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  • Flat 9 Entertainment presents the Phoenix Amplified Jazz Experience featuring Gail Jhonson/Jazz in Pink and Saxophonist/Flutist Paula Atherton. This will an exciting night of contemporary and smooth jazz music featuring two chart-topping artists. Gail and Paula have performed nationally and internationally over the years on various jazz festivals and concert tours. This will be an amazing night of music performed by two influential women in Jazz! Gail Jhonson...piano, vocals, music director, composer, educator, and author... What an extensive journey this lady has traversed thus far in her career in the music industry! Hailing from Philadelphia, PA, Gail is a Berklee College of Music alumni and in 2020, she received a master's degree from Southern New Hampshire University in conjunction with Berklee College of Music, in Music Business. Her national break in the industry stemmed from her landing her first major gig with Morris Day of The Time. She relocated to Los Angeles, where she also taught for many years at Hollywood's famed Musicians Institute. As a musician, she has worked with some of the top artists in the business, like Brenda Russell, Jermaine Jackson, Pink, Norman Brown, Patti Austin, Jeff Lorber, Bobby Womack, and Jonathan Butler. And this is just the shortlist! Saxophonist, flutist Paula Atherton has enjoyed a long and varied career in contemporary and mainstream jazz. Her acumen on her instruments are poised and adept. Her full-length album Can You Feel It has already begun to garner real accolades with her single also titled "Can You Feel It," landing a #1 hit, three weeks in a row on Billboard. What is even more cementing about this accolade is she also landed #1 slots on Mediabase and #1 on the Smooth Jazz Network. New York-based sax player/vocalist and songwriter Paula Atherton has shared the stage with such contemporary jazz notables as The Rippingtons, Nick Colionne, Chuck Loeb, Cindy Bradley, Brian Simpson, Althea Renee, Four80East, David Sanborn, Bob James, Marc Antoine, Hiroshima, Gerald Albright, and Chieli Minucci. Paula has also worked in the traditional jazz field; one of the notable performances being a week-long engagement at the Blue Note NYC with pianist and jazz legend, Hank Jones. . Paula also performed with Grammy award-winning singer Dee Dee Bridgewater at the Annenberg Theater, for the Palm Springs Women's Jazz Festival.
  • The Yoko Miwa Trio - Yoko Miwa on Piano, Will Slater on Bass, Scott Goulding on Drums. CD Release Concert for their 2021 chart topping release "Songs of Joy".
  • In ceramics, hand building is about creating beautiful forms with your hands and tools, instead of using a potter’s wheel. In this two-day workshop, you will be guided through the process of creating your very own vessel! Learn how to shape, decorate, and glaze your vessel, leaving you with a keepsake to last a lifetime. This workshop will be held in person in the Museum’s ceramics studio. Participants will be divided in two separate classrooms, with a maximum capacity of 6 people per classroom, plus the instructor. The Newark Museum of Art is operating under new protocols to keep our visitors and staff as safe as possible. As part of planning your visit, all visitors aged 12 and up must show proof of vaccination with a copy of vaccination card or photo, along with personal identification, or present a negative COVID-19 test from the last 72 hours. This includes both the Alice Ransom Dreyfuss Garden and inside the Museum.
  • Join award-winning pianist and composer Charu Suri, who became the first Indian jazz artist to premiere an evening of work at Carnegie Hall, in an evening of her music that draws from her native Indian rhythms and ragas (modal scales), in an enthralling, energetic and soulful musical experience unlike anything you’ve heard, with glorious Sufi singing on top of it all.

    Praised by GRAMMY winners and a winner of several awards for her work, Suri’s ensemble pulls you deep into the heart and soul of the East while pushing the boundaries of a jazz trio. Lyrics or ghazals sung by Falsa, and percussion by Jesse Gerbasi.

    Pianist and composer Charu Suri treads fearlessly between genres, pulling global influences that range from the mood-anchoring Indian ragas, Sufi music, to the trio. Her ground-breaking albums, The Book of Ragas, and its sequel, The Book of Ragas vol. 2 have often elicited the response, "I've never heard this type of sound before."

