by the orchestra atJazz at Lincoln Center.
Vincent GardnerVincent Gardner (Trombone) was born inChicago in 1972 and was raised inHampton, Virginia. After singing, playingpiano, violin, saxophone, and French horn atan early age, he decided on the trombone atage 12. He attended Florida A&MUniversity and the University of NorthFlorida. He soon caught the ear of MercerEllington, who hired Gardner for his first
Jazz at Lincoln Center
professional job. After graduating from col-lege, he moved to Brooklyn, New York,completed a world tour with Lauryn Hill in2000, then joined the Jazz at Lincoln CenterOrchestra. Gardner has served as instructorat The Juilliard School, as visiting instructorat Florida State University and MichiganState University, and as adjunct instructor atThe New School. He has contributed manyarrangements to the Jazz at Lincoln CenterOrchestra and other ensembles. In 2009 hewas commissioned by Jazz at LincolnCenter to write “The Jesse B. SempleSuite,” a 60- minute suite inspired by theshort stories of Langston Hughes. Gardneris featured on a number of notable record-ings and has recorded five CDs as a leaderfor Steeplechase Records. He has per-formed with The Duke Ellington Orchestra,Bobby McFerrin, Harry Connick, Jr., TheSaturday Night Live Band, Chaka Khan, ATribe Called Quest, and many others.
Victor GoinesVictor Goines (Tenor Saxophone) is a nativeof New Orleans, Louisiana. He has been amember of the Jazz at Lincoln CenterOrchestra and the Wynton Marsalis Septetsince 1993, touring throughout the worldand recording more than 20 albums. As aleader, Goines has recorded seven albumsincluding his most recent release Twilight(2012) on Rosemary Joseph Records. Agifted composer, Goines has more than 50original works to his credit. He hasrecorded and/or performed with manynoted jazz and popular artists includingAhmad Jamal, Ruth Brown, Dee DeeBridgewater, Ray Charles, Bob Dylan, DizzyGillespie, Lenny Kravitz, Branford Marsalis,Ellis Marsalis, Dianne Reeves, WillieNelson, Marcus Roberts, Diana Ross,Stevie Wonder, and a host of others.Currently, he is the director of jazz studies/professor of music at NorthwesternUniversity. He received a bachelor of musicdegree from Loyola University in NewOrleans in 1984, and a master of music
degree from Virginia CommonwealthUniversity in Richmond in 1990.
Carlos Henriquez Carlos Henriquez (Bass) was born in 1979in the Bronx, New York. He studied musicat a young age, played guitar through juniorhigh school and took up the bass whileenrolled in The Juilliard School’s MusicAdvancement Program. He enteredLaGuardia High School of Music & Arts andPerforming Arts and was involved with theLaGuardia Concert Jazz Ensemble whichwent on to win first place in Jazz at LincolnCenter’s Essentially Ellington High SchoolJazz Band Competition and Festival in1996. In 1998, swiftly after high school,Henriquez joined the Wynton MarsalisSeptet and the Jazz at Lincoln CenterOrchestra, touring the world and featuredon more than 25 albums. Henriquez hasperformed with artists including ChuchoValdes, Paco De Lucia, Tito Puente, theMarsalis Family, Willie Nelson, Bob Dylan,Stevie Wonder, Lenny Kravitz, MarcAnthony, and many others. He has been amember of the music faculty atNorthwestern University School of Musicsince 2008, and was music director of theJazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra’s culturalexchange with the Cuban Institute ofMusic with Chucho Valdes in 2010.
Sherman IrbySherman Irby (Alto Saxophone ) was bornand raised in Tuscaloosa, Alabama. Hefound his musical calling at age 12. In highschool, he played and recorded with gospelimmortal James Cleveland. He graduatedfrom Clark Atlanta University with a B.A. inMusic Education. In 1991 he joined JohnnyO’Neal’s Atlanta-based quintet. In 1994 hemoved to New York City then recorded hisfirst two albums, Full Circle (1996) and BigMama’s Biscuits (1998), on Blue Note. Irbytoured the U.S. and the Caribbean with theBoys Choir of Harlem in 1995, and was amember of the Jazz at Lincoln Center
Jazz at Lincoln Center
Orchestra from 1995 to 1997. During thattenure, he also recorded and toured withMarcus Roberts, was part of Betty Carter’sJazz Ahead Program and Roy Hargrove’sgroups. After a four-year stint with RoyHargrove, Irby focused on his own group inaddition to being a member of Elvin Jones’ensemble and Papo Vazquez’s PiratesTroubadours. Since 2003 Irby has been theregional director for JazzMasters Workshop,mentoring young children, and a boardmember for the CubaNOLA Collective. Heformed Black Warrior Records and releasedBlack Warrior, Faith, Organ Starter, and Liveat the Otto Club under the new label.
Ryan Kisor Ryan Kisor (Trumpet ) was born on April 12,1973 in Sioux City, Iowa, and began playingtrumpet at age four. In 1990 he won firstprize at the Thelonious Monk Institute’sfirst annual Louis Armstrong TrumpetCompetition. Kisor enrolled in ManhattanSchool of Music in 1991 where he studiedwith trumpeter Lew Soloff. He has per-formed and/or recorded with the MingusBig Band, the Gil Evans Orchestra, HoraceSilver, Gerry Mulligan, and Charlie Haden’sLiberation Music Orchestra, the CarnegieHall Jazz Band, the Philip Morris Jazz All-Stars, and others. In addition to being anactive sideman, Kisor has recorded severalalbums as a leader including Battle Cry(1997), The Usual Suspects (1998), andPoint of Arrival (2000). He has been amember of the Jazz at Lincoln CenterOrchestra since 1994.
