Sei sulla pagina 1di 24

Thursday Evening, May 1, 2014, at 7:00

Wynton Marsalis, Managing and Artistic Director


Greg Scholl, Executive Director

THE JAZZ AT LINCOLN CENTER ORCHESTRA


WITH WYNTON MARSALIS
AND HOST BILLY CRYSTAL

Love, Loss and Laughter: The Story of Jazz


JOEY ALEXANDER, Piano
JONATHAN BATISTE, Piano
BILL COSBY
AARON DIEHL, Piano
JON FADDIS, Trumpet
DOMINICK FARINACCI, Trumpet
NORM LEWIS, Vocals
TAJ MAHAL, Guitar, Vocals
PEDRITO MARTINEZ, Percussion
MARK OCONNOR, Violin and Leader of Mark OConnors Hot Swing
SHANNON POWELL, Snare Drum and Leader of Fairview Baptist Church Brass Band
DIANNE REEVES, Vocals
MARCUS ROBERTS, Piano
CCILE MCLORIN SALVANT, Vocals
DARRYL ADAMS, Saxophone
BOBBY ALLENDE, Percussion
TERRENCE ANDREWS, Bass Drum
JAMES CHIRILLO, Guitar
RICKY GORDON, Grand Marshall
DAVID HARRIS, Trombone
JEFFREY HILLS, Tuba
JULIAN LAGE, Guitar
KEVIN LOUIS, Trumpet
FRANK VIGNOLA, Guitar
MARC BRUNI, Director
Dance numbers choreographed by RYAN FRANCOIS
Dancers: HANNAH FLYNN, RYAN FRANCOIS, CRAIG FUCHS, KRISTAN JACKSON,
BRIAN T. LAWTON, SAMANTHA L. SIEGEL, ELYSE SPARKES, LANA WILLIAMS
There will be no intermission during this performance.
Please turn off your cell phones and other electronic devices.
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 Centers


Rose Theater
Frederick P. Rose Hall
jalc.org

Please make certain your cellular phone,


pager, or watch alarm is switched off.

Jazz at Lincoln Center


Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra
WYNTON MARSALIS, Music Director, Trumpet
RYAN KISOR, Trumpet
KENNY RAMPTON, Trumpet
MARCUS PRINTUP, Trumpet
CHRIS CRENSHAW, Trombone
ELLIOT MASON, Trombone
VINCENT GARDNER, Trombone
SHERMAN IRBY, Alto Saxophone
TED NASH, Alto Saxophone
VICTOR GOINES, Tenor Saxophone
WALTER BLANDING, Tenor Saxophone
JOE TEMPERLEY, Baritone Saxophone
DAN NIMMER, Piano
CARLOS HENRIQUEZ, Bass
ALI JACKSON, Drums

The Program
Love, Loss and Laughter: The Story of Jazz
The Jazz at Lincoln Center 2014 Gala
May 1, 2014
Hosted by Billy Crystal
Music Selections
Down By the Riverside/
When the Saints Go Marching In ....................Fairview Baptist Church Brass Band
Traditional

Nobody Knows You When Youre Down and Out ...................................Taj Mahal
By Jimmie Cox

King Porter Stomp............................................................................Marcus Roberts


By Jelly Roll Morton

The Charleston ............................Dancers, Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra (JLCO)


By James P. Johnson
Paul Whiteman Orchestra Arrangement, Re-orchestrated by Chris Crenshaw

A-Tisket, A-Tasket ..................................Ccile McLorin Salvant, Aaron Diehl, JLCO


By Ella Fitzgerald and Van Alexander
Arranged by Klauss Lessman

Mystery Pacific...............................................................Mark OConnors Hot Swing


By Django Reinhardt

Jazz at Lincoln Center


Blues in the Night........................................Norm Lewis, Dominick Farinacci, JLCO
By Harold Arlen & Johnny Mercer
Arrangement by Sherman Irby

Jumpin at the Woodside..........................................Dancers, James Chirillo, JLCO


By William Count Basie

Things to Come ..............................................Jon Faddis & Wynton Marsalis, JLCO


By Dizzy Gillespie
Arrangement by Gil Fuller

After Hours...............................................................................Dianne Reeves, JLCO


By Rozzo Gordon
Arrangement by Michael Abene

A Gozar Timbero..........................................Pedrito Martinez, Bobby Allende, JLCO


By Osvaldo Estivill & Israel Cachao Lopez
Arrangement by Carlos Henriquez

Round Midnight ................................................................................Joey Alexander


By Thelonious Monk

Moanin...............................................................................................................JLCO
By Charles Mingus
Arrangement by Sy Johnson

Welcome to the House of Swing ........................................Jonathan Batiste, JLCO

Jazz at Lincoln Center

Notes on the Program


by Ted Panken
If asked, Jazz at Lincoln Centers Managing
and Artistic Director, Wynton Marsalis, will
cherrypick some particularly memorable
moments from the 26 gala concerts that
Jazz at Lincoln Center has staged since
1996, when it officially joined Lincoln
Center. Weve had a lot of good ones,
recalls Marsalis. He mentions a 1996
appearance by the late piano giant Oscar
Peterson; grand diva Diana Rosss contribution to Heres to the Ladies: A
Celebration of Great Women in Jazz ; Ray
Charles, Eric Clapton, B.B. King, and Willie
Nelson convening to raise the roof of
Harlems Apollo Theater on Blowin the
Blues Away. He also cites more recent iterations, at which the Jazz at Lincoln Center
Orchestra explored the connections
between jazz and contemporary American
popular and vernacular song with iconic
practitioners Nelson, Clapton, Paul Simon,
and Crosby, Stills & Nash.
Still, Marsalis prefers to focus less on the
musical particulars than the selflessness
displayed by all of Jazz at Lincoln Centers
featured guests in contributing to its mission. They are truly giving, because were
not paying them, he says emphatically.
The amount of effort and energy that the
musicians have put into it is unbelievable.
Its uplifting. Thats what Im always left
withhow hard these artists work, their
respect for our art form and our institution.
Believe me, its a lot to go through to do
something for free.
They identify with jazz, and they like to
play with the band. The great jazz musicians mean something to them, and they
know were trying to embody them. We
ask a lot of musicians, and a lot of people
wont do it. Were very grateful that these
musicians were willing to make that kind of
sacrifice for us.

On this evening, Jazz at Lincoln Center


departs from past practice with a presentation worthy of its scope. This gala is about
who we are and what we do, Marsalis
says. We are a jazz institution, bringing
people together through swing, and this is
a chance to celebrate the history of jazz
musicour musicin all its glory, all its
emotional colors. Hence the titleLove,
Loss and Laughter.
Providing the latter attribute in abundance,
as he remarks upon the proceedings, will
be renowned emcee Billy Crystal, himself
descended from a prominent jazz family and
a master improviser of the spoken word, as is
Bill Cosby, who came of age in Philadelphias
thriving jazz culture of the 1950s. The cast
of characters incorporates world-class artists
from five generations, all of whom
embrace and embody Marsalis dictum,
all jazz is modern. They include the
members of the incomparable Jazz at Lincoln
Center Orchestra, and also the Fairview
Baptist Church Brass Band from New
Orleans, which was directed by the iconic
banjoist-raconteur Danny Barker when
Marsalis, then eight, joined it in 1969. Marcus
Roberts, Taj Mahal, Dianne Reeves, Norm
Lewis, Mark OConnor, Pedrito Martinez, and
Jon Faddis, all established stars in diverse
stylistic arenas, will showcase their skills,
as will best-and-brightest twenty-somethings
Jonathan Batiste, Aaron Diehl, Dominick
Farinacci, and Ccile McLorin Salvant, each
of whom has grown and blossomed under
JALCs watchful mentorship.
It goes without saying that without you,
the audience, whose generous contributions ensure Jazz at Lincoln Centers continued existence, it would be impossible
to stage the show. Your donation will
finance future concerts. It will buttress
JALCs investment in young people
through unparalleled jazz education activities and advocacy programs. It will
enhance JALCs ability to spread the word
via state-of-the-art webcasts and live

Jazz at Lincoln Center


Essentially Ellington high school jazz program. Jazz at Lincoln Center featured
1,500 artists and presented 1,100 concerts
across its three venues, drawing approximately 166,000 visitors to Frederick P.
Rose Hall, while 215,941 people around
the world participated in JALCs live, free
concert webcasts.