    One of the few female composers from India to perform work at Carnegie Hall, Charu has lived in four continents, and writes music that reflect her journey as both a traveler and her training as a classical music piano prodigy. She has been playing the piano since the age of five, and performing since the age of nine, and one of her best memories is winning an international piano competition at the age of 15.

    What started purely as an experiment with her "Book of Ragas" has turned into a niche that she is now increasingly becoming known for.

    In her latest "Book of Ragas vol. 2," which was highlighted by Jazz at Lincoln Center as an August new release, Suri uses her native Carnatic and Hindustani ragas (modal scales) as the basis for lyrical and energetic piano improvisations, layered by Sufi singing. All About Jazz has praised her for creating a new sound, and her raga compositions have garnered her an Hollywood Music in Media nomination, an International Singer Songwriters Association gold record, and Global Music Awards as well as praise from fellow GRAMMY voting members.

    But she is no stranger to the art of the Songbook too (attribute this to her listening to numerous records of Bill Evans and Billie Holiday as a kid). "The New American Songbook" has garnered many awards, including a "Band Single of the Year" crystal trophy for her song, Bluesy, awarded by the International Singer-Songwriters Association (ISSA) in 2021.

    Charu has performed at Lincoln Center and other prestigious concert halls around the world, including St. Croix in the U.S. Virgin Islands. She often performs with her band, and sometimes as a soloist.
  • The festival's namesake, Jim Burge, is a retired Professor of Music at Hillsborough Community College with BME and Master's degrees at the University of Denver. His experience includes Las Vegas show bands, the Walt Disney World Band, and the Florida Symphony. In addition, he is active as a performer and teacher in the Tampa area and co-conducts the FanFare Winds Band. Burge also hosts Jazz with Jim, a monthly program at the Carrollwood Cultural Center. On Friday, April 29 at 7:30 p.m., Jim Burge and The Jazz Directions (pictured above) will host a unique Jazz with Jim featuring the young performers of the Hillsborough County High School All-Star Jazz Ensemble. Burge hand-selected the performers during the All-County Jazz Event on April 22-23 and invited them to perform with him and the band. On Saturday, April 30, the festivities will continue at 6 p.m. with the Jazz Directions again taking the stage, only this time with guest trumpeter Tom Ziegelhofer. Ziegelhofer has performed with Tony Bennett, Andy Williams, Nell Carter, Jerry Seinfeld, Bob Hope, and Connie Stevens, to name a few. He has also opened for Miami Sound Machine and Basia. In addition, he was a founding member of Baytown Brass and performed with The Jazz Cellar Underground Orchestra. Next, O Som Do Jazz ("The Sound of Jazz" in Portuguese) with Rio de Janeiro singer Andrea Moraes Manson will join the festivities with samba-jazz, Bossa Nova, Balanco, Baião, and MPB. O Som Do Jazz's sound recaptures the sound, grace, energy, and spirit of 1960s Brazilian music. Their music has been featured on HBO, Fox, and on Chinese and Turkish Bossa Nova compilations. Finally, Burge and the Center will welcome the Carrollwood Jukebox Big Band after a two-year hiatus due to the pandemic. The Carrollwood Jukebox Big Band plays popular hip swivelin', jump jivin', swing dancin', Latin lovin', waltz, and cha-cha steppin', contemporary tunes of the 20th century. The band will put a big band twist on jazz as Burge joins in to close out the evening. Tickets for the entire two-day indoor jazz event are USD 47 for Center members and USD 67 for non-members. Tickets are also available per day, with tickets for Friday, April 29 at USD 13 for Center members and USD 18 for non-members, and tickets for Saturday, April 30 at USD 39 for Center members and USD 54 for non-members. Streaming sponsored by AARP is also available for USD 10 on Friday and USD 30 on Saturday. Tickets can be purchased at the Center, online at carrollwoodcenter.org, or by calling (813) 922-8167. The Carrollwood Cultural Center, located at 4537 Lowell Road in Tampa, is a non-profit 501(c)3 organization with a mission of creating culture through community and community through culture.
  • New York’s Longest Running Jazz Concert Series

