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  • A return to live music happens at SOPAC on June 19th for one show only! The Dizzy Gillespie Afro-Latin Experience with Grammy Winners John Lee and Paquito D'Rivera
    Hosted by WBGO's Bobby Sanabria
    Saturday, June 19 at 8pm! The train and station and SOPAC entrance are easily accessible. If you walk in the opposite direction (towards the back of the train)you can exit to the other side of the street. The balloon on the map is an exit, and does not accurately depict the train station location.
  • Every August, the VJC’s Summer Jazz Workshop hosts multi-generational participants from around the world for an intense week of study. This year, the VJC celebrates its 46th season August 9-13 with an online program for wind players, vocalists and guitarists and an in-person program for pianists at the Brattleboro Music Center World-class faculty encourage and support the musical development of each participant by utilizing a teaching style based on positive reinforcement. In Person Piano Program: $1350 Instructors:  Zaccai Curtis, Ray Gallon, Eugene Uman Daily Masterclasses, History, & Duo-Plus Workshops (10:00 am -5:30 pm) Zoom Tunes on Monday, Tuesday and Thursday evenings Live, in-person jam session   On-Line Instrumental & Vocal Program: $265
 Instructors: Voice: Sheila Jordan, Jay Clayton
 Saxophone and Flute: Camille Thurman
 Guitar: Freddie Bryant Guitarists and Wind players: daily, two-hour-long Masterclasses Vocalists: daily, two-hour-long Singing the Standards program Zoom Tunes on Monday, Tuesday and Thursday evenings Live, in-person jam session for local attendees https://vtjazz.org/summer-workshop-2021/ gingervjc@gmail.com 802 254 9088
  • In support of their debut album Town Attend virtually via a well-known online platform (yes, that one). Registration is required to attend virtually. Virtual attendance link will be emailed to you following registration. The Soubrettes are a singing ensemble based at the Vermont Jazz Center and led by Anna Patton. They specialize in close-harmony arrangements of swing, jazz, blues, and songs by contemporary songwriters. They take the moniker “Soubrette” from the musical theater term for the non-leading lady who is usually more worldly, funnier, and more instrumental to plot intrigue than the lead. The Choir seeks out these kinds of Soubrette-like songs and performs them with syncopation, panache, and wonderfully crunchy harmonies. A year in which they couldn’t perform as usual seemed like a good time to revisit some favorite songs from their twelve years together and make a remotely-recorded album. They chose songs by songwriters including Irving Berlin, Carsie Blanton, Mose Allison, and Kris Delmhorst and arrangements based on performances by Billie Holiday, Ella Fitzgerald, McCoy Tyner, and Cecile Mclorin Salvant. They rehearsed online and recorded individually, mostly by showing up to Anna’s porch where mic and headphone cables were dangling out her second-story office window. Some of Vermont’s finest instrumentalists joined Anna in creating the accompaniment tracks, including Will Patton, Eugene Uman, and Dono Schabner. The recording project has been a true labor of love, and their concert will feature their never-before-heard rough mixes: a sneak peek at recorded tracks that won’t be available for some months yet! There will also be moments of live audio, music videos, and a few of the group’s favorite short jokes.  The Soubrettes are raising money to have their album mixed and mastered and even printed to CD, so donations are much appreciated. Suggested donation scale: $10 - $30 The event can also be viewed via the VJC Facebook Live page. https://www.facebook.com/VermontJazzCenter/live/ Register now, donate now or during the event. https://tinyurl.com/Soubrette-register https://tinyurl.com/Soubrette-donate
  • CELEBRATE THE SEASON with NYC vocalist Lizzie Thomas and her swinging jazz band. Get into the spirit as Lizzie reimagines the holiday & Christmas classics you know and love. She dazzles!

    Lizzie Thomas is an inventive jazz singer with a beautiful voice and a swinging style who loves to perform fresh and heartfelt versions of standards from the Great American Songbook. On her five recordings and in her popular and entertaining live performances, she introduces audiences to classic songs that are still timeless and relevant today.