streaming. Last, though far from least,


your support will sustain the general operating costs of everything that this singular
organization does.
Consider the magnitude of Jazz at Lincoln
Centers impact during the last year on
both a local and global scale. It served 724
children through its WeBop early childhood
education program, while 2,700 schools
participated in Jazz at Lincoln Centers

Wynton Marsalis
Wynton Marsalis (Music Director, Trumpet)
is the managing and artistic director of Jazz
at Lincoln Center and a world-renowned
trumpeter and composer. Born in New
Orleans, Louisiana in 1961, Marsalis began
his classical training on trumpet at age 12,
entered The Juilliard School at age 17, and
then joined Art Blakey and the Jazz
Messengers. He made his recording debut
as a leader in 1982, and has since recorded
more than 60 jazz and classical recordings,
which have won him nine GRAMMY
Awards. In 1983 he became the first and
only artist to win both classical and jazz
GRAMMYs in the same year and repeated
this feat in 1984. Marsalis is also an internationally respected teacher and spokesman
for music education, and has received honorary doctorates from dozens of U.S. universities and colleges. He has written six
books; his most recent are Squeak,
Rumble, Whomp! Whomp! Whomp!, illustrated by Paul Rogers and published by
Candlewick Press in 2012, and Moving to
Higher Ground: How Jazz Can Change Your
Life with Geoffrey C. Ward, published by
Random House in 2008. In 1997 Marsalis

became the first jazz artist to be awarded


the prestigious Pulitzer Prize in music for
his oratorio Blood on the Fields, which was
commissioned by Jazz at Lincoln Center. In
2001 he was appointed Messenger of
Peace by Mr. Kofi Annan, SecretaryGeneral of the United Nations, and he has
also been designated cultural ambassador
to the United States of America by the
U.S. State Department through their
CultureConnect program. Marsalis was
instrumental in the Higher Ground
Hurricane Relief concert, produced by Jazz
at Lincoln Center. The event raised more
than $3 million for the Higher Ground Relief
Fund to benefit the musicians, music
industry-related enterprises, and other individuals and entities from the areas in
Greater New Orleans who were impacted
by Hurricane Katrina. Marsalis helped lead
the effort to construct Jazz at Lincoln
Centers homeFrederick P. Rose Hall
the first education, performance, and
broadcast facility devoted to jazz, which
opened in October 2004.

NIGEL PARRY

FRANK STEWART

Meet the Artists

So eat, drink, be merry, and allow Jazz at


Lincoln Center to leave you feelin good.

Billy Crystal

Tony and Emmy Awardwinning comedian,


actor, producer, writer, and director Billy
Crystal (Host ) is known to audiences
around the world as the star of such fea-

Jazz at Lincoln Center


ture films as When Harry Met Sally, City
Slickers, and Analyze This; as a cast
member of NBCs Saturday Night Live; and
as the acclaimed nine-time host of the
Academy Awards. Crystal landed his first
major television role in 1977 on the
comedy series Soap, playing Jodie Dallas,
one of the first openly gay characters on
TV. In 1984 he hosted Saturday Night Live
and a few months later joined the regular
cast. His best-known SNL creation was
Fernando, an unctuous talk-show host
whose tagline, You look mahvelous!
entered the popular lexicon.
Crystals many feature-film credits include
the buddy cop comedy Running Scared
(1986), Rob Reiners comic fairy tale The
Princess Bride (1987), and Danny DeVitos
dark comedy Throw Momma from the
Train (1987). But his breakthrough role
came in 1989 when he starred opposite
Meg Ryan in Reiners When Harry Met
Sally, which became a romantic touchstone for a generation of moviegoers.
He is the voice of one eyed Mike Wazowski,
in DisneyPixars animated global blockbusters Monsters Inc. and Monsters
University. As a director, Crystal was nominated for both an Emmy and a Directors
Guild Award for his direction of the 2001
HBO movie 61*, which told the dramatic
story of the 1961 race between Mickey
Mantle and Roger Maris to break Babe
Ruths single-season home-run record.
Most recently, Crystal was seen on the big
screen opposite Bette Midler and Marisa
Tomei in the Christmas 2012 family comedy
Parental Guidance, which he also produced.
In addition to hosting the Oscars nine
timesmost recently in 2012Crystal has
also hosted the GRAMMY Awards three
times. His work as a host, writer, and producer on the televised awards shows has
earned him 14 Emmy nominations and five
wins. Crystal won a sixth Emmy for his
1989 comedy special, Billy Crystal:
Midnight Train to Moscow.

The recipient of the 2007 Mark Twain Prize


for American Humor, Crystal has written
five books, including Absolutely Mahvelous
(1986), 700 Sundays (2005), and two childrens books, I Already Know I Love You
(2004) and Grandpas Little One (2006). In
his most recent book, a memoir titled Still
Foolin Em: Where Ive Been, Where Im
Going, and Where the Hell Are My Keys?
Crystal offers his heartfelt and humorous
observations on aging. The book, which
was released in September 2013, became
an instant New York Times Bestseller. The
audiobook version debuted at No. 1 on
iTunes and was nominated for a GRAMMY
Award for the Best Spoken Word Album.
Crystal made his Broadway debut in 2004
with the original production of his one-man
show 700 Sundays, for which he won a
Tony Award. Most recently, the Broadway
production was taped in front of a live audience for an HBO special that aired in April.
He lives in Los Angeles and New York with
Janice, his wife of 43 years.

Marc Bruni
Marc Bruni (Director ) is the director of
Beautiful: The Carole King Musical on
Broadway and recently directed a new production of The Sound of Music for the
Chicago Lyric Opera. Off-Broadway credits
include The Explorers Club (MTC) and Old
Jews Telling Jokes (NY and Chicago). Other
directing credits include Pipe Dream
(Encores!), Fanny (Encores!), Ordinary Days
(Roundabout), In the Mood (Berkshire
Theatre Festival), 25th Annual Putnam
County Spelling Bee (Paper Mill/Philadelphia
Theatre Company), Irving Berlins White
Christmas (Paper Mill), Such Good Friends
(NYMF Directing Award), High Spirits (York
Mufti), Glimpses of the Moon (Oak Room),
and six shows for the St. Louis MUNY,
including The Music Man, The Sound of
Music (Kevin Kline nominations), Legally
Blonde, My One and Only, Seven Brides for
Seven Brothers, and Thoroughly Modern
Millie. He has been associated with Walter
Bobbie, Kathleen Marshall, Jerry Mitchell,

Jazz at Lincoln Center


Casey Nicholaw, and Jerry Zaks on numerous
Broadway shows and tours including, most
recently, The Book of Mormon, Nice Work
if You Can Get It, Anything Goes, Legally
Blonde, and The Pajama Game.

Joey Alexander
Born in 2003 on the Island of Bali, Joey
Alexander (Piano ) was introduced to jazz at
an early age, listening to Louis Armstrong
and Harry Connick, Jr. Alexanders musical
talents soon came to the fore when he
started learning the keyboards at age six,
studying classical music, but his tendency
was always to swing. Due to the lack of
jazz education where he lived, he began
playing jazz piano mostly by ear at age
seven. As his parents regularly took him to
jam sessions where senior musicians in
Bali would ask Alexander to join, his musical
intuition and love of playing jazz grew.

The Ellen Degeneres Show. Recently, he


made a successful debut appearance at the
International Java Jazz Festival with his trio
and was recognized by the founder of the
festival. Now, at age ten, he receives the
great honor of performing at Jazz at Lincoln
Center and a chance to learn from his role
model, Wynton Marsalis, and experience
firsthand the best jazz orchestra today. Jazz
has become spiritual to Alexander and he
thanks the Lord for his musical talent, which
he intends to share with the world and use
to get new generations into jazz.

Jonathan Batiste
Jonathan Batiste (Piano) has ignited the
NYC music scene with his unique voice on
piano and dapper sense of style. Batiste
comes from a celebrated lineage of musicians in New Orleans. He has performed in
more than 40 countries and conducted
clinics and master classes worldwide. He
is a Juilliard graduate, Movado Future
Legend award recipient, and Steinway
Performing Artist. Now 27, he is featured
on the HBO series Trem, has successfully
begun to innovate jazz music and arts education, and is a music curator at the
National Jazz Museum in Harlem.