    Celebrates “The Return of the Jam Session,” May 12, 2022

    49th Season Finale of Famed Highlights in Jazz Series
    At BMCC Tribeca Performing Arts Center

    All-Star Lineup Features Wycliffe Gordon, Ted Rosenthal, Victor Lewis,
    Brian Lynch, Peter & Will Anderson, and James Chirillo
    Plus, a Surprise Special Guest!


    You won’t want to miss the dynamic final Highlights in Jazz concert for 2022, when today’s top jazz players take to the BMCC Tribeca Performing Arts Center stage to celebrate the Return of the Jam Session.

    The May 12 event features Peter and Will Anderson on saxophones, flutes and clarinets; trombonist Wycliffe Gordon, pianist Ted Rosenthal, drummer Victor Lewis, trumpeter Brian Lynch and guitarist James Chirillo, playing together for the very first time.

    To veteran producer Jack Kleinsinger, the jam session is the true heart of jazz, and a jam has become a Highlights in Jazz tradition. For each Return of the Jam Session concert, Kleinsinger brings together musicians who have never before played together in this configuration, showcasing them as they rise to the occasion, showing off their chops and flexibility. “I never ask anyone to bring their own band,” Kleinsinger notes. “I like to hear what happens when they’re outside their usual setting.”

    This year’s lineup includes a spectrum of versatile players from different generations and musical backgrounds:

    Trombonist Wycliffe Gordon caught the ears of avid jazz listeners circa 1989 as part of Wynton Marsalis’ Septet; he was an original member of the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra, starting in 1995. Wycliffe has performed with David Sanborn, Rene Marie, Dianne Reeves, Anat Cohen, Arturo Sandoval, Dizzy Gillespie, Lionel Hampton, Tommy Flanagan, Shirley Horn, Joe Henderson, and Eric Reed, to name just a few. The trombonist has released close to three dozen CDs as a leader or co-leader, and is a perennial winner of “best trombonist” honors from numerous publications and professional organizations.

    Saxophonists/clarinetists/flautists Peter and Will Anderson: Hailed by The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal and other august publications for their remarkable virtuosity, the identical Anderson twins began steeping themselves in classic jazz while still in elementary school. They absorbed the styles and sounds of Benny Goodman, Sidney Bechet, Louis Armstrong, Nat King Cole, Frank Sinatra, Ella Fitzgerald and Count Basie. They cite Duke Ellington and Charlie Parker as early influences. Since moving to the Big Apple, they’ve played with the likes of Wynton Marsalis, Jimmy Heath, Jimmy Cobb and the Village Vanguard Orchestra. In addition to releasing several albums as leaders, the Juilliard-trained twosome have appeared off-Broadway celebrating the music of Artie Shaw and the Dorsey Brothers.


    Pianist Ted Rosenthal first hit the radar of many critics and listeners as the winner of an early Thelonious Monk Institute of Jazz International Piano Competition. Since then, he’s more than lived up to that early promise, releasing over a dozen well-received albums as a leader and accompanying NEA Jazz Masters Art Farmer, Phil Woods, Bob Brookmeyer and James Moody, as well as a host of other jazz greats. The versatile Mr. Rosenthal has received grants and commissions from the NEA, the Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater and the New York City Opera; he earned a four-star DownBeat review for his solo album, The 3 B’s, focusing on tunes by fellow pianists Bill Evans and Bud Powell, plus Beethoven-fueled improvisations. An avid listener as well as player, in pre-pandemic times Ted often could be spotted in the audience of clubs and concert halls throughout the NYC metro area, listening raptly.