    Lizzie Thomas - vocals

    John Di Martino- piano

    Yoshi Waki- bass

    Carmen Intorre JR -drums

    Antoinne Drye - trumpet

    DUO Encounters, which will be released by Dot Time in March 2023, teams Lizzie Thomas with a dozen major instrumentalists on one duet apiece. Rather than sing a conventional set in front of an accompanying pianist or guitarist, the interpretations are adventurous, filled with close interplay between the artists, and contain plenty of variety in instrumentation, mood, and tempos. Lizzie shares the spotlight with pianists Helio Alves, John Di Martino, and Rossanno Sportiello, guitarists Russell Malone, Ron Affif, and Guilherme Monteiro, bassists Ron Carter (“Willow Weep For Me”), Noriko Ueda, and Dezron Douglas (a version of “Have You Met Miss Jones” that includes the rarely heard verse), percussionist Café (“Nature Boy”), tenor-saxophonist Wayne Escoffery (“Lush Life”), and cellist Mairi Dorman-Phaneuf (a haunting version of “’Round Midnight”). The result is a memorable set of superbly sung and often-surprising music, Lizzie Thomas’ most rewarding recording to date.

    As usual, she digs deep into the lyrics and uplifts each song, but these performances also convey a sense of happiness and joy at finally having the opportunity to interact with other musicians after the worst days of the pandemic.

    When asked what qualities a song needs to have for her to want to perform it, Lizzie shares, “I'm a lover of melody and lyrics. I love uncovering tunes that are unknown, but also reimagining standards with a great arrangement. Within my live show, surprising my audience with folk and nontraditional jazz selections is a must, and I have a special love for Brazilian music. I enjoy educating my audience about the songs, the stories, and the composers. If I have someone come up after my set and say they were inspired to daydream and think of new ideas, I know I did a great job. My favorite comment is, ‘I was transformed- as if I was in another space and time.’”
  • “David Amram is the Renaissance Man of American Music.” —The Boston Globe

    Join us in celebrating acclaimed composer, conductor, and multi-instrumentalist David Amram’s 92nd Birthday on Saturday, December 10.

    Ever since meeting, jamming with, and being mentored by Dizzy Gillespie in 1951 and Charlie Parker in 1952, David Amram has continued over the past seven decades as one of the first pioneers, along with Julius Watkins, to include the French horn as an improvising voice in jazz. He has also pioneered the use of jazz and the all-embracing philosophy it embodies in every genre of music, as a foundation to inspire all sincere musicians to tell their story while learning, respecting, and then performing all true music that is built to last.

    Amram has also been acclaimed as a major pioneer of World Music and has stated publicly that his broad-ranging interest in all kinds of music which touches the heart is the foundation of what Bird and Dizzy told him to pursue long ago when he expressed his dreams of becoming a jazz French hornist and a symphonic composer. He credits them with steering him on the path he has pursued and shared with the world ever since those first encounters. To remain open and respectful to all forms of artistic expression and the people and the cultures who keep these arts alive and share them with others.

    As a performer, composer, and conductor/arranger, Amram has recorded with Lionel Hampton, Charles Mingus, Kenny Dorham, Oscar Pettiford, Dizzy Gillespie, Machito, Candido, Betty Carter, Curtis Fuller, Pepper Adams, Mary Lou Williams, Thad Jones, Julius Watkins, T.S Monk, Paquito D’Rivera, Arturo Sandoval, Curtis Fuller, Jutta Hipp, Anita Ellis, Albert Mangelsdorff, and Emil Mangelsdorff; in addition to his `Folk’ work with Bob Dylan, Willie Nelson, Pete Seeger, Odetta, Ramblin’ Jack Elliott, Judy Collins, Loudon Wainwright III, Steve Goodman, Jerry Jeff Walker, and Kate Taylor, and John McEuen. In addition, noted artists have also recorded his compositions, including Gerry Mulligan, Stan Kenton, David Sanborn, and the Percy Faith Orchestra.