Elliot Mason Elliot Mason (Trombone ) was born inEngland in 1977 and began trumpetlessons at age four with his father. At ageseven, he switched his focus from trumpetto trombone. At 11 years old, he was per-forming in various venues, concentratingon jazz and improvisation. By 16, Masonleft England to join his brother Brad Masonat the Berklee College of Music on a fulltuition scholarship. He has won the fol-
lowing awards: Daily Telegraph Young JazzSoloist (under 25) Award, the prestigiousFrank Rosolino Award, the InternationalTrombone Association’s Under 29 JazzTrombone competition, and Berklee’s SlideHampton Award in recognition of out-standing performance abilities. He movedto New York City after graduation and in2008, Mason joined NorthwesternUniversity’s faculty as the jazz tromboneinstructor. Mason has performed withCount Basie Orchestra, the Mingus BigBand, the Maria Schneider Orchestra, andthe Maynard Ferguson Big Bop Nouveau. Amember of the Jazz at Lincoln CenterOrchestra since 2006, Mason also con-tinues to co-lead the Mason BrothersQuintet with his brother. The MasonBrothers released their debut album, TwoSides, One Story in 2011.
Ted Nash Ted Nash (Alto Saxophone ) was born intoa musical family in Los Angeles. His father,Dick Nash, and uncle, the late Ted Nash,were both well-known jazz and studiomusicians. The younger Nash explodedonto the jazz scene at eighteen, moved toNew York and released his first album,Conception (Concord Jazz). He is co-leaderof the Jazz Composers Collective and isconstantly pushing the envelope in theworld of “traditional jazz.” His groupOdeon has often been cited as a creativefocus of jazz. Many of Nash’s recordingshave received critical acclaim, and haveappeared on the “best-of” lists in the NewYork Times, New Yorker, Village Voice,Boston Globe, and Newsday. His record-ings, The Mancini Project (PalmettoRecords) and Sidewalk Meeting(Arabesque Recordings), have been placedon several “best-of-decade” lists. Hisalbum Portrait in Seven Shades wasrecorded by the Jazz at Lincoln CenterOrchestra and was released in 2010. Thealbum is the first composition released bythe JLCO featuring original music by aband member other than bandleader
Jazz at Lincoln Center
Wynton Marsalis. Chakra, Nash’s mostrecent big band relcording, came out inlate 2013.
Paul Nedzela Paul Nedzela (Baritone Saxophone) wasborn in New York City in 1984 and hasquickly become one of the top baritonesaxophone players around. After graduat-ing with honors and a degree in mathe-matics from McGill University in 2006,Nedzela received the Samuel L. Jacksonscholarship and continued his musical stud-ies at The Juilliard School. He has studiedwith baritone saxophone legends JoeTemperley, Gary Smulyan, and RogerRosenberg, and has played with renownedartists and ensembles including WessAnderson, Paquito D’Rivera, Benny Golson,Roy Haynes, Christian McBride, and TheTemptations. Nedzela also performed inTwyla Tharp’s Broadway show, Come FlyAway, as well as at major festivals, such asThe Monterey Jazz Festival and The BanffMusic Festival.
Dan Nimmer Dan Nimmer (Piano) was born in 1982 inMilwaukee, Wisconsin. With prodigioustechnique and an innate sense of swing,his playing often recalls that of his ownheroes Oscar Peterson, Wynton Kelly,Erroll Garner, and Art Tatum. Nimmerstudied classical piano and eventuallybecame interested in jazz. He beganplaying gigs with renowned saxophonistand mentor Berkley Fudge. Nimmerstudied music at Northern IllinoisUniversity and became one of Chicago’sbusiest piano players. A year after movingto New York City, he became a member ofthe Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra andthe Wynton Marsalis Quintet. Nimmer hasworked with Norah Jones, Willie Nelson,Dianne Reeves, George Benson, FrankWess, Clark Terry, Tom Jones, BennyGolson, Lewis Nash, Peter Washington, EdThigpen, Wess “Warmdaddy” Anderson,Fareed Haque, and many more. He has
appeared on The Tonight Show with JayLeno, The Late Show with DavidLetterman, The View, The Kennedy CenterHonors, Live from Abbey Road, and PBS’Live from Lincoln Center, among otherbroadcasts. He has released four of hisown albums on the Venus label (Japan).
Marcus Printup Marcus Printup (Trumpet) was born andraised in Conyers, Georgia. His first musicalexperiences were hearing the fiery gospelmusic his parents sang in church. Whileattending the University of North Florida on amusic scholarship, he won the InternationalTrumpet Guild Jazz Trumpet competition. In1991 Printup’s life changed when he met hismentor, the great pianist Marcus Roberts.Roberts introduced him to Wynton Marsalis,which led to Printup’s induction into the Jazzat Lincoln Center Orchestra in 1993. Printuphas recorded with Betty Carter, DianneReeves, Eric Reed, Madeline Peyroux, TedNash, Cyrus Chestnut, Wycliffe Gordon, andRoberts, among others. He has recordedseveral records as a leader: Song for theBeautiful Woman, Unveiled, Hub Songs,Nocturnal Traces, The New Boogaloo, Peacein the Abstract, Bird of Paradise, LondonLullaby, Ballads All Night, and A Time forLove. He made his screen debut in the 1999movie Playing by Heart and recorded on thefilm’s soundtrack. August 22 has beendeclared “Marcus Printup Day” in his home-town of Conyers, Georgia.