    For a quick tour of the world of contemporary jazz, take a glance at the discography of drummer Victor Lewis. Since the 1970s he’s been a regular in the studio as a leader and accompanying straight-ahead masters like Stan Getz, Kenny Barron, Dexter Gordon, Lew Tabackin and J.J. Johnson; adventurous souls including Carla Bley, George Adams, David Murray and Charles Tolliver; and vocalists Judy Niemack, Helen Merrill, Carmen Lundy and Abbey Lincoln. This thumbnail sketch leaves unexplored more than a few categories in which Victor has made his mark, but take our word for it that the drummer has been on the scene and consistently sounding great in person and on record for more than four decades.

    While many of today’s players hold impressive jazz school degrees, trumpeter Brian Lynch is the rare one who is an honored graduate of a pair of the music’s most legendary and respected proving grounds: Art Blakey’s Jazz Messengers and Horace Silver’s Quintet. Brian played with NEA Jazz Masters Toshiko Akiyoshi, Benny Golson and Phil Woods, and also has deep roots in Latin music, including stints with Eddie Palmieri, Conrad Herwig, Hector LaVoe and Lila Downs. The trumpeter has received numerous awards, grants and commissions, and appeared on hundreds of albums, including two dozen as a leader.

    When looking for a guitarist who can swing, look no further than six-string maven James Chirillo. His credits span generations of giants, from those who invented and grew up in the genre (Benny Goodman, Benny Carter, Frank Wess, Eddie Barefield and Buck Clayton) to those who made swing their own in more recent years (Wynton Marsalis, Tony Bennett, Michael Feinstein). James has also worked with Paquito D’Rivera, Joe Lovano and a host of other jazz greats across many styles. He’s played on an abundance of albums, movie soundtracks, and Broadway shows, and is on Juilliard’s jazz faculty.

    Presenting a surprise special guest is a series-long tradition for Highlights in Jazz, and the Return of the Jam Session concert will be no exception. The idea was planted in Kleinsinger’s mind long before he tried his hand at putting on concerts. A lifelong jazz enthusiast, the producer recalls the first major concert he attended, one of the earliest productions of the legendary Norman Granz. The surprise special guest that night was none other than Billie Holiday, one of the brightest jazz stars of the era. “She came out on stage and the crowd went wild,” Kleinsinger says. “It made such an impression on me. It was so exciting to see someone extra, people remember it for years. So I decided to do that when I planned my first concert.”

    Sometimes the special guest even surprises Kleinsinger, like the time Gene Bertoncini showed up ax in hand. He had been sent in to sub by scheduled guitarist Bucky Pizzarelli who was running late. And sometimes the guests themselves are surprised: Kleinsinger keeps his eye on the crowd to see who he can grab to sit in. He recalls spotting Ellington alumnus Ray Nance in the audience and bringing him to the stage; since Ray wasn’t packing his violin or trumpet, he contributed by singing and dancing.

    From his start as a producer in the early 1970s, diversity has been important to Kleinsinger. Not only has every event featured an integrated band, “I’ve consistently aimed for interplay between generations,” he says. “Highlights in Jazz was one of John Pizzarelli’s first gigs—at 15 he was on stage with his dad, Bucky, and Zoot Sims.” Another leap across the generation gap was a pairing of trumpeters: the very young Jon Faddis and senior statesman Doc Cheatham.

    The concert wraps up the triumphant 49th season of the venerable series, which returns to the BMCC Tribeca Performing Arts Center stage after a two-year hiatus due to the pandemic. That’s the longest break since the first Highlights in Jazz presentation in the early 1970s. “This season is a beacon of the return to normal,” Kleinsinger declares.


    All Shows At

    BMCC TRIBECA Performing Arts Center
    Borough of Manhattan Community College
    199 Chambers Street, New York, NY 10007
    http://tribecapac.org
    TRIBECA SAFE – COVID POLICY

    Please Note: For all concerts at Tribeca Performing Arts Center, patrons will be entering through our temporary entrance – the West Street Gate – between Chambers Street and Harrison Street.
    Go to 190 West St., New York, NY 10013, and walk 50 feet north
    to the West Street Gate Entrance.
    Do not enter at our usual address on 199 Chambers;
    Please go around the corner to West Street.