    He has also performed with Thelonious Monk, Sonny Rollins, Dizzy Gillespie, Max Roach, Gerry Mulligan, Elvin Jones, Stan Getz, Earle “Fatha” Hines, Randy Weston, Kenny Burrell, Los Papines, Wynton Marsalis, Nina Simone, Stephane Grappelli, Paquito D’Rivera, Ray Barretto, Mongo Santamaria, Bobby Sanabria, Arturo Sandoval, Arturo O’Farrill, Jim Pepper, Yolande Bavan, Benny Golson, Bill Evans, and Kurt Elling.

    Over the past sixty years, Amram has conducted symphony concerts with more than 75 of the world’s great orchestras and performed as a soloist with 40 orchestras, while often performing music from his more than 110 orchestral and chamber music works. At these concerts, he has often invited the participation of jazz artists as both soloists and as guest composers at his classical concerts, decades before the term `cross-over’ was ever used.

    From Amram’s first film score in 1956 for the documentary film Echo of an Era (with Cecil Taylor playing piano on his first-ever recording); to the scores for Splendor in the Grass (with soloists Buster Bailey and George Barrow); The Manchurian Candidate (the original film – with stellar performances by Harold Land and Carmell Jones); to Jack Kerouac’s Pull My Daisy (with Sahib Shihab and David Amram as soloists, and Jack Kerouac narrating); and on up through his most recent films, Barbara Kopple’s New Homeland, and Michael Patrick Kelly’s Isn’t it Delicious, where he included jazz luminaries Paquito D’Rivera, Alex Foster, Earl McIntyre, Jerome Harris and guitarists Gene Bertoncini and Vic Juris, all performing with the classical musicians, he has consistently and artfully woven various musical styles and jazz together in almost all of his scores.

    In 2019, Moochin’ About Records released the 5 CD Box Set, DAVID AMRAM’s Classic American Film Scores (1956 – 2016). The box set contains his jazz-influenced scores from seven of his most celebrated films, including Elia Kazan’s Splendor in the Grass and The Arrangement; John Frankenheimer’s The Manchurian Candidate and The Young Savages; and Jack Kerouac’s Pull My Daisy; in addition, two of his Broadway scores, for Arthur Miller’s After the Fall, and Budd Schulberg’s On the Waterfront, are included.

    In 1966, when Leonard Bernstein chose Amram as the New York Philharmonic’s first-ever composer in residence, Bernstein encouraged Amram to continue to be an ambassador of music for young people and to always remember to share with them the enduring values of European classical music and the treasures of jazz, Native American and Latin American music — all of which are of enduring value, based on purity of intent and an exquisite choice of notes.

    Amram has been honored as the recipient of The Oklahoma Jazz Hall of Fame’s Jay McShann Lifetime Achievement Award, and the New York’s Highlights in Jazz Lifetime Achievement Award; along with Folk Alliance International’s Lifetime Achievement Award; the Pete & Toshi Seeger’s Power of Song Award; and the Spirit of Farm Aid Award, in honor of his 34 years playing with the Willie Nelson Band at Farm Aid.

    He is the author of three memoirs, all published by Routledge Press, Nine Lives of a Musical Cat (2009); Collaborating With Kerouac (2005); and the highly acclaimed Vibrations (1968, 2007). In 2023, Routledge Press will be releasing his next memoir DAVID AMRAM @ 90: Promising Young Composer. The documentary film DAVID AMRAM: The First 80 Years, was released in 2011 on Vimeo on Demand; and in 2023, Lawrence Kraman will be releasing the feature-length film documentary DAVID AMRAM @ 90.

    His archive of manuscripts, personal papers, and musical scores have been acquired by the Lincoln Center of the Performing Arts Branch of the New York Public Library

    Today, as he approaches 92, Amram continues to follow his muse, and maintain a remarkable pace of composing new classical pieces, while making recordings and performing as a bandleader, multi-instrumentalist, vocalist, guest conductor, instrumental soloist, narrator teacher, and lecturer in five languages.