Kenny Rampton Kenny Rampton (Trumpet ) joined the Jazzat Lincoln Center Orchestra in 2010. Healso leads his own sextet in addition to per-forming with the Mingus Big Band, TheMingus Orchestra, The Mingus Dynasty,George Gruntz’ Concert Jazz Band, andThe Manhattan Jazz Orchestra (under thedirection of Dave Matthews). In 2010Rampton performed with The ScottishNational Jazz Orchestra at the EdinburghInternational Festival, and was the featuredsoloist on the Miles Davis/Gil Evans classic
Jazz at Lincoln Center
version of Porgy and Bess. He toured theworld with The Ray Charles Orchestra in1990 and with the legendary jazz drummerPanama Francis, The Savoy Sultans, andThe Jimmy McGriff Quartet, with whom heplayed for 10 years. As a sideman,Rampton has performed with MingusEpitaph (under the direction of GuntherSchuller), Bebo Valdez’ Latin Jazz All-Stars,Maria Schneider, the Afro-Latin JazzOrchestra, Charles Earland, Dr. John,Lionel Hampton, Jon Hendricks, IllinoisJacquet, Geoff Keezer, Christian McBride,and a host of others. Most recently, he washired as the trumpet voice on SesameStreet. Some of his Broadway creditsinclude Finian’s Rainbow, The Wiz,Chicago: The Musical, In The Heights, Hair,Young Frankenstein, and The Producers.
Joe Temperley Joe Temperley (Baritone Saxophone ) wasborn in Scotland and first achieved promi-nence in the United Kingdom as a memberof Humphrey Lyttelton’s band from 1958 to1965. In 1965, Temperley came to NewYork City, where he performed and/orrecorded with Woody Herman, Buddy Rich,Joe Henderson, Duke Pearson, the JazzComposer’s Orchestra, the Thad Jones-MelLewis Orchestra, and Clark Terry, among
many others. In 1974 he toured andrecorded with The Duke EllingtonOrchestra as a replacement for HarryCarney. Temperley played in the Broadwayshow Sophisticated Ladies in the 1980s,and his film soundtrack credits includeCotton Club, Biloxi Blues, Brighton BeachMemoirs, When Harry Met Sally, and TuneIn Tomorrow, composed by WyntonMarsalis. Temperley is a mentor and co-founder of the FIFE Youth Jazz Orchestraprogram in Scotland, which now enrolls 70young musicians, ages 7–17, playing inthree full-size bands. He has releasedseveral albums as a leader includingNightingale (1991), Sunbeam andThundercloud with pianist Dave McKenna(1996), With Every Breath (1998), andDouble Duke (1999). He released Portraits(2006) on Hep Records and Cocktails forTwo (2007) on Sackville. His most recentrelease is The Sinatra Songbook (2008). Heis an original member of the Jazz at LincolnCenter Orchestra, and serves on the facultyof The Juilliard Institute for jazz studies andManhattan School of Music. Through theyears, Temperley has been named inDownBeat magazine’s Critics Polls and wasthe featured artist in the 2009 EdinburghJazz Festival where he performed with theEdinburgh Jazz Orchestra.
Dave Brubeck: Jazz AmbassadorPart of Jazz at Lincoln Center’s Dave Brubeck Festival
On View Now – June 2014
Free and open to the public during scheduled performances
As part of Jazz at Lincoln Center’s Dave Brubeck Festival, our current exhibit, Dave Brubeck:Jazz Ambassador, documents the life and work of one of America’s most significantmusicians to emerge after the Swing Era. A pianist, bandleader, and composer, California-born Brubeck (1920–2012) grew new audiences—particularly on college campusesnationwide—with a sophisticated, swinging style. In 1958, a far-ranging U.S. Department ofState tour to countries in Eastern Europe, the Middle East, and Southern Asia gave Brubeckthe opportunity to serve as a cultural ambassador. A socially engaged artist, Brubeckconsistently fought for racial integration and equality at home and abroad. Our exhibit, foundon the fifth floor of Frederick P. Rose Hall, features historical photographs, scores,ephemera—including concert programs and correspondence—and videos. Please stop by,learn more about one of the legends of jazz, and enjoy!
Jazz at Lincoln Center
Jazz at Lincoln Center Jazz at Lincoln Center is dedicated toinspiring and growing audiences for jazz.With the world-renowned Jazz at LincolnCenter Orchestra and a comprehensive arrayof guest artists, Jazz at Lincoln Centeradvances a unique vision for the continueddevelopment of the art of jazz by producinga year-round schedule of performance, edu-cation, and broadcast events for audiencesof all ages. These productions include con-certs, national and international tours, resi-dencies, weekly national radio programs,television broadcasts, recordings, publications,
an annual high school jazz band competitionand festival, a band director academy, jazzappreciation curriculum for students, musicpublishing, children’s concerts and classes,lectures, adult education courses, studentand educator workshops, and interactivewebsites. Under the leadership ofManaging and Artistic Director WyntonMarsalis, Chairman Robert J. Appel, andExecutive Director Greg Scholl, Jazz atLincoln Center produces thousands ofevents each season in its home in New YorkCity, Frederick P. Rose Hall, and around theworld. For more information, visit jalc.org.
jazz at lincoln center broadway at 60th street, 5th fl oor, nyc
nightly7:30pm & 9:30pm sets 212-258-9595 jalc.org/dizzys
JOE SAYLOR Photo by Marylene Mey and Whit Lane
Shahara Ahmad-LlewellynThe Ammon FoundationHelen and Robert J. AppelAnonymous (2)Jody and John ArnholdSiris Capital, LLC / Robin and Peter Berger
Lisa and Dick CashinColumbus Center LLC
Barbara and Raymond DalioThe Irene Diamond FundDiana and Joe DiMennaFord FoundationMica ErtegunThe Kresge FoundationAnn Tenenbaum andThomas H. Lee
MasterCard
Adam R. Rose and Peter R. McQuillan
The Andrew W. MellonFoundation
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Burwell and Chip SchorrSteward FamilyFoundation
Jazz at Lincoln Center’s annual artistic, educational, and archival programs are supported by the following generous contributors:
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AnonymousThe Argus FundJessica BibliowiczBlavatnik Family FoundationBloombergBrooks BrothersValentino D. CarlottiGoldman, Sachs & Co.The Coca-Cola Company
The Shops at ColumbusCircle at Time WarnerCenter
Gail and Al EngelbergFinneran FamilyFoundation
Larry GagosianThe Hearst Foundation, IncMady Hornig
Joan and George HornigHSBC BankKari Gronberg and Little Johnny Koerber
Wynton MarsalisNational Endowment forthe Arts
New York City Departmentof Cultural Affairs
New York State Council onthe Arts
The Fan Fox & Leslie R.Samuels Foundation, Inc.