At age eight, the family moved to the city of


Jakarta for Alexander to learn and experience more jazz, a sacrifice that allowed him
to progress. Not long after, he was invited
by UNESCO in Jakarta to play solo piano for
the jazz legend Herbie Hancock. For
Alexander, the experience marked the start
of further explorations in this true American
art. He would point out that everything he
listens to directs his musical development
in some way, including Thelonious Monk,
Bill Evans, Herbie Hancock, and John
Coltrane. He also has a special affinity to
trumpet players such as Clifford Brown,
Lee Morgan, and Wynton Marsalis.

One of Americas most beloved comedians


of all time, Bill Cosby has captivated generations of fans with his comedy routines,
iconic albums, and best-selling books such
as Fatherhood. His comedy transcends
age, gender, and cultural barriers.

By age nine, he had already played in jazz


festivals and other major events overseas. In
June 2013 he brought home the Grand Prix
Award after winning the Master-Jam Festival
contest in Odessa, Ukraine, in which 43 talented jazz professionals from 17 countries
participated. Alexanders story has been
written about by major media across much
of Asia, in the famous Moscow jazz magazine The Good News, and was featured on

Cosby broke televisions racial barrier with


I Spy, becoming the first African American
to co-star on a television series, while winning three consecutive Emmys. He created
and produced the Emmy-winning cartoon
Fat Albert and the Cosby Kids, which
began airing in the 1970s and was made
into a film in 2004. The show, based on
Cosbys childhood in Philadelphia, was
designed to educate and entertain.

Bill Cosby

Jazz at Lincoln Center

The former Navy servicemans illustrious


list of accomplishments includes roles on
the childrens educational show Electric
Company and creating and producing the
Emmy Awardwinning Little Bill, which is
based on his best-selling book series.
Perhaps Cosbys greatest contribution to
American entertainment and culture is The
Cosby Show, about a close-knit, upper
middle class black family. Cosby said his
intent was to portray an American family.
Time magazine called the show an
encouraging sign of maturity in matters of
race. The Cosby Show dominated the
No. 1 spot for years, earning nearly unanimous critical praise. Life magazine
described the program as a gentle, whimsical, warmhearted show whose delicious ordinariness of its pleasures and
tribulations has given millions a fresh,
laughter-splashed perspective on their own
domestic lives.
Cosbys first television special in 30 years,
Far From Finished, premiered on Comedy
Central last fall. As always, Cosby crafts
stories around topics such as marriage and
parenting with his singular point of view
and renowned sense of humor.
In his current best seller, I Didnt Ask to Be
Born, But Im Glad I Was, Cosby talks
about the Bible, being a grandfather, and
his first love in his humorous and insightful
manner. Cosby has received the Kennedy
Center Honors, the Presidential Medal of
Freedom (Americas highest civilian honor),
the Mark Twain Prize for American Humor,
and the Marian Anderson Award.
Cosby has been busy raising a family, too.
He married the former Camille Hanks on
January 25, 1964, while she was still a student at the University of Maryland. They
raised four daughters (Erika, Erinn, Ensa,
and Evin) and one son (Ennis) and now
have three grandchildren. The family
resides in New England.

Aaron Diehl
Columbus, Ohio native Aaron Diehl (Piano)
seeks to stand out in his era as an artist to
exemplify quality, authenticity, and a fluency in the American musical vernacular.
The 2011 Cole Porter Fellow of the
American Pianists Association, Diehl has
been hailed by the New York Times as a
smart young pianist with a fastidious grasp
of jazz traditions. He is committed to
unearthing the treasures of a rich musical
language through collaborative efforts with
artists across generations.
Born in 1985, Diehl grew up in a nurturing
musical environment. His grandfather, pianist/
trombonist Arthur Baskerville, was his first
influence. Diehl began studying classically
at age seven, and discovered his passion for
jazz music while attending Interlochen
Summer Camp. There he met piano
prodigy Eldar Djangirov, who made a lasting
impression on Diehl through his enthusiasm
for Oscar Peterson and Art Tatum.
In 2002 Diehl was a finalist in Jazz at Lincoln
Center's Essentially Ellington competition,
where he was awarded Outstanding
Soloist. The following year, he was invited
to tour with the Wynton Marsalis Septet on
their European tour. A 2007 graduate of the
Juilliard School, he studied with Kenny
Barron, Oxana Yablonskaya, and Eric Reed.
He is a Martin E. Segal Award recipient.
Diehl released his first live album in 2008, a
solo concert recorded at the Caramoor
Festival. In 2010 Live at the Players featured
two of his working triosDavid Wong and
Paul Sikivie on bass, along with Quincy
Davis and Lawrence Leathers on drums. His
latest release, The Bespoke Man's
Narrative, (Mack Avenue) is the current
product of Diehl's ensemble cultivation,
influenced partly by John Lewis and the
Modern Jazz Quartet. He is the 2013 Jazz
Journalist Association's Up-And-Coming
Musician of the Year Award recipient.

Jazz at Lincoln Center

Jon Faddis
Jon Faddis (Trumpet ) is a consummate
musician, conductor, composer, and educator. Marked by both intense integrity and
humor, Faddis earned accolades from his
close friend and mentor John Birks Dizzy
Gillespie, who declared of Faddis, Hes
the best ever, including me! As a trumpeter, Faddis possesses a virtually unparalleled range and full command of his
instrument, making the practically impossible seem effortless. Born in 1953, Faddis
began playing at age seven, inspired by an
appearance by Louis Armstrong on television. Meeting Dizzy Gillespie at 15 proved
to be a pivotal beginning of a unique friendship that spanned almost three decades.
Shortly before his 18th birthday, Faddis
joined Lionel Hamptons band, moving
from Oakland, California to New York.
Faddis worked as lead trumpet for the
Thad Jones/Mel Lewis Orchestra, formed
his own quartet, and soon began directing
orchestras, including the GRAMMY
Awardwinning United Nation Orchestra,
the Dizzy Gillespie 70th Birthday Big Band,
the Dizzy Gillespie Alumni All-Stars, the
Carnegie Hall Centennial Big Band, and the
Chicago Jazz Ensemble. He has also
served as guest conductor and featured
guest with the Jazz at Lincoln Center
Orchestra. Faddis distinctive trumpet
appears on hundreds of records and
numerous soundtracks for film and television. His recordings as a leader include the
GRAMMY-nominated Remembrances
(Chesky 1998), Hornucopia (Epic 1991),
Into the Faddisphere (Epic 1989), and
Teranga (Koch 2006). Faddis remains true
to the tradition of honoring mentors, regularly leading master classes, and clinics
worldwide. He is a full-time faculty
member at the Conservatory of Music at
SUNYPurchase College, where he is
artist-in-residence, professor, and director
of the jazz performance program.

Dominick Farinacci
Recently featured on ABCs Good Morning
America and at the Amy Winehouse

Inspiration Awards, Dominick Farinacci


(Trumpet ) has garnered critical acclaim
around the globe. Upon the release of his
U.S. debut CD, Lovers, Tales and Dances,
the great Quincy Jones stopped by Los
Angeles club Vibrato to check out the now
30-year-old trumpeter. Farinacci had
recorded an obscure Q composition, The
Theme from the Pawnbroker. Jones
classic response: This kid is 360
degrees!a reference to the cosmopolitan, culturally expansive range of
American and world music influences
Farinacci brings to his music. Farinacci has
won numerous awards that speak to his
wide-ranging impact and appeal, including
the International New Star Award (along
with Diana Krall and Christian McBride) and
Disney New Star Award. He was also
invited to perform at the O2 in London,
opening for Jamie Cullum and Jeff Beck. In
January 2012 he was featured on NPRs
Jazz Rising Stars. He released six albums
between 2003 and 2007 on Japans Pony
Canyon/M&I Records, and Farinacci blossomed with the full-throttle eclectic
approach he took to Lovers, Tales and
Dances, the first jazz recording produced by
GRAMMY Awardwinning Russ Titelman
(formerly with Eric Clapton, Steve
Winwood, and James Taylor). Farinacci was
invited by Wynton Marsalis to headline the
newly established Jazz at Lincoln Center
Doha in Doha, Qatar, and he has since been
invited to return for a one-month residency.
He is the creator and artistic director for the
Tommy Lipuma Creative Center for the Arts,
a youth outreach program in his hometown
of Cleveland. Farinacci also serves as an
artistic consultant to the newly established
Amy Winehouse Foundation. Farinacci
recently performed at Jazz at Lincoln
Centers annual Ring In The Swing: A New
Years Eve Dance Party in The Appel Room.