    Showtime is at 7 pm. Tickets: $30 in advance / $35 day of show. For more info, visit https://www.zincjazz.com.
  • “David Amram is the Renaissance Man of American Music.” —The Boston Globe

    Join us in celebrating acclaimed composer, conductor, and multi-instrumentalist David Amram’s 92nd Birthday on Saturday, December 10.

    Ever since meeting, jamming with, and being mentored by Dizzy Gillespie in 1951 and Charlie Parker in 1952, David Amram has continued over the past seven decades as one of the first pioneers, along with Julius Watkins, to include the French horn as an improvising voice in jazz. He has also pioneered the use of jazz and the all-embracing philosophy it embodies in every genre of music, as a foundation to inspire all sincere musicians to tell their story while learning, respecting, and then performing all true music that is built to last.

    Amram has also been acclaimed as a major pioneer of World Music and has stated publicly that his broad-ranging interest in all kinds of music which touches the heart is the foundation of what Bird and Dizzy told him to pursue long ago when he expressed his dreams of becoming a jazz French hornist and a symphonic composer. He credits them with steering him on the path he has pursued and shared with the world ever since those first encounters. To remain open and respectful to all forms of artistic expression and the people and the cultures who keep these arts alive and share them with others.

    As a performer, composer, and conductor/arranger, Amram has recorded with Lionel Hampton, Charles Mingus, Kenny Dorham, Oscar Pettiford, Dizzy Gillespie, Machito, Candido, Betty Carter, Curtis Fuller, Pepper Adams, Mary Lou Williams, Thad Jones, Julius Watkins, T.S Monk, Paquito D’Rivera, Arturo Sandoval, Curtis Fuller, Jutta Hipp, Anita Ellis, Albert Mangelsdorff, and Emil Mangelsdorff; in addition to his `Folk’ work with Bob Dylan, Willie Nelson, Pete Seeger, Odetta, Ramblin’ Jack Elliott, Judy Collins, Loudon Wainwright III, Steve Goodman, Jerry Jeff Walker, and Kate Taylor, and John McEuen. In addition, noted artists have also recorded his compositions, including Gerry Mulligan, Stan Kenton, David Sanborn, and the Percy Faith Orchestra.

    He has also performed with Thelonious Monk, Sonny Rollins, Dizzy Gillespie, Max Roach, Gerry Mulligan, Elvin Jones, Stan Getz, Earle “Fatha” Hines, Randy Weston, Kenny Burrell, Los Papines, Wynton Marsalis, Nina Simone, Stephane Grappelli, Paquito D’Rivera, Ray Barretto, Mongo Santamaria, Bobby Sanabria, Arturo Sandoval, Arturo O’Farrill, Jim Pepper, Yolande Bavan, Benny Golson, Bill Evans, and Kurt Elling.

    Over the past sixty years, Amram has conducted symphony concerts with more than 75 of the world’s great orchestras and performed as a soloist with 40 orchestras, while often performing music from his more than 110 orchestral and chamber music works. At these concerts, he has often invited the participation of jazz artists as both soloists and as guest composers at his classical concerts, decades before the term `cross-over’ was ever used.

    From Amram’s first film score in 1956 for the documentary film Echo of an Era (with Cecil Taylor playing piano on his first-ever recording); to the scores for Splendor in the Grass (with soloists Buster Bailey and George Barrow); The Manchurian Candidate (the original film – with stellar performances by Harold Land and Carmell Jones); to Jack Kerouac’s Pull My Daisy (with Sahib Shihab and David Amram as soloists, and Jack Kerouac narrating); and on up through his most recent films, Barbara Kopple’s New Homeland, and Michael Patrick Kelly’s Isn’t it Delicious, where he included jazz luminaries Paquito D’Rivera, Alex Foster, Earl McIntyre, Jerome Harris and guitarists Gene Bertoncini and Vic Juris, all performing with the classical musicians, he has consistently and artfully woven various musical styles and jazz together in almost all of his scores.