Lisa and David T. SchiffSiriusXMDianne and David J. SternMarlene Hess and James D. Zirin
GUARANTORS
The Altman FoundationBank of AmericaCentricBetsy and Alan D. CohnConEdisonSharon and ChristopherDavis
Melanie A. Shorin andGreg S. Feldman
Donna J. Astion andMichael D. Fricklas
Susan and Roger HertogSonia and Paul T. JonesJohn S. and James L.Knight Foundation
The Ambrose MonellFoundation
Cindy and Charles MurphyGwen and Peter Norton
Charles and Karen PhillipsPrudential FinancialLouise and Leonard RiggioDiana and Jonathan F.P. RoseLisa Roumell and Mark Rosenthal
Barry F. SchwartzTherese S. Rosenblatt andH. Marshall Sonenshine
Starwood Hotels andResorts Worldwide
The Harold and MimiSteinberg Charitable Trust
Vital Projects Fund, Inc.Vosshall FamilyThe Walton FamilyFoundation
George T. WeinWorld Stage
BENEFACTORS
AnonymousDonna and WilliamAcquavella
The Jeffrey AltmanFoundation
Jolynn Schmidt and ScottAnderson
Augustine FoundationPatricia BlanchetCBRE, Inc.Diane M. CoffeyPeggy Cooper Davis andGordon J. Davis/Venable LLP
Annette and Oscar de la Renta
Jennifer and Viet Dinh/Bancroft PLLC
The Ella FitzgeraldCharitable Foundation
The David GeffenFoundation
Charles Evans HughesMemorial Foundation
Hughes Hubbard & Reed LLP
Caroline and Ed HymanM. Billie Lim and Stephen M. Ifshin
Jurate KazickasLear Family FoundationArthur Levine FoundationLincoln Center CorporateFund
Mericos FoundationMLGW LLP/LesterWeingarten CPA, Partner
Daniel Rozzi and ToddYanuzzi/Morgan Stanley
Adam Silver/NationalBasketball Association
Stavros Niarchos FoundationJacqueline L. Bradley andClarence Otis
Peter J. SolomonCompany LLP
Related CompaniesRose-Lee and KeithReinhard
Shearman & Sterling LLPThe Schubert Foundation,Inc.
Fredric E. SteckLaurie M. Tisch IlluminationFund
Linda WachnerWorld Wide Technology, Inc.Viacom, Inc.
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Amy and David AbramsSimi AhujaJudy and John AngeloAngelson FamilyFoundation
Anonymous (2)Rose M. BadgeleyCharitable Trust
Leslie and Harrison BainsNorman BenzaquenBrook and Roger BerlindBarbara and TimothyBoroughs
Broadway Across AmericaAmbassador and Mrs. W. L.Lyons Brown
Valerie S. BrownBetty and Philippe CamusKathryn and Kenneth I.Chenault
Emilie Roy Corey andMichael Corey
Anthony CorsoJudith and Jamie DimonBrenda EarlCheryl and Blair EffronEmpirical ResearchPartners, LLC
Irith Federmann-LandeauFind to FundSteve and Nicole Frankel
Carolyn Surgent andJacques Friedman
Arlyn and Edward GardnerJennifer and Gregory GeilingBarbara Langaro and Darin S. Goldstein
Ms. Carolyn Katz and Mr. Michael Goldstein
Elizabeth M. GordonSusan C. GordonRoberta Campbell andRichard N. Gray
Robin and DannyGreenspun
Amy and John Griffin
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Louise and Henry A.Grunwald
Lisa Meulbroek and Brent R. Harris
Dina Merrill and Ted HartleyJulia Perry and Wolf HengstSusan and J. Alan KahnSandy and D. JeffreyKallenberg
Craig KallmanKeiko Matsuyama andDavid S. Katz
Julia and David Koch
ANGELS
4WallAllureVirginia and AndrewAdelson
Angelo, Gordon & Co.Anonymous (14)American ExpressAREA Property PartnersAtlantic RecordsRobin and Arthur AufsesBank of AmericaBET NetworksSol and Margaret BergerFoundation
Arthur M. Blank FamilyFoundation
Henry BloomCynthia R. BoardmanDr. William and LaurieBolthouse
Merilee and Roy BostockRhoda BresslerMildred BrinnDel Bryant/BMINoreen and KennethBuckfire
Simona and Jerome ChazenPietro CicognaniLisa McGoran and Michael Cohl
Julie and Peter CummingsSylvia Botero and Norman Cuttler
Susan and Mark DaltonJennie and RichardDeScherer
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Forbes Media LLCAlice and Nathan GantcherGeneral Motors CompanyBarbara and PeterGeorgescu
Georgia and Donald GogelBarbara GoldsmithGreat PerformancesMyrna and StephenGreenberg
Harlem's Fashion RowStanley and Alice HarrisHaynes and Boone, LLP.Maria Christina Anzola andJohn G. Heimann
Dr. and Mrs. David HelfetThe DuBose and DorothyHeyward Memorial Fund
Jennifer and CameronHillyer
Home Box Office, Inc.Roger HorchowJoan and John JakobsonAmabel and Tony JamesJewish Communal FundJames JohnsonJohnson & JohnsonAntoinette Guerrini-Maraldiand Hans W. Kertiss
Key Brand TheatricalGroup Inc.