Norm Lewis
Norm Lewis (Vocals ) was last seen as
Senator Edison Davis on the hit ABC drama
Scandal. He recently received Tony, Drama
Desk, Drama League, and Outer Critics

Jazz at Lincoln Center


Circle Award nominations for his performance as Porgy in the Broadway production
of The Gershwins Porgy & Bess. His many
Broadway credits include Sondheim on
Sondheim, The Little Mermaid, Les
Misrables (Drama League nomination),
Chicago, Amour, The Wild Party, Side
Show, Miss Saigon, and The Whos Tommy.
He was seen in the West End/London in Les
Misrables,
Les
Misrables
25th
Anniversary Concert (Londons O2 Arena,
PBS), and Off-Broadway in The Tempest
(The Public Theater), Ragtime with the New
York Philharmonic, Dessa Rose (Drama
Desk nomination, AUDELCO Award), The
Two Gentlemen of Verona (Drama League
nomination), Captains Courageous, and A
New Brain. He was also featured in the
Stephen Sondheim and Wynton Marsalis
collaboration, A Bed and a Chair: A New
York Love Affair.

Taj Mahal
Taj Mahal (Guitar, Vocals ) is a composer,
multi-instrumentalist, vocalist, and one of
the most prominent and influential figures
in late 20th-century blues and roots music.
Though his career began more than four
decades ago with American blues, he has
broadened his artistic scope over the years
to include music representing virtually
every corner of the worldWest Africa,
the Caribbean, Latin America, Europe, the
Hawaiian islands, and more. What ties it all
together is his insatiable interest in musical
discovery. Over the years, Mahals passion
and curiosity have led him around the
world, and the resulting global perspective
is reflected in his music. Born Henry St.
Claire Fredericks in Harlem on May 17,
1942, Mahal grew up in Springfield,
Massachusetts. His father was a jazz
pianist, composer, and arranger of
Caribbean descent, and his mother was a
gospel-singing schoolteacher from South
Carolina. In addition to piano, the young
musician learned to play the clarinet, trombone, and harmonica, and he loved to sing.
He discovered his stepfathers guitar and

became serious about it in his early teens


when a guitarist from North Carolina
moved in next door and taught him the various styles of Delta and Chicago blues.
Inspired by a dream, he adopted the
musical alias of Taj Mahal and formed the
popular University of Massachusetts party
band, the Elektras. After graduating, he
headed west in 1964 to Los Angeles,
where he formed the Rising Sons, a sixpiece outfit. This diversity of musical experience served as the bedrock for Mahals
first three recordings: Taj Mahal (1967), The
Natchl Blues (1968) and Giant Step (1969).
He returned to a full recording and touring
schedule in the 1990s. In 2000 Mahal
released a second GRAMMY-winning
album, Shoutin in Key, and recorded a
second album with the Hula Blues,
Hanapepe Dream, in 2003. Mahal will
appear in Jazz at Lincoln Centers 201415
season alongside John Scofield in
Celebrating Muddy Waters.

Pedrito Martinez
Pedro Pablo Pedrito Martinez (Percussion)
was born in Havana, Cuba in 1973. He
began his musical career at the age of 11,
performing with such Cuban legends as
Tata Guines and Los Munequitos de
Matanzas. Bandleader Jane Bunnett
brought Martinez to Canada in 1998, and he
remained in North America to pursue his
career. Two years later, he won first place in
the Thelonious Monk Institute Competition
for Afro-Latin Hand Drumming.
A consummate master of Afro-Cuban folkloric music, he does not just play the obligatory handful of standard bat rhythms; he
plays the monumentally complex Oru seco
exquisitely on each drum, or on all three at
once. Martinez is also the worlds first-call
rumberoplaying, singing, and dancing
with dozens of groups, performing on
more than 100 recordings, and contributing
to or appearing in several important films,
including Calle 54 (2000) and Chico and
Rita (2010). Equally at home in popular

Jazz at Lincoln Center


music, his voice combines popular and
folkloric influences, and his infectious
energy, humor, charisma, and dance
moves make him a formidable front man.
Since settling in New York City in 1998,
Martinez has recorded and/or performed
with Paquito DRivera, Wynton Marsalis,
Paul Simon, Eddie Palmieri, Bebo Valds,
Bruce Springsteen, Michelle Rosewoman,
Cassandra Wilson, Brian Lynch, Arturo
OFarrill, Joe Lovano, Issac Delgado, Edie
Brickell, Eliane Elias, Stefon Harris,
Gonzalo Rubalcaba, and Sting.
Mr. Martinez was a founding member of
the highly successful Afro-Cuban/Afro-Beat
band Yerba Buena, with which he recorded
two albums and toured the world.
Martinez album Rumba de la Isla, featuring
the music of the flamenco great Camarn
de la Isla, was released in 2013.
The Pedrito Martinez Group came together
in 2005, and regular visitors to their gigs
have included Roger Waters, Eric Clapton,
Derek Trucks, John Scofield, Steve Gadd,
Steve Winwood, and Taj Mahal, to name a
few. The group has appeared at premier
venues and festivals around the world, and
recently performed at Jazz at Lincoln
Centers annual Ring in the Swing: A New
Years Eve Dance Party. Their debut album,
The Pedrito Martinez Group, was released
on October 8, 2013. It was produced by
Steve Gadd and Pedrito Martinez and features special guests Wynton Marsalis,
John Scofield, Steve Gadd, Marc
Quinones, and Gary Schreiner. It was
chosen among NPRs Favorite Albums of
2013, iTunes Top Ten Jazz Albums for
2013, and Boston Globe Critics Top Ten
Albums of 2013.
Martinez has been honored with the
Thelonious Monk Award for Afro-Latin
Hand Percussion in 2000, The Sphinx
Medal of Excellence in 2014, The Jazz
Journalists Association Percussionist of
the Year in 2014, and Modern Drummer

Readers Poll #1 Percussionist of the Year in


2014. Martinez will join Wynton Marsalis,
the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra, and
Chucho Valds in September, 2014 to open
Jazz at Lincoln Centers 201415 season.

Mark OConnor
Mark OConnor (Violin and Leader of Mark
OConnors Hot Swing) is a multiGRAMMY Awardwinning American jazz,
folk, and classical violinist, composer, and
author. His orchestral concertos and symphonies have received more than 500 performances around the country, and his
million-seller Appalachia Waltz is one of
the most loved string pieces since Barbers
Adagio. OConnor is also an eloquent
spokesman for the role of the arts in
society and a keen observer of the evolution of American music. The OConnor
Method - A New American School of String
Playing has joined the Suzuki method as
the most popular method to learn from
around the country, as students respond to
the cultural proximity of the American
musical material featured in the method.
OConnors new CD, An Appalachian
Christmas, has just been released.

Shannon Powell
Shannon Powell (Snare Drum and Leader of
Fairview Baptist Church Brass Band ) is a
highly sought after drummer and percussionist who has achieved international
acclaim for his commanding technique and
style, rooted in the characteristic funky
drum beats of New Orleans. As a youth
growing up in New Orleans storied
Faubourg Trem, home to many of the
citys jazz performers, Powell was surrounded by music. By age six, Powell was
playing drums regularly for his church, the
First Garden Christ Church. It was a natural
transition from the raw spiritualism and
rhythms of his church to the driving
grooves of traditional New Orleans jazz.
Soon after, he began visiting and performing at the historic Preservation Hall
alongside local legends such as Ci Frasier
and Freddie Coleman.