    In 2019, Moochin’ About Records released the 5 CD Box Set, DAVID AMRAM’s Classic American Film Scores (1956 – 2016). The box set contains his jazz-influenced scores from seven of his most celebrated films, including Elia Kazan’s Splendor in the Grass and The Arrangement; John Frankenheimer’s The Manchurian Candidate and The Young Savages; and Jack Kerouac’s Pull My Daisy; in addition, two of his Broadway scores, for Arthur Miller’s After the Fall, and Budd Schulberg’s On the Waterfront, are included.

    In 1966, when Leonard Bernstein chose Amram as the New York Philharmonic’s first-ever composer in residence, Bernstein encouraged Amram to continue to be an ambassador of music for young people and to always remember to share with them the enduring values of European classical music and the treasures of jazz, Native American and Latin American music — all of which are of enduring value, based on purity of intent and an exquisite choice of notes.

    Amram has been honored as the recipient of The Oklahoma Jazz Hall of Fame’s Jay McShann Lifetime Achievement Award, and the New York’s Highlights in Jazz Lifetime Achievement Award; along with Folk Alliance International’s Lifetime Achievement Award; the Pete & Toshi Seeger’s Power of Song Award; and the Spirit of Farm Aid Award, in honor of his 34 years playing with the Willie Nelson Band at Farm Aid.

    He is the author of three memoirs, all published by Routledge Press, Nine Lives of a Musical Cat (2009); Collaborating With Kerouac (2005); and the highly acclaimed Vibrations (1968, 2007). In 2023, Routledge Press will be releasing his next memoir DAVID AMRAM @ 90: Promising Young Composer. The documentary film DAVID AMRAM: The First 80 Years, was released in 2011 on Vimeo on Demand; and in 2023, Lawrence Kraman will be releasing the feature-length film documentary DAVID AMRAM @ 90.

    His archive of manuscripts, personal papers, and musical scores have been acquired by the Lincoln Center of the Performing Arts Branch of the New York Public Library

    Today, as he approaches 92, Amram continues to follow his muse, and maintain a remarkable pace of composing new classical pieces, while making recordings and performing as a bandleader, multi-instrumentalist, vocalist, guest conductor, instrumental soloist, narrator teacher, and lecturer in five languages.

    Showtime is at 8:30 pm. Tickets: $30 in advance / $35 day of show. For more info, visit https://www.zincjazz.com.
  • Jazz Power Initiative is now expanding their monthly jam series to be presented at two Uptown Manhattan locations, the National Jazz Museum in Harlem and their newest partner venue, Alianza Dominicana Cultural Center in Washington Heights. Concerts are presented monthly on the third Sunday at the National Jazz Museum in Harlem and on the third Thursday at the Alianza Dominicana Cultural Center, with high-quality jazz music for neighbors and visitors to enjoy and participate in a family-friendly environment.

    The artistic line-up and schedule for the Intergenerational Jazz Power Jam fall season is:

    OCTOBER 20th 7-8:30 PM at Alianza Dominicana Cultural Center
    OCTOBER 23rd 2-4 PM at National Jazz Museum in Harlem
    NOVEMBER 17th 7-8:30 PM at Alianza Dominicana Cultural Center
    NOVEMBER 20TH 2-4 PM at the National Jazz Museum in Harlem
    DECEMBER 15th 7-8:30 PM at Alianza Dominicana Cultural Center
    DECEMBER 18th 2-4 PM the National Jazz Museum in Harlem
  • With Rakim, Speech, Chuck D, Nikki Giovanni, jessica Care moore, Ravi Coltrane, Mayor Ras Baraka, The Last Poets, Javon Jackson and Christian McBride Situation

    Christian McBride – Musical Director

    For one unmissable night, NJPAC’s City Verses program unites the leading voices in jazz, hip hop and poetry. The legendary lineup includes hip hop stars Rakim (Paid in Full), Speech (Arrested Development), and Chuck D (Public Enemy); award-winning poets and spoken word performers Nikki Giovanni, jessica Care moore, Ravi Coltrane, Mayor Ras Baraka, and The Last Poets (Abiodun Oyewole, Umar Bin Hassan, and Babadon Babatunde); Musical Director (and NJPAC Jazz Advisor) Christian McBride and the Christian McBride Situation. We’ll also celebrate the young poets who have participated in City Verses this year, and hear some of their incredible original work. Blaring horns and baring souls, these masterful artists exclaim their vision of justice, change, and joy.