Sarah and Steven KraemerEmilia Saint-Amand and H. Fred Krimendahl
Diane Forrest andNicholas J. LaHowchic
Deirdre LatourJo Carole and RonaldLauder
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Betty and John LevinMr. and Mrs. A. AndrewLevison
Carolyn and Ed LewisRobert C. LieberCasey LipscombAmanda and Peter LowLorraine MachizMacquarie Holdings (USA) Inc.Main Street AdvisorsEllen and James MarcusGeorge Kelly MartinJoanne and NormanMatthews
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Wendy Rothman andAndrew Monness
Frosty MontgomeryJeremy MossBrooke and Daniel NeidichNancy Kuhn and Bernie Nussbaum
Jann Wenner and Matt NyeMary Ann OklessonRebecca and Daniel OkrentGabrielle and Michael PalitzEunice and Jay PanettaJackie Judd and John Papanek
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Mr. and Mrs. Joel PicketPaulson & Co., Inc.Paul, Weiss, Rifkind,Wharton & Garrison LLP
Jerome and Christine PonzPosternak BauerAssociates, Inc.
Cathy and Malcolm PriceNina Bogosian andMatthew Quigley
Paul RaetherEllen B. RandallCarol and Don RandelRandom House Children'sbooks
Jean Renfield-Miller andDouglas Renfield
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Clara and Walter RicciardiDr. and Mrs. Howard RiinaThe Riverside CompanyRopes & Gray LLPDaryl and Steven RothFiona and Eric C. RudinThe Mortimer D. SacklerFoundation, Inc.
Safra National Bank ofNew York
Barbara Saltzman
Samsung ElectronicsAmerica
SAPShackman AssociatesNew York
Alejandro Santo DomingoPam and Scott SchaflerFrances and Glen SchorDonald SchupakIrene and Bernard SchwartzGlenn Close and David ShawKatherine and StephenSherrill
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Lyn and David SilfinKaren and Mark SimonsSkadden, Arps, Slate,Meagher and Flom LLP
Laura J. Sloate/Hermione Foundation
Tracy and Jay SnyderMargaret Whitton andWarren Spector
Bettina and Fred StelleTracy and Russell StidolphDonna and Alan StillmanNatasha and Richard StoweBarbara Carroll and Mark Stroock
Judy and Alfred TaubmanKendall ThomasMaggie and Amor TowlesBarbara WaltersTime Warner Cable MediaTime Warner Inc.Time MagazineAlfred and Thomas J. TischTurner Broadcasting SystemLatin America, Inc
The Value InvestingCongress
Viacom Media NetworksDani and Ted VirtueJeanette and Paul WagnerWarburg PincusWoman's DayDiane and Geoffrey WardLarry Satterfield andMichael S. Ward
Cindy and Kenneth WestDenise S. YoungPatricia and Alfred ZollarTara Kelleher and Roy J. Zuckerberg
FRIENDS
Sarah Ann and WernerKranarsky
Sandra and Eric KrasnoffM. Robin KrasnyLaurie and Pierre LaPeyreThe Blanche and IrvingLaurie Foundation
Toby Devan LewisRobin and Jay L. LewisMr. and Mrs. Robert D.Lindsay and Family
Fern and Steven LoebThe Louis ArmstrongEducational Foundation
James LyleVirginia ManciniSusan and Stephen Mandel
Nancy and Peter MeinigJudith E. NeisserAlice K. NetterBette Kim and Steven J. Niemczyk
Cynthia and D. JeffreyPenney
Ashley and Mike RamosBrian J. RatnerPhilanthropic Fund
Aileen and Robert RendineMarcus V. RibeiroMrs. Frederick P. RosePatricia and Edward JohnRosenwald
Esther and Steve RotellaRichard Roth
Ophelia and William RudinMr. and Mrs. Joseph SafraDiane and Leo SchlinkertAdolph and RuthSchnurmacherFoundation, Inc
Scholastic, Inc.Chloe Breyer and Greg J. Scholl
Peter Schub FoundationGil ShivaSydney and StanleyShuman
Riva Arielle Ritvo Slifka/Alan B. Slifka Foundation
Katherine Farley and Jerry Speyer
Liora and MenachemSternberg FamilyFoundation
Mary Kay and JohnStrangfeld
Tames Music GroupKimberley and Paul TanicoNicki and Harold TannerEboni Marshall and Rossie E. Turman
Tania and Mark WalkerLester WeingartenThe Weininger FoundationCarol and Bernard Winograd
Diane and Arthur AbbeyJames M. AllenAnnette and Joseph AllenDonna and Greg AmatoAnonymous (2)Rose Marie and BurnsideAnderson
The ASCAP FoundationTracy AustinChristina and Robert BakerLillian BarbashDouglas J. BardElizabeth BartlettMercedes BassPaul BeirneTheresa and Gerry BernazAdam D. Bernstein, M.D.David L. BernsteinArlene and Mark BernsteinCecile BerryKeith BestMiriam BienstockThe Black Alumni of PrattMadeline and Alan BlinderBarbara and James BlockDominique BlokkerHenry BloomLes BluestoneCynthia R. BoardmanGale Hayman and Richard Bockman
Meg and Owen BogerMaria and Mark BoonieJeffrey BoyerShirley BrandmanBarbara and WilliamBroeder
Marcia and KennethBrookler
H.L. Brown Jr. FamilyFoundation
Peter G. BurkiMichelle K. BurnettBonnie Burnham, World Monuments Fund
Mary G. CadaginDonald G. Calder and Ann M. Calder
Hilary and Joseph CalifanoJudy and Ross CarsonJanina CaseyCassin & Cassin, LLPRuss CharltonGinger and Kevin ChaversDeborah and DavidChecketts
Michael P. CliffordMarian and James CohenLisa Pevaroff-Cohn andGary D. Cohn
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Larry CorioLinda M. CoteDouglas CramerDana CranmerAlice and Daniel CunninghamAnne N. CurtinEllen and Gary DavisConstance and Yves de Balmann
Elizabeth de CuevasMarilyn and Anthony De Nicola
Diga Diga Doo NYC, LLC
Michael K. DouglasMarcella and RichardDresdale
Chris and Jim DrostJacqueline Moline andAntoine Drye
Steven EckhausMichael EdwardsMarsha and James EllowitzElizabeth and Jean-MarieEveillard
Judy and Tony EvninJeffrey B. FagerShirley S. Farmer, Esq.Eric C. FastJoseph FazioAlfred and Harriet FeinmanFoundation
George FertittaSusan and Joseph FettoElizabeth and Matt FifieldStephen FilloChristine and JohnFitzgibbons
Susan and ArthurFleischer, Jr.