    Box Office 212-220-1460

    THERE WILL BE A BOX OFFICE NIGHT OF EVENT

    Ticket Prices
    $50.00
    $45.00 (Students)

    Tickets can be purchased in advance through the online box office or by mail order.
    You are now able to use your credit card now online at Tickets.TribecaPAC.org.
    The theater is located at 199 Chambers St.,
    but you must enter through the West Street entrance.
  • Martin Speake is one of the most interesting and rewarding alto saxophonists now playing jazz on any continent.'" Thomas Conrad - Jazz Times Composer, musician, bandleader, educator and record label founder - Alto saxophonist Martin Speake brings his project "In all Languages - The music of Ornette Coleman, the rebellious founding father of free jazz to The Jazz Sanctuary with Alyson Cawley - tenor saxophone, Calum Gourlay - Double Bass and Jeff Williams - drums Tjoe is a London-based, much in demand musician from Hong Kong who can always surprise the crowd with his engaging tunes, powerful soloing and unique improvisation. Over a decade, the Musicians Institute alumnus has made progress from an accomplished guitarist and arranger to a creative music project leader. As well as leading his own band Tjoe is guitarist with Cheris, Pyjaen and Orii Jam. URLs: Instagram: https://go.evvnt.com/1126475-2?pid=4480 Website: https://go.evvnt.com/1126475-3?pid=4480 Website: https://go.evvnt.com/1126475-4?pid=4480 Twitter: https://go.evvnt.com/1126475-5?pid=4480 YouTube: https://go.evvnt.com/1126475-6?pid=4480 YouTube: https://go.evvnt.com/1126475-7?pid=4480 Artists: martin speake, Allyson Crawley, Jeff Williams, Calum Gourlay, Tjoe, basile petite, rishi pelham, marco marotta Category: Live Music | Gig
  • Phil Young gathers the Harlem Hip for the Phil Young Experience sponsored by Keyed Up. Food, drink, and jazz weekly at Patrick's Place. Doors open at 6pm, 1st set begins at 7pm. No cover required however a minimum spend of $20 per guest is required. A cozy atmosphere make this an experience that you will want to repeat. Register at https://www.patricksplaceharlem.com/events
  • Matt Slocum has played with a who's who of talent including Jimmy Herring Band, Oteil and the Peacemakers, Susan Tedeschi, Wanyne Krantz, Page Mcconnell and so many more! We are so very fortunate to have him as our guest, don't miss this chance to see a once in a generation talent live in Midtown Atlanta! URL: Facebook: https://go.evvnt.com/1127217-0?pid=4480 Category: Arts | Performing Arts | Music

  • Eugene Uman’s Convergence Project

    Saturday, 5/21/22 , 8 pm


    The VJC’s artistic director, Eugene Uman (piano,composition) presents the culmination of a year’s worth of composing and collaborating.

    Listeners can expect a “convergence” of the music he loves, including references to Colombian rhythms, swinging jazz and funk.

    This year features Michael Zsoldos (saxophone), Jeff Galindo (trombone), & the group’s original rhythm section: Stomu Takeishi (bass) and Satoshi Takeishi (drums).


    This year each concert has an in-person audience & a livestream component. You may purchase in-person tickets above &/or donate to the livestream. Please give generously and support live music.

    Tickets are $20-40 sliding scale.

    Your contribution goes directly to sustaining the Vermont Jazz Center’s mission of providing access to top quality jazz music to all, & fair employment to jazz musicians.

    https://vtjazz.org/2021-safety-protocols-for-in-person-activities/

    Sponsors - McKenzie Family Charitable Trust, Vermont Arts Council, Vermont Humanities Council, New England Foundation of the Arts.

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

    (802)254 9088
    gingervjc@gmail.com
    www.vtjazz.org
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