    This program is made possible by NJPAC and Rutgers-Newark’s City Verses: Elevating Voices through Jazz and Poetry initiative, funded by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation.

    This unique partnership between NJPAC and Rutgers University-Newark celebrates the rich historical connection between jazz and poetry, creates opportunities for public engagement, strengthens community ties through the arts, amplifies the authentic voices of the people of Greater Newark, and engages a new generation of poets, jazz musicians and teaching artists.
  • The Rose Parade, also commonly known as the Rose Bowl Parade, is the highlight of the annual Tournament of Roses that greets the new year in Pasadena every year since way back in 1890. The Rose Parade is a lively, loud and colourful parade involving dozens of floats, marching bands and equestrian units, and is watched by a huge audience, both on the city streets and also on televison and online via the increasingly popular and free live stream, which is back once again for the 2023 event, which will be the 134th year this fabulous event has taken place.

    Click Here Rose Bowl Games 2023 Live Streaming Free

    Click Here Rose Parade Show 2023 Live Streaming Free

    This year's Grand Marshal is Arizona Congresswoman, Gabby Giffords and the theme "Turning the corner" The Rose Bowl college football game, typically starting later on the same day, although sometimes falling on the day before, also forms part of the Tournament or Roses - see how to watch that on TV and online here: Rose Bowl live coverage
    Parade Date

    As is most common, the Rose Parade usually takes place on 1st January, new year's day itself, however, for 2023 it is scheduled for the 2nd January from 8am to 12 noon to stay in line with the tradition "Never on a Sunday"
    Parade Route

    The parade predominantly follows the town's main street of Colorado Boulevard, where the main grandstands are located. The formation area for participants is in front of Tournament House, and then the start point is at the corner of Green Street and Orange Grove Boulevard. The parade then moves north on Orange Grove before turning onto Colorado Boulevard for the main viewing, then onto Sierra Madre Boulevard before the parade ends at Villa Street.

    There are ticketed seating areas available in reserved grandstand areas on the parade route, and you must have a ticket if you wish to sit in the grandstands. Tickets can be reserved via Sharp Seating here.
    Rose Parade Lineup

    Here is the details of the participants for the 2023 Rose Parade, many more will of course be added in time:

    All Gifu Honor Green Band (Gifu, Japan)
    Banda de Musica La Primavera (Santiago, Panama)
    Buhos Marching Band (Veracruz, Mexico)
    Foothills Falcon Band (Tucson, Arizona)
    Fresno State Bulldog Marching Band (Fresno, California)
    LAUSD All District High School Honor Band (LA, California)

    More to be announced here
    TV & Live Streaming

    For anyone who can't make it to the parade, or who just has an interest in seeing a bit of life and colour at a traditionally drab time of year, local TV station KTLA5 will be streaming the parade live online.

    Page content by Martin Kerrigan. If you have found the content on this page useful then please feel free to share it with your friends and family, or if you have any information or updates that might be useful for us to add to the page then please contact us
  • Mingus Dynasty Band
    at the Vermont Jazz Center

    Saturday January 21, 2023
    7:30 PM
     
    An all-star group that tours the world, introducing & keeping afresh the complex, intense, & beautiful music of one of jazz’s greatest bassists/composers. 
     
     
    Craig Handy, tenor saxophone

    Conrad Herwig, trombone

    Jim Ridl, piano

    Boris Kozlov, bass

    Donald Edwards, drums
     
    “Charles Mingus would be very proud of this band”
    Saxophonist Charles McPherson, member of the original Mingus Orchestra
     
    Sponsor:
    A Friend of VJC Educational Programs

    Sliding scale $20-$50
    Masks required.

    Please contact in advance to facilitate
    handicapped access

    gingervjc@gmail.com
    802 258 9088
     
    www.vtjazz.org

    Vermont Jazz Center
    72 Cotton Mill Hill #222
    Brattleboro VT 05301
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