Sylvia and Fred FogelSusan and Ed ForstMr. Tom Freston and Mrs. Kathy Freston
Charlotte Moss and Barry Friedberg
Erin A. Pond and Peter H. Friedland
Fredrica and StephenFriedman
Frieda and Roy L. FurmanHenry Louise Gates, Jr.Luiz Ernesto GemignaniAlex and Rebecca GinzburgPamela Fiori and Colt GivnerEdythe and MichaelGladstein
Keith GogginSteven GoldmanArlene GoldmanPatricia and BernardGoldstein
Nancy and GaryGoodenough
Elizabeth and Mark GormleyBarbara and Harry GouldGreenwood CemetaryAmy S. Khoudari andFrances Greenstein
Terry and Michael GrollLori E. GrossRhoda and Edwin GuinsburgDan HalstedFleur and Leonard HarlanCatherine and Bill HartnettSanjeanetta HarrisLaurie HawkesGale and Richard HaymanAnne Farley and Peter C. Hein
Andrew HeinemanCarron Sherry and Richard Hogan
Alan D. HoltzWaring HopkinsAudrey Sokoloff and Tim Hosking
Donna Raftery and Vincent Inconiglios
Joy and Jonathan InghamAdam Inselbuch
Khalil JacksonAndrea Montalbano andDiron Jebejian
Steven JoubertLaurence JurdemMarnee and Eric KaltmanClarence KamKauff McGuire & MargolisLLP
Linda and William KayeKaren and Tom KeatingElizabeth and Dean KehlerRisa Schifter and Edward A. Kirtman
Anthony C. KiserJane and Charles KleinPat and John KlingensteinTheresa KnightChikako and Tomo KodamaPeggy A. KoenDavid L. KomarHitoshi KondoIsobel KoneckyEric KormanDiane KranzBarbara and Marvin KushnickDerek KwanWendy and Jerry LabowitzNancy and Jeffrey LaneThe Leonard and EvelynLauder Foundation
Bonnie and FrankLautenberg
Eric LaxElizabeth LeckieLaurie Zucker Ledermanand David Lederman
Jonathan O. Lee andBarbara Lee
Nyssa and Chisten LeeSandra Shahinian LeitnerJoan Weberman and Roy W. Lennox
Pamela Sweeny and Peter Levenson
Audrey Silver and Henry Levin
Karen Collias and Geoffrey Levitt
Ira LevyMemrie LewisLoida Nicolas LewisCarol Sutton Lewis andWilliam M. Lewis
Mary K. and John LibbyRita Fishman and Leonard Lichter
Sharon Horn and Jeffrey Lichtman
Lynn Staley and Marty LinskyTina and Michael LobelMadeleine LongLynn Davidson and Jon Lukomnik
Ninah and Michael LynneChristine and Richard MackLinda and Harry MackloweAnne and Sean MaddenJames MangesKatina and Ken ManneNancy and AlanManocherian
Susan and Morris MarkJoan Lee and Robert MatloffValerie and Paul MariniLady Va and Sir Deryck Maughan
Joanne and NormanMatthews
Steven MazzuchelliMary and R. LawrenceMcCaffrey
Merridith and RobertMcCarthy
Sandy and Michael McManusJoyce F. MenschelIrene Weiss Miller andJeffrey D. Miller
Lybess Sweezy and Ken Miller
Jennifer and Scott D. MillerCheryl and Philip MilsteinCheryl and Michael MinikesMarcia and Richard MishaanNancy and Joseph MissetAdriana and Robert MnuchinKimberly and NicholasMoore
Susan and Alan MorrisJohn MorrisKimberly and David MorseRichard MoylanMary and Roger MulvihillMarion and TimothyMurphy
Gaya and Vinay NairMary Katherine andAlexander Navab
Metin NegrinBrooke and Daniel NeidichJudith E. NeisserLynn NesbitMichael NeumanSusan and Peter NitzeJosiane and Thierry NoufeleJoan O'ConnorJason OlaineLaura and John OlsonHarry O’MealiaRobert G. O'MeallyPaula and WilliamOppenheim
Judy and Steve OrichGideon PanterPamela and Edward PantzerClaudine and Bernard ParisotJanet Charles ParkerSusan and Alan PatricofMargo Bridger and Joseph G. Paul
Michael PefferMary and Edwin PeissisDara PerlbinderPaula and Dominic PetitoCaroline Wamsler andDeWayne Phillips
Jane PooleMark G. PrentissRobert PressHarold PrinceKaren and Timothy ProctorJudith Garson and Steven Rappaport
Cheryl and Louis RaspinoCaryl RatnerPixie and Jimmy ReissRichard ReitknechtPaula and Ira ResnickJennifer and Tim RiceMegan and William RiedBarbara J. RileyDanea RileyRalph G. Roberts, Jr.