Jazz at Lincoln Center


While in elementary school, Powell met
the legendary Danny Barker, a veteran of
Cab Calloways Orchestra who had
returned home to New Orleans in the mid1960s to teach traditional jazz to neighborhood youth. Barker chose Powell for his
legendary Fairview Baptist Brass Band.
Within a few years, Powell became a regular member of Barkers band and played
professionally with Danny Barker & His
Original Jazz Hounds.
Powell spent his teenage years in the
acclaimed concert band at Joseph S.
Clark High School, from which he graduated. He also studied at the Black
Academy of Arts, headed by pianist
Willie Metcalf Jr. and played in Metcalfs
band along with fellow academy students Wynton Marsalis and Branford
Marsalis. He further honed his skills and
broadened his stylistic palette with bandleader and tenor saxophonist David
Lastie, as well as the Original Taste of
New Orleans.
From 1987 to 1992 Powell toured extensively with Harry Connick, Jr. and released
two platinum albums with Connick,
including We Are in Love and Blue Light
Red Light. He also recorded Loftys Roach
Souffle with Connick. During subsequent
years, Powell has toured with Wynton
Marsalis and the Jazz at Lincoln Center
Orchestra, Marcus Roberts, Diana Krall, Dr.
John, Earl King, the Preservation Hall Jazz
Band, and John Scofield. Powell has also
recorded with a long list of noteworthy
artists, including Ellis Marsalis, Jason
Marsalis, Nicholas Payton, Donald
Harrison, Irvin Mayfield, Leroy Jones, Blind
Boys of Alabama, Topsy Chapman, John
Boutte, Kermit Ruffins, Tommy Ridgely,
Charmaine Neville, Jeremy Davenport,
Chuck Carbo, Johnny Adams, Lars
Edegran, Russell Malone, Juanita Brooks,
Henry Butler, Mighty Sam McClain,

Barbara Shorts, George Porter Jr., Snooks


Eaglin, and the Preservation Hall Jazz Band.
Currently, he is a bandleader and has
recorded his own CD, Powells Place, which
showcases a mix of traditional and original
jazz songs and also features Powell on
vocals. Powell is considered a leading force
on the traditional jazz circuit and also serves
as an educator and clinician. He has been
featured at workshops presented at universities and jazz festivals all over the world.
Considered a living legend in New Orleans
music, Powell is heralded as The King of
Trem, the neighborhood where he grew
up in New Orleans, which has given birth to
countless musical inspirations and innovations. He will be leading the Fairview Baptist
Church Brass Band at Dizzys Club CocaCola this weekend, from May 24.

Dianne Reeves
Dianne Reeves (Vocals ) is one of the preeminent jazz vocalists in the world. As a
result of her breathtaking virtuosity, improvisational prowess, and unique jazz and R&B
stylings, Reeves received the GRAMMY
Award for Best Jazz Vocal Performance
for three consecutive recordingsa
GRAMMY first in any vocal category.
Reeves was featured in George Clooneys
six-time Academy Awardnominated Good
Night, and Good Luck, which chronicles
Edward R. Murrows ongoing confrontations with Senator Joseph McCarthy. The
soundtrack recording of the film provided
Reeves with her fourth Best Jazz Vocal
GRAMMY Award.
She has recorded and performed extensively with the Jazz at Lincoln Center
Orchestra with Wynton Marsalis, who said
of Reeves, She has one of the most powerful, purposeful, and accurate voices of
this or any time. Reeves has also
recorded with the Chicago Symphony
Orchestra conducted by Daniel Barenboim

Jazz at Lincoln Center


and was a featured soloist with Sir Simon
Rattle and the Berlin Philharmonic. In addition, she was the first Creative Chair for
Jazz for the Los Angeles Philharmonic and
the first singer to ever perform at the
famed Walt Disney Concert Hall.
In recent years Reeves has toured the world
in a variety of contexts, including a program
entitled Sing the Truth, a musical celebration of Nina Simone which also featured Lizz
Wright and Angelique Kidjo. She also performed at the White House at the State
Dinner for the President of China as well as
the Governors Balland was hard at work
on her album Beautiful Life, released this
past February.
Beautiful Life is Reeves' first album in five
years, and it features her arsenal of talents
on a compelling collection of covers and
originals. Produced by Terri Lyne
Carrington, Beautiful Life also features
Richard Bona, Gerald Clayton, George
Duke, Robert Glasper, Lalah Hathaway,
Gregory Porter, and Esperanza Spalding.

Marcus Roberts
Marcus Roberts (Piano) is from Jacksonville,
Florida. He has always been influenced by
the early exposure to his mothers gospel
singing and the music of the local church.
Roberts lost his sight at age five. His parents
bought him a piano when he was eight
years old, and he was self-taught for four
years. He decided that he wanted to be a
jazz pianist after listening to the music of
Duke Ellington, Benny Goodman, Mary Lou
Williams, and others on the radio. After
graduating from high school, he left
Jacksonville to attend Florida State
University, where he studied classical piano
with Leonidus Lipovetsky. While at FSU,
Roberts won the young artists competition
at the 1982 National Association of Jazz
Educators annual conference. The next year
he won the Great American Jazz Piano
Competition, followed by first prize at the
Thelonious Monk International Jazz

Competition in 1987. He was honored to


receive a National Academy of Achievement
award in 1995 and, in 1998, he received the
award that he considers his highest honor,
the Helen Keller Award for Personal
Achievement. At age 21, Roberts joined
Wynton Marsalis band and toured and
recorded with the trumpeter for six years.
Roberts signed his first recording contract
with BMG/Novus in 1988 and completed six
recordings for them before signing with
Columbia Records early in 1994. Several
recordings have reached the No. 1 spot on
Billboards traditional jazz chart. He has
written numerous suites of music, as well
as a very large number of original songs and
arrangements, all of which are important
contributions to jazz. As an assistant professor at the school of music at Florida State
University, where he still teaches when he
is not on tour, Roberts became more
involved in the formal instruction of young
musicians and composers. In 2009 he
released New Orleans Meets Harlem, Vol.
1, and in 2011, he released Celebrating
Christmas, both on J-Master Records.
Roberts will be performing Piano Masters of
Melody in JALCs 201415 season.

Ccile McLorin Salvant


Ccile McLorin Salvant (Vocals ) was born
and raised in Miami, Florida, of a French
mother and a Haitian father. She started
classical piano studies at age five, and
began singing in the Miami Choral Society
at age eight. Early on, she developed an
interest in classical voice, began studying
with private instructors, and later with
Edward Walker, vocal teacher at the
University of Miami.
In 2007 Salvant moved to Aix-en-Provence,
France, to study law as well as classical and
baroque voice at the Darius Milhaud
Conservatory. It was in Aix-en-Provence, with
reedist and teacher Jean-Franois Bonnel,
that she started learning about improvisation,
instrumental, and vocal repertoire ranging
from the 1910s on, and sang with her first

Jazz at Lincoln Center


band. In 2009, after a series of concerts in
Paris, she recorded her first album Ccile,
with Jean-Franois Bonnels Paris Quintet. A
year later, she won the Thelonious Monk
competition in Washington, D.C.
Salvant performs unique interpretations of
unknown and scarcely recorded jazz and
blues compositions. She focuses on a theatrical portrayal of the jazz standard and
composes music and lyrics, which she also
sings in French, her native language, as
well as in Spanish. She enjoys popularity in
Europe and in the United States, performing in clubs, concert halls, and festivals accompanied by renowned musicians
like Jean-Francois Bonnel, Rodney
Whitaker, Aaron Diehl, Dan Nimmer, Sadao
Watanabe, Jacky Terrasson (with a noted
collaboration on his Gouache Universal
CD), Archie Shepp, and Jonathan Batiste.
For the second consecutive year, she sings
for Chanels Chance ad campaign. She
recently released WomanChild, featuring
Aaron Diehl, Rodney Whitaker, Herlin Riley,
and James Chirillo.
Salvant has performed at numerous festivals such as Jazz Vienne, Ascona,
Whitley Bay, Montauban, Foix, with the
Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra with
Wynton Marsalis in Jazz at Lincoln
Centers Frederick P. Rose Hall and
Chicagos Symphony Center, and with her
own band at the Kennedy Center, Spoleto
Jazz Festival, Detroit Jazz Festival, and
other venues. Salvant will be featured in
Big Band Holidays and Ccile McLorin
Salvant Sings Billie Holiday during JALCs
201415 season.

Syncopated City Dance Company


Syncopated City Dance Company (formerly
known as SwingFX) is a dynamic, New York
City-based company, taking inspiration from
the popular jazz dances of the 1920s1950s.
Their work uniquely features both solo
movement and social, partnered-dance elements, in traditional form or recombined

into classical structures, and dramatic


scenes. The company roster includes some
of the greatest Lindy Hop dancers in the
world today, as well as classically trained
dancers and specialists in other vernacular
styles. They continue to make new work,
expressing their range, from acrobatic Lindy
Hop to saucy blues, and loose, earthy folkjazz to Fosse-styled precision.
Under their former name SwingFX,
Syncopated Citys work has been featured
at venues such as Jacobs Pillow, The
Kennedy Center, Ulster Performing Arts
Center, and Jazz at Lincoln Center.

Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra


The Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra,
comprising 15 of the finest jazz soloists
and ensemble players today, has been the
Jazz at Lincoln Center resident orchestra
since 1988. Featured in all aspects of Jazz
at Lincoln Centers programming, this
remarkably versatile orchestra performs
and leads educational events in New York,
across the U.S. and around the globe; in
concert halls; dance venues; jazz clubs;
public parks; and with symphony orchestras; ballet troupes; local students; and an
ever-expanding roster of guest artists.
Education is a major part of Jazz at Lincoln
Centers mission; its educational activities
are coordinated with concert and Jazz at
Lincoln Center Orchestra tour programming. These programs, many of which feature Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra
members, include the celebrated Jazz for
Young People family concert series; the
Essentially Ellington High School Jazz Band
Competition & Festival; the Jazz for Young
PeopleTM Curriculum; educational residencies; workshops; and concerts for students
and adults worldwide. Jazz at Lincoln
Center educational programs reach over
110,000 students, teachers and general
audience members each year. The Jazz at
Lincoln Center weekly radio series, Jazz at
Lincoln Center Radio, is distributed by the
WFMT Radio Networks. Winner of a 1997

Jazz at Lincoln Center


Peabody Award, Jazz at Lincoln Center
Radio is produced in conjunction with
Murray Street Enterprise, New York. Under
Music Director Wynton Marsalis, the Jazz
at Lincoln Center Orchestra spends over a
third of the year on tour. The big band performs a vast repertoire, from rare historic
compositions to Jazz at Lincoln Centercommissioned works, including compositions and arrangements by Duke Ellington;
Count Basie; Fletcher Henderson;
Thelonious Monk; Mary Lou Williams; Billy
Strayhorn;
Dizzy
Gillespie;
Benny
Goodman; Charles Mingus; Chick Corea;
Oliver Nelson; and many others. Guest
conductors have included Benny Carter;
John Lewis; Jimmy Heath; Chico OFarrill;
Ray Santos; Paquito DRivera; Jon Faddis;
Robert Sadin; David Berger; Gerald Wilson;
and Loren Schoenberg.
Jazz at Lincoln Center also regularly premieres works commissioned from a variety
of composers including Benny Carter; Joe
Henderson; Benny Golson; Jimmy Heath;
Wayne Shorter; Sam Rivers; Joe Lovano;
Chico OFarrill; Freddie Hubbard; Charles
McPherson; Marcus Roberts; Geri Allen;
Eric Reed; Wallace Roney; and Christian
McBride, as well as from current and
former Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra
members Wynton Marsalis, Wycliffe
Gordon, and Ted Nash.
Over the last few years, the Jazz at Lincoln
Center Orchestra has performed collaborations with many of the worlds leading symphony orchestras, including the New York
Philharmonic; the Russian National Orchestra;
the Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra; the
Boston, Chicago and London Symphony
Orchestras; the Orchestra Esperimentale in
So Paolo, Brazil; and others. In 2006, the
Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra collaborated with Ghanaian drum collective
Odadaa!, led by Yacub Addy, to perform
Congo Square, a composition Mr.
Marsalis and Mr. Addy co-wrote and dedi-

cated to Mr. Marsalis native New Orleans.


The Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra
performed Marsalis symphony, Swing
Symphony, with the Berliner Philharmoniker
in Berlin and with the New York
Philharmonic in New York City in 2010 and
with the Los Angeles Philharmonic in Los
Angeles in 2011. Swing Symphony is a cocommission by the New York Philharmonic,
Berlin Philharmonic, Los Angeles
Philharmonic, and The Barbican Centre.
The Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra has
also been featured in several education and
performance residencies in the last few
years, including those in Vienne, France;
Perugia, Italy; Prague, Czech Republic;
London, England; Lucerne, Switzerland;
Berlin, Germany; So Paulo, Brazil;
Yokohama, Japan; and others.
Television broadcasts of Jazz at Lincoln
Center programs have helped broaden the
awareness of its unique efforts in the
music. Concerts by the Jazz at Lincoln
Center Orchestra have aired in the U.S.;
England; France; Spain; Germany; the
Czech Republic; Portugal; Norway; Brazil;
Argentina; Australia; China; Japan; Korea;
and the Philippines. Jazz at Lincoln Center
has appeared on several XM Satellite Radio
live broadcasts and eight Live From Lincoln
Center broadcasts carried by PBS stations
nationwide; including a program which
aired on October 18, 2004 during the grand
opening of Jazz at Lincoln Centers new
home, Frederick P. Rose Hall, and on
September 17, 2005 during Jazz at Lincoln
Centers Higher Ground Benefit Concert.
Jazz at Lincoln Centers Higher Ground
Benefit Concert raised funds for the Higher
Ground Relief Fund that was established
by Jazz at Lincoln Center, and was administered through the Baton Rouge Area
Foundation to benefit the musicians, music
industry-related enterprises, and other individuals and entities from the areas in
Greater New Orleans who were impacted
by Hurricane Katrina, and to provide other

Jazz at Lincoln Center

general hurricane relief. The band is also


featured on the Higher Ground Benefit
Concert CD that was released on Blue
Note Records following the concert. The
Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra was featured in a Thirteen/WNET production of
Great Performances entitled Swingin
with Duke: Lincoln Center Jazz Orchestra
with Wynton Marsalis, which aired on
PBS in 1999. In September 2002, BET Jazz
premiered a weekly series called Journey
with Jazz at Lincoln Center, featuring performances by the Jazz at Lincoln Center
Orchestra from around the world.
To date, 14 recordings featuring the Jazz at
Lincoln Center Orchestra with Wynton
Marsalis have been released and internationally distributed: Vitoria Suite (2010); Portrait in
Seven Shades (2010); Congo Square (2007);
Dont Be AfraidThe Music of Charles
Mingus (2005); A Love Supreme (2005); All
Rise (2002); Big Train (1999); Sweet
Release & Ghost Story (1999); Live in Swing
City (1999); Jump Start and Jazz (1997);
Blood on the Fields (1997); They Came to
Swing (1994); The Fire of the Fundamentals
(1993); and Portraits by Ellington (1992).

Jazz at Lincoln Center


Jazz at Lincoln Center is dedicated to
inspiring and growing audiences for jazz.
With the world-renowned Jazz at Lincoln
Center Orchestra and a comprehensive array
of guest artists, Jazz at Lincoln Center
advances a unique vision for the continued
development of the art of jazz by producing a
year-round schedule of performance, education, and broadcast events for audiences of
all ages. These productions include concerts,
national and international tours, residencies,
weekly national radio programs, television
broadcasts,
recordings,
publications,
an annual high school jazz band competition and festival, a band director academy,
jazz appreciation curriculum for students,
music publishing, childrens concerts and
classes, lectures, adult education courses,
student and educator workshops, and interactive websites. Under the leadership of
Managing and Artistic Director Wynton
Marsalis, Chairman Robert J. Appel, and
Executive Director Greg Scholl, Jazz at
Lincoln Center produces thousands of
events each season in its home in New York
City, Frederick P. Rose Hall, and around the
world. For more information, visit jalc.org.

Dave Brubeck: Jazz Ambassador


Part of Jazz at Lincoln Centers Dave Brubeck Festival
On View Now June 2014
Free and open to the public during scheduled performances
As part of Jazz at Lincoln Centers Dave Brubeck Festival, our current exhibit, Dave Brubeck:
Jazz Ambassador, documents the life and work of one of Americas most significant
musicians to emerge after the Swing Era. A pianist, bandleader, and composer, Californiaborn Brubeck (19202012) grew new audiencesparticularly on college campuses
nationwidewith a sophisticated, swinging style. In 1958, a far-ranging U.S. Department of
State tour to countries in Eastern Europe, the Middle East, and Southern Asia gave Brubeck
the opportunity to serve as a cultural ambassador. A socially engaged artist, Brubeck
consistently fought for racial integration and equality at home and abroad. Our exhibit, found
on the fifth floor of Frederick P. Rose Hall, features historical photographs, scores,
ephemeraincluding concert programs and correspondenceand videos. Please stop by,
learn more about one of the legends of jazz, and enjoy!

