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  • Christian Scott, also known as Christian Scott aTunde Adjuah (born March 31, 1983, in New Orleans, Louisiana) is a two-time Edison Award winning and Grammy Award nominated trumpeter, composer and producer. He is the nephew of jazz innovator and legendary sax man, Donald Harrison, Jr. His musical tutelage began under the direction of his uncle at the age of thirteen. After graduating from the New Orleans Center for Creative Arts (NOCCA) in 2001, Christian received a full tuition scholarship to Berklee College of Music where he earned a degree in professional music and film scoring thirty months later.

    Since 2002, Christian has released eleven critically acclaimed studio recordings, two live albums and one greatest hits collection. According to NPR, "Christian Scott ushers in new era of jazz". He has been heralded by JazzTimes Magazine as "Jazz's young style God." Christian is known for developing the harmonic convention known as the “forecasting cell” and for his use of an un-voiced tone in his playing, emphasizing breath over vibration at the mouthpiece. The technique is known as his “whisper technique.”

    Christian is the progenitor of “Stretch Music,” a jazz rooted, genre blind musical form that attempts to “stretch” jazz’s rhythmic, melodic and harmonic conventions to encompass as many other musical forms, languages and cultures as possible. Jazz is a progressive musical movement and Christian is at the forefront of its continued viability as an art form. Christian’s 2015 release, Stretch Music, marked the partnership between Christian’s Stretch Music record label and Ropeadope Records. Critics and fans alike have praised the recording. Stretch Music is also the first recording to have an accompanying app, for which Christian won the prestigious JazzFM Innovator of the year Award in 2016. The Stretch Music App is an interactive music player that allows musicians the ability to completely control their practicing, listening and learning experience by customizing the player to fit their specific needs and goals.

    In 2017, Christian released three albums, collectively titled The Centennial Trilogy, that debuted at number one on iTunes. The albums’ launch commemorated the 100th anniversary of the first Jazz recordings of 1917. The series is, at its core, a sobering re-evaluation of the social political realities of the world through sound. It speaks to a litany of issues that continue to plague the collective human experience, such as slavery in America via the Prison Industrial Complex, food insecurity, xenophobia, immigration, climate change, sexual orientation and gender inequality, fascism and the return of the demagogue.

    The first release in the trilogy, Ruler Rebel, vividly depicts Adjuah's new vision and sound - revealing Adjuah to the listener in a way never heard before via a completely new production methodology that stretches trap music with West African and New Orleanian Black Indian masking tradition musical styles. Ruler Rebel’s release coincided with the first annual Stretch Music Festival at Harlem Stage in New York. The Stretch Music Festival, created and curated by Christian, explores the boundaries of Stretch, Jazz, Trap, and Alternative Rock with some of music’s most poised and fiery rising stars. The sold-out performances were met with praise from both music critics and fans. The second release, Diaspora, was showcased during Adjuah’s sold-out Carnegie Hall performance in 2017. The third release, Emancipation Procrastination, launched in September 2017 during NPR’s global Jazz Night in America broadcast from New Orleans.

    Christian scored his identical twin brother’s and Director’s Guild of America 2015 Student Award recipient, writer-director and Spike Lee protégé, Kiel Adrian Scott’s, recent Student Academy Award nominated film, Samaria. Christian also scored Kiel’s award-winning film, The Roe Effect. He will also score Kiel’s feature length directorial debut, slated for production late 2018.

    In addition to scoring documentaries for Hennessy Cognac and others, in 2017, Christian has scored commercials for Tag Heuer watch makers and The Gap clothing company, as well as music for ESPN’s Sports Center. Christian has also recently completed a music project, in which he served as leader, in conjunction with 1800 Tequila and Billboard Magazine called The Refined Player’s Series.

    Since 2006, Christian has worked with a number of notable artists, including Prince, Radiohead’s Thom Yorke, McCoy Tyner, Marcus Miller, Eddie Palmieri, rappers Mos Def (Yasin Bey), Talib Kweli, and Vic Mensa, as well as heralded poet and musician Saul Williams.

    Additionally, through his partnership with Adam’s Instruments, Christian designed a signature line of horns, the Siren Trumpet, Sirenette and Reverse Flugelhorn that are revolutionizing brass instrument design all over the world. Domestic production of Christian’s proprietary reverse flugelhorn will begin in 2018.

    Christian is a scion of New Orleans’ first family of art and culture, the Harrisons, and the grandson of legendary Big Chief, Donald Harrison Sr., who lead four nations in the City’s masking tradition. The HBO series, Treme, borrowed the name “Guardians of the Flame” from African-American cultural group Scott began “masking” as a member of with his grandfather in 1989. Christian recently became the Chief of The Brave, in February 2017, one his grandfather’s early banners. In 2018, Tulane University’s acclaimed Amistad Research Center announced its archive of the Donald Harrison, Sr. legacy papers to highlight the Harrison/Scott/Nelson family’s contributions to the arts, activism, and African diaspora cultural expressions. The Harrison family’s story has been documented by Oscar winning director, the late Jonathan Demme, in his post-Hurricane Katrina works.

    Christian is dedicated to a number of causes that positively impact communities. He gives his time and talents in service to several organizations which garnered him a place in Ebony Magazine’s 30 Young Leaders Under 30. He has provided his services to Each One, Save One, NO/AIDS Task Force, Girls First, The Mardi Gras Indian Hall of Fame, Good Work Network and numerous other community service organizations. Holding master classes, creating and participating in discussion panels, and purchasing and giving away instruments, are all part of Christian’s community based work. He has worked with Guardians Institute in New Orleans’ 9th Ward, which is dedicated to reading and fiscal literacy, cultural retention and a firm commitment to the participation of community elders and artists in uplifting and supporting youths in underserved areas of New Orleans. Christian currently sits on the Boards of Guardians Institute and The NOCCA Institute. Since Christian’s emergence on the jazz music scene, he has been a passionate and vocal proponent of human rights and an unflinching critic of injustices throughout the world.
  • “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.
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