PATRONS
As of April 17, 2014
Alicia and WilliamRobertson
Donna and Benjamin M.Rosen
Carla and H. DavidRosenbloom
Judith Zarin and Gerald Rosenfeld
Laura and James RossJames RubinEthel RubinsteinSusan Cluff and Neil Rudolph
James RyanStuart SaalGeorge H. Sands, MDPhyllis W. Bertin andAnthony M. Saytanides
Cynthia and Brian ScanlanBarabar and James SchadtAmy Katz and Irving ScherAndrew N. SchiffIrwin SchlossShari and Jay SchusterAnnette Mitchell ScottDeborah and Phillip ScottKathy and Joel SegallRobin and Enrique SeniorRonald SheerRobert B. Shepler
Dr. David ShermanPatricia W. ShifkeRandall Eron ShyAngelia and George SiberJerome SiegelJohn SiffertCarla Emil and Richard Silverstein
Nancy and AndrewSimmons
Ann and James SitrickCarra SleightDana Anderson and Aaron Smidt
Elizabeth Smith-MalikHelena and Steve SokoloffYuriko and Leonard SolondzChang and Lisa SpaideRobert E. SpattJimmie E. SpearsJanet and Gilbert SpitzerLouise A. SpringerDeirdre StanleyBarbara and Mitchell SteinJoan and Michael SteinbergLeonore and Walter SternJames StevensJennifer and Joel StevensBonnie and Thomas StraussSabin C. Streeter
Barbra StreisandFoundation Inc.
Betsy Miller and Stuart Sucherman
Joe SullivanBecky and Mark W. SwiftMark TallmanGloria and Phillip TalkowJay TanenbaumLynne TarnopolAulston TaylorKendall ThomasTiffany and Co.Billie TischThe Wilma S. and LaurenceA. Tisch Foundation
Barbara and Donald ToberJean and Raymond TroubhMichael Tuch Foundation,Inc.
Diane and Thomas TuftSandra and Bruce TullyJade Netanya UllmanAnn and Thomas UnterbergJacqueline T. UterCheryl VollweilerMary Ellen and Karl Von der Heyden
Margaret and GeorgeVranesh
Ellen and Barry WagenbergTanna and Michael WallCathy and James WallickFaye WattletonJane L. Overman and Paul Weltchek
Joan and Howard WeinsteinMildred WeissmanRobert C. Wesley, Jr.Lola C. WestWestern Oil & Gas J.V. Inc.Naida S. WhartonFoundation
Katherine C. WickhamMaria and DavidWildermuth
Michael E. WilesShelley and Robert WillcoxJanice Savin Williams andChristopher Williams
Audrey Strauss and John Wing
Richard M. Winn IIIBenjamin WinterThe Craig E. WishmanFoundation
Wolfensohn FamilyFoundation
Karen WoodAnne Youngblood
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Find us on
UPCOMING EVENTSJazz at Lincoln Center’sFrederick P. Rose Hall
May 2014IRENE DIAMOND EDUCATION CENTER
WeBop Summer TermExploring Jazz StylesMay 27–June 22This summer, discover the unique sounds of jazz atWeBop, with our brand new ‘Exploring Jazz Styles’term. Students will enjoy a band week for the finalweek of the term.Registration is now open at academy.jalc.org/webop.
THE APPEL ROOM
John Pizzarelli Quartet with Special Guest Jane MonheitMay 30–31 at 7pm & 9:30pmSoulful elegance, virtuosic musicianship, melodic cre-ativity, and an unfailing swing will be operative duringthis meeting of John Pizzarelli and Jane Monheit,each a world-class communicator of an encyclopedicarray of American—and other—popular song styles.A formidable practitioner of the 7-string guitar andthe most conversational of singers, Pizzarelliaddresses, in his own manner, repertoire associatedwith Nat King Cole, Frank Sinatra, the Beatles, andothers. Known for her extraordinary vocal instrumentsince she burst onto the scene in her early twenties,Monheit has steadily matured, consistently followingRosemary Clooney's exhortation "to keep telling thetruth, because everybody knows the difference."
June 2014ROSE THEATER
Modern EllingtonJune 5-7 at 8pmDuke Ellington is the foundation of Jazz at LincolnCenter's aesthetic. On this program, the Jazz atLincoln Center Orchestra with Wynton Marsalisdraws from its already deep well of Ellingtonia witharrangements that shed light on the depth and com-plexity of the maestro's all-modernistic-all-the-timecorpus. His music was known for its unique ability toilluminate any setting, from the night club, to thedance hall, to the concert hall. Ellington, who wrotemore than 3,000 compositions during his career, won13 GRAMMY® Awards alongside numerous otherhonors, including citations from two presidents. The
New York Times refers to "Ellington's ability to mashtogether, like some improbably graceful garbagecompactor, stylistic elements from all eras, from jazz,classical, folk and any other idioms that happened tostrike his fancy" Ellington's distinctly democraticvision sets the stage for an evening sure to be mod-ern in many contexts. "The Clothed Woman," a rarelyheard yet accomplished work, will be featured.Free pre-concert discussion, nightly, 7pm.
THE APPEL ROOM
Bill Frisell: The Electric Guitar in AmericaJune 6-7 at 7pm & 9:30pmAlways on the lookout for opportunities to "digaround for where I'm coming from," Bill Frisell pre-sents an homage to the instrumental popular musicmade "right at the birth of the Fender Telecaster gui-tar" that, he recalls, "got me super fired up" about hisinstrument of choice. Frisell is joined by fellow guitarmaster Greg Leisz on electric and pedal steel gui-tars, and his trio partners Tony Scherr on bass andKenny Wollesen on drums. Together they will beexploring music of the electric guitar in the spaceage—Speedy West and Jimmy Bryant, CharlieChristian, Merle Travis, Link Wray, Duane Eddy, ChetAtkins, Chuck Berry, Dick Dale, The Ventures, TheAstronauts,The Wrecking Crew, and more. As on allFrisell projects, the proceedings will be, he under-states, "rich with possibility."