Jazz at Lincoln Center

TONY ESPARZA/CBS

The Ed Bradley Award For Leadership


The Ed Bradley Award for Leadership celebrates
our friend and board member Ed Bradley, who
served on the Jazz at Lincoln Center board from
1992 until his death in 2007.
The Jazz at Lincoln Center Award for Leadership
was renamed in his honor in 2008 and recognizes
and celebrates the integrity, wisdom, and
pioneering spirit of outstanding leaders in jazz.
The 2014 Recipient is

John Arnhold
Chairman and Chief Investment Officer,
First Eagle Investment Management
Board of Directors, Treasurer Jazz at Lincoln Center
Past recipients of the Ed Bradley Award for Leadership
(formerly known as the Jazz at Lincoln Center Award for Leadership)

2013
Mica Ertegun

2007
Ed Bradley

1999
Irene Diamond

2012
Lisa Schiff

2005
Hughlyn F. Fierce

1998
June Noble Larkin

2011
Dr. Billy Taylor

2003
Phoebe Jacobs

1997
Ahmet Ertegun

2009
Albert Murray

2001
Gordon J. Davis

1996
George Weissman

2008
Ken Burns

2000
Jack and Susan Rudin

Jazz at Lincoln Center

The Ed Bradley Award for


Leadership 2014 Recipient
John Arnhold
Chairman and Chief Investment Officer John P. Arnhold
joined First Eagle Investment Management, a familycontrolled asset management firm, in 1983, founding the Risk
Arbitrage Department. Before joining First Eagle Investment
Management, Mr. Arnhold was a research analyst in the Risk
Arbitrage Department at Lehman Brothers Kuhn Loeb. Prior
to that, he was an officer in the corporate lending and merchant banking groups at Chase
Manhattan Bank. Mr. Arnhold received his B.A. from The University of CaliforniaSanta
Barbara in 1975.
In addition to his directorships at First Eagle Investment Management, and its affiliates,
Mr. Arnhold is a director of Arnhold Ceramics, and the Arnhold and Mulago Foundations.
Mr. Arnhold is also president and trustee of First Eagle Funds, a registered mutual fund
company. He is a member of the Board of Trustees of Trinity Episcopal Schools Corp.,
Vassar College, WNET.org, and The International Tennis Hall of Fame.
Mr. Arnhold resides in New York City with his wife and two children.

The Inaugural
Ashley Schiff Ramos
Community Development in
Jazz Award
Ashley Schiff Ramos
From 200113 Ashley Schiff Ramos was a member of Jazz
at Lincoln Centers Board of Directors. During this period she
produced 11 gala benefit concerts and dinners raising more
than $20 million for the organization. She also organized
numerous other fundraising activities and publicity events. Ashley was born and raised in
New York City. After graduating from Yale University with a bachelor of science degree,
she decided to pursue her interest in public relations and experiential marketing for more
than ten years in New York. Currently, Ramos works as a regional consultant for Christies
for the southeast. She sits on the board of the Palm Beach Zoo and is co-chairman of the
Everglades Foundation Annual Benefit in Palm Beach. Ramos lives with her husband and
two young children in Palm Beach, FL.

Jazz at Lincoln Centers annual artistic, educational, and archival programs are supported
by the following generous contributors:
Shahara Ahmad-Llewellyn
The Ammon Foundation
Helen and Robert J. Appel
Anonymous (2)
Jody and John Arnhold
Siris Capital, LLC /
Robin and Peter Berger
Lisa and Dick Cashin
Columbus Center LLC

LEADERS
Barbara and Raymond Dalio Adam R. Rose and
The Irene Diamond Fund
Peter R. McQuillan
Diana and Joe DiMenna
The Andrew W. Mellon
Ford Foundation
Foundation
Mica Ertegun
Jennifer and Michael Price
The Kresge Foundation
Karen Pritzker/
Ann Tenenbaum and
Seedlings Foundation
Thomas H. Lee
The Rockefeller Foundation
MasterCard

Anonymous
The Argus Fund
Jessica Bibliowicz
Blavatnik Family Foundation
Bloomberg
Brooks Brothers
Valentino D. Carlotti
Goldman, Sachs & Co.
The Coca-Cola Company

GUARANTORS
The Shops at Columbus
Joan and George Hornig
Circle at Time Warner
HSBC Bank
Center
Kari Gronberg and
Gail and Al Engelberg
Little Johnny Koerber
Finneran Family
Wynton Marsalis
Foundation
National Endowment for
Larry Gagosian
the Arts
The Hearst Foundation, Inc New York City Department
Mady Hornig
of Cultural Affairs

New York State Council on


the Arts
The Fan Fox & Leslie R.
Samuels Foundation, Inc.
Lisa and David T. Schiff
SiriusXM
Dianne and David J. Stern
Marlene Hess and
James D. Zirin

The Altman Foundation


Bank of America
Centric
Betsy and Alan D. Cohn
ConEdison
Sharon and Christopher
Davis
Melanie A. Shorin and
Greg S. Feldman

BENEFACTORS
Donna J. Astion and
Charles and Karen Phillips
Michael D. Fricklas
Prudential Financial
Susan and Roger Hertog
Louise and Leonard Riggio
Sonia and Paul T. Jones
Diana and Jonathan F.P. Rose
John S. and James L.
Lisa Roumell and
Knight Foundation
Mark Rosenthal
The Ambrose Monell
Barry F. Schwartz
Foundation
Therese S. Rosenblatt and
Cindy and Charles Murphy
H. Marshall Sonenshine
Gwen and Peter Norton

Starwood Hotels and


Resorts Worldwide
The Harold and Mimi
Steinberg Charitable Trust
Vital Projects Fund, Inc.
Vosshall Family
The Walton Family
Foundation
George T. Wein
World Stage

Anonymous
Donna and William
Acquavella
The Jeffrey Altman
Foundation
Jolynn Schmidt and Scott
Anderson
Augustine Foundation
Patricia Blanchet
CBRE, Inc.
Diane M. Coffey
Peggy Cooper Davis and
Gordon J. Davis/
Venable LLP

SUSTAINERS
Jurate Kazickas
Annette and Oscar
Lear Family Foundation
de la Renta
Arthur Levine Foundation
Jennifer and Viet Dinh/
Lincoln Center Corporate
Bancroft PLLC
Fund
The Ella Fitzgerald
Mericos Foundation
Charitable Foundation
MLGW LLP/Lester
The David Geffen
Weingarten CPA, Partner
Foundation
Daniel Rozzi and Todd
Charles Evans Hughes
Yanuzzi/Morgan Stanley
Memorial Foundation
Adam Silver/National
Hughes Hubbard &
Basketball Association
Reed LLP
Stavros Niarchos Foundation
Caroline and Ed Hyman
Jacqueline L. Bradley and
M. Billie Lim and
Clarence Otis
Stephen M. Ifshin

Amy and David Abrams


Simi Ahuja
Judy and John Angelo
Angelson Family
Foundation
Anonymous (2)
Rose M. Badgeley
Charitable Trust
Leslie and Harrison Bains
Norman Benzaquen
Brook and Roger Berlind
Barbara and Timothy
Boroughs
Broadway Across America
Ambassador and Mrs. W. L.
Lyons Brown

ANGELS
Carolyn Surgent and
Valerie S. Brown
Jacques Friedman
Betty and Philippe Camus
Arlyn and Edward Gardner
Kathryn and Kenneth I.
Jennifer and Gregory Geiling
Chenault
Barbara Langaro and
Emilie Roy Corey and
Darin S. Goldstein
Michael Corey
Ms. Carolyn Katz and
Anthony Corso
Mr. Michael Goldstein
Judith and Jamie Dimon
Elizabeth M. Gordon
Brenda Earl
Susan C. Gordon
Cheryl and Blair Effron
Roberta Campbell and
Empirical Research
Richard N. Gray
Partners, LLC
Irith Federmann-Landeau Robin and Danny
Greenspun
Find to Fund
Amy and John Griffin
Steve and Nicole Frankel

The Jack and Susan Rudin


Educational and
Scholarship Fund
Rebecca and Arthur
Samberg
Burwell and Chip Schorr
Steward Family
Foundation

Peter J. Solomon
Company LLP
Related Companies
Rose-Lee and Keith
Reinhard
Shearman & Sterling LLP
The Schubert Foundation,
Inc.
Fredric E. Steck
Laurie M. Tisch Illumination
Fund
Linda Wachner
World Wide Technology, Inc.
Viacom, Inc.