2014–15 SEASON SUBSCRIPTIONSJoin us for the 27th season of Jazz at Lincoln Center.Anchored by the renowned Jazz at Lincoln CenterOrchestra with Wynton Marsalis, we kick off the2014–15 season with the debut of a new collabora-tion by Chucho Valdés, Pedrito Martinez, andMarsalis. Brazilian ensemble SpokFrevo Orquestramakes its JALC debut, and Bill Frisell returns tocurate our Roots of Americana series. We honor leg-endary baritone saxophonist Joe Temperley of DukeEllington’s band and our own, and showcase jazz’svaried cultural interpretations with Elio Villafranca’s“Music of the Caribbean” and Sherman Irby’s“Journey Through Swing.” We welcome visionarieslike Michael Feinstein, Wayne Shorter, RubénBlades, and Dianne Reeves, and honor the music ofCount Basie, Betty Carter, Billie Holiday, MuddyWaters, Frank Sinatra, and more. Customize yourseason with the Take 3,4,5 series.For more information, visit jalc.org/subs.
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Except where noted, all venues are located in Jazz at Lincoln Center’s Frederick P. Rose Hall, Time Warner Center, 5th floor
Tickets starting at $10To purchase tickets call CenterCharge: 212-721-6500 or visit: jalc.org. The Jazz at Lincoln Center Box Officeis located on Broadway at 60th Street, Ground Floor. Hours: Monday-Saturday, 10am-6pm; Sunday, 12pm-6pm.
For groups of 15 or more: 212-258-9875 or jalc.org/groups.For more information about our education programs, visit academy.jalc.org.
For Swing University and WeBop enrollment: 212-258-9922.Find us on Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, and Instagram.
UPCOMING EVENTS
Jazz at Lincoln Center’sFrederick P. Rose Hall
In deference to the artists, patrons of Dizzy’s Club Coca-Colaare encouraged to keep conversations to a whisper during the performance.
Artists and schedule subject to change.
Dizzy’s Club Coca-Cola is located in Jazz at Lincoln Center’s Frederick P. Rose Hall, Time Warner Center, 5th floor New York.
Reservations: 212-258-9595 or jalc.org/dizzys; Group Reservations: 212-258-9595 or jalc.org/dizzys/group-sales.Nightly Artist sets at 7:30pm & 9:30pm.
Late Night Session sets Tuesday through Saturday at 11:30 pm.
Cover Charge: $20–40. Special rates for students with valid student ID. Full dinner available at each artist set.
Rose Theater and The Appel Room concert attendees, present your ticket stub to get 50% off the late-night cover charge at Dizzy’s Club Coca-Cola Fridays and Saturdays.
Jazz at Lincoln Center merchandise is now available at the concession stands during performances in Rose Theaterand The Appel Room. Items also available in Dizzy’s Club Coca-Cola during evening operating hours.
Dizzy’s Club Coca-Cola gift cards now available.
Find us on Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, and Foursquare.
May 2014Ben Wolfe Quintet featuring Nicholas Paytonwith Dave Kikoski, Donald Edwards, and Stacy DillardMay 22–257:30pm & 9:30pm
Ryan Kisor Quintetwith Peter Zak, Willie Jones III, John Webber, andPeter BernsteinMay 26–277:30pm & 9:30pm
Eric Person Big BandMay 28, 20147:30pm & 9:30pm
Ali Jackson QuintetMay 29-June 17:30pm & 9:30pm
June 2014Juilliard School EnsembleJune 27:30pm & 9:30pm
Alexis Cuadrado: A Lorca Soundscapewith Claudia Acuña, Yosvany Terry, Robert Rodriguez, and Mark FerberJune 37:30pm & 9:30pm
Sarah Elizabeth Charles Quartet: Celebrating Caribbean American Heritagewith Jesse Elder, Burniss Earl Travis II, John Davis,and Emeline Michel (6/4 7:30pm only)June 4–57:30pm & 9:30pm
Dion Parson & 21st Century Bandwith Ron Blake, Terell Stafford, Rashawn Ross, Kenny Davis, Carlton Holmes, Victor Provost,and Alioune FayeJune 6–87:30pm & 9:30pm
Mentoring Through the Arts with Dion ParsonJune 97:30pm & 9:30pm
Eddie Daniels and Roger KellawayJune 10–127:30pm & 9:30pm
Elio Villafranca Jass Syncopators CD Release:Caribbean Tingewith Lewis Nash, Carlos Henriquez, Vincent Herring,Greg Tardy, Nelson Mateo, Jonathan Troncoso, andJulia Loiza Gutierrez-RiveraJune 13–157:30pm & 9:30pm
Monday Nights with WBGOMelissa Aldana & Crash Trio CD ReleaseJune 167:30pm & 9:30pm
Paquito D’Rivera: Jazz Meets the ClassicsJune 17–227:30pm & 9:30pm
Alan Broadbent TrioJune 237:30pm & 9:30pm
Made in the U.K. Jonathan Gee TrioJune 247:30pm & 9:30pm
5
JUN 5–7 8PMThe Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra with Wynton Marsalis performs Ellington works in their season fi nale.
modern ellington
jalc.org
box o� ce broadway
at 60th, ground fl oor
frederick p. rose hall
5th fl oor
centercharge
212-721-6500
DUKE ELLLINGTON PHOTO COURTESY OF THE FRANK DRIGGS COLLECTION AT JAZZ AT LINCOLN CENTER
LEAD CORPORATE SPONSORSPONSORED BY
–15–1514season
JAZZ AT LINCOLN CENTERPROUDLY ACKNOWLEDGESOUR SEASON SPONSORS:
jalc.org/subs
212-258-9999
aaron diehl
new orleans songbook
feb 20–21, 2015
PHOTO BY WHIT LANE
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concert