Christiane and Jean-Claude


Gruffat
Louise and Henry A.
Grunwald
Lisa Meulbroek and
Brent R. Harris
Dina Merrill and Ted Hartley
Julia Perry and Wolf Hengst
Susan and J. Alan Kahn
Sandy and D. Jeffrey
Kallenberg
Craig Kallman
Keiko Matsuyama and
David S. Katz
Julia and David Koch

Sarah Ann and Werner


Kranarsky
Sandra and Eric Krasnoff
M. Robin Krasny
Laurie and Pierre LaPeyre
The Blanche and Irving
Laurie Foundation
Toby Devan Lewis
Robin and Jay L. Lewis
Mr. and Mrs. Robert D.
Lindsay and Family
Fern and Steven Loeb
The Louis Armstrong
Educational Foundation
James Lyle
Virginia Mancini
Susan and Stephen Mandel

Nancy and Peter Meinig


Judith E. Neisser
Alice K. Netter
Bette Kim and
Steven J. Niemczyk
Cynthia and D. Jeffrey
Penney
Ashley and Mike Ramos
Brian J. Ratner
Philanthropic Fund
Aileen and Robert Rendine
Marcus V. Ribeiro
Mrs. Frederick P. Rose
Patricia and Edward John
Rosenwald
Esther and Steve Rotella
Richard Roth

4Wall
Allure
Virginia and Andrew
Adelson
Angelo, Gordon & Co.
Anonymous (14)
American Express
AREA Property Partners
Atlantic Records
Robin and Arthur Aufses
Bank of America
BET Networks
Sol and Margaret Berger
Foundation
Arthur M. Blank Family
Foundation
Henry Bloom
Cynthia R. Boardman
Dr. William and Laurie
Bolthouse
Merilee and Roy Bostock
Rhoda Bressler
Mildred Brinn
Del Bryant/BMI
Noreen and Kenneth
Buckfire
Simona and Jerome Chazen
Pietro Cicognani
Lisa McGoran and
Michael Cohl
Julie and Peter Cummings
Sylvia Botero and
Norman Cuttler
Susan and Mark Dalton
Jennie and Richard
DeScherer
Mary Beth and Stephen S.
Daniel
Deusche Asset and
Wealth Management
Discovery Communications
Ms. Jacqueline Weld Drake
and Rodman Drake
Cheryl and Blair Effron
Peggy and Mark Ellis
Caryl and Isreal Englander
Ebony Magazine
Eminence Capital
ESPN
Anna and James Fantaci
FedEx Corporation
Hughlyn F. Fierce
Rachel and Mark Fisch
Trinae Thompson and
Ronald Freeman

FRIENDS
The MCJ Amelior
Forbes Media LLC
Foundation
Alice and Nathan Gantcher
General Motors Company Sonnet and Ian Mckinnon
Anne W. McNulty
Barbara and Peter
Marlene Meyerson
Georgescu
Georgia and Donald Gogel Scott Miller
Joan Weinberg and
Barbara Goldsmith
Alan Mirken
Great Performances
Wendy Rothman and
Myrna and Stephen
Andrew Monness
Greenberg
Frosty Montgomery
Harlem's Fashion Row
Jeremy Moss
Stanley and Alice Harris
Brooke and Daniel Neidich
Haynes and Boone, LLP.
Maria Christina Anzola and Nancy Kuhn and
Bernie Nussbaum
John G. Heimann
Dr. and Mrs. David Helfet Jann Wenner and Matt Nye
The DuBose and Dorothy Mary Ann Oklesson
Heyward Memorial Fund Rebecca and Daniel Okrent
Gabrielle and Michael Palitz
Jennifer and Cameron
Eunice and Jay Panetta
Hillyer
Jackie Judd and
Home Box Office, Inc.
John Papanek
Roger Horchow
Catherine and Malcolm
Joan and John Jakobson
Price
Amabel and Tony James
Mr. and Mrs. Joel Picket
Jewish Communal Fund
Paulson & Co., Inc.
James Johnson
Paul, Weiss, Rifkind,
Johnson & Johnson
Wharton & Garrison LLP
Antoinette Guerrini-Maraldi
Jerome and Christine Ponz
and Hans W. Kertiss
Posternak Bauer
Key Brand Theatrical
Associates, Inc.
Group Inc.
Sarah and Steven Kraemer Cathy and Malcolm Price
Nina Bogosian and
Emilia Saint-Amand and
Matthew Quigley
H. Fred Krimendahl
Paul Raether
Diane Forrest and
Ellen B. Randall
Nicholas J. LaHowchic
Carol and Don Randel
Deirdre Latour
Random House Children's
Jo Carole and Ronald
books
Lauder
Jean Renfield-Miller and
Melva Bucksbaum and
Douglas Renfield
Raymond Learsy
Ingeborg and Ira Leon
Betty and John Levin
Rennert
Mr. and Mrs. A. Andrew
Clara and Walter Ricciardi
Levison
Dr. and Mrs. Howard Riina
Carolyn and Ed Lewis
The Riverside Company
Robert C. Lieber
Ropes & Gray LLP
Casey Lipscomb
Daryl and Steven Roth
Amanda and Peter Low
Fiona and Eric C. Rudin
Lorraine Machiz
Macquarie Holdings (USA) Inc. The Mortimer D. Sackler
Foundation, Inc.
Main Street Advisors
Safra National Bank of
Ellen and James Marcus
New York
George Kelly Martin
Barbara Saltzman
Joanne and Norman
Matthews

Ophelia and William Rudin


Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Safra
Diane and Leo Schlinkert
Adolph and Ruth
Schnurmacher
Foundation, Inc
Scholastic, Inc.
Chloe Breyer and
Greg J. Scholl
Peter Schub Foundation
Gil Shiva
Sydney and Stanley
Shuman
Riva Arielle Ritvo Slifka/
Alan B. Slifka Foundation
Katherine Farley and
Jerry Speyer

Liora and Menachem


Sternberg Family
Foundation
Mary Kay and John
Strangfeld
Tames Music Group
Kimberley and Paul Tanico
Nicki and Harold Tanner
Eboni Marshall and
Rossie E. Turman
Tania and Mark Walker
Lester Weingarten
The Weininger Foundation
Carol and Bernard Winograd

Samsung Electronics
America
SAP
Shackman Associates
New York
Alejandro Santo Domingo
Pam and Scott Schafler
Frances and Glen Schor
Donald Schupak
Irene and Bernard Schwartz
Glenn Close and David Shaw
Katherine and Stephen
Sherrill
Susan Moldow and
William M. Shinker
Lyn and David Silfin
Karen and Mark Simons
Skadden, Arps, Slate,
Meagher and Flom LLP
Laura J. Sloate/
Hermione Foundation
Tracy and Jay Snyder
Margaret Whitton and
Warren Spector
Bettina and Fred Stelle
Tracy and Russell Stidolph
Donna and Alan Stillman
Natasha and Richard Stowe
Barbara Carroll and
Mark Stroock
Judy and Alfred Taubman
Kendall Thomas
Maggie and Amor Towles
Barbara Walters
Time Warner Cable Media
Time Warner Inc.
Time Magazine
Alfred and Thomas J. Tisch
Turner Broadcasting System
Latin America, Inc
The Value Investing
Congress
Viacom Media Networks
Dani and Ted Virtue
Jeanette and Paul Wagner
Warburg Pincus
Woman's Day
Diane and Geoffrey Ward
Larry Satterfield and
Michael S. Ward
Cindy and Kenneth West
Denise S. Young
Patricia and Alfred Zollar
Tara Kelleher and
Roy J. Zuckerberg

Diane and Arthur Abbey


James M. Allen
Annette and Joseph Allen
Donna and Greg Amato
Anonymous (2)
Rose Marie and Burnside
Anderson
The ASCAP Foundation
Tracy Austin
Christina and Robert Baker
Lillian Barbash
Douglas J. Bard
Elizabeth Bartlett
Mercedes Bass
Paul Beirne
Theresa and Gerry Bernaz
Adam D. Bernstein, M.D.
David L. Bernstein
Arlene and Mark Bernstein
Cecile Berry
Keith Best
Miriam Bienstock
The Black Alumni of Pratt
Madeline and Alan Blinder
Barbara and James Block
Dominique Blokker
Henry Bloom
Les Bluestone
Cynthia R. Boardman
Gale Hayman and
Richard Bockman
Meg and Owen Boger
Maria and Mark Boonie
Jeffrey Boyer
Shirley Brandman
Barbara and William
Broeder
Marcia and Kenneth
Brookler
H.L. Brown Jr. Family
Foundation
Peter G. Burki
Michelle K. Burnett
Bonnie Burnham,
World Monuments Fund
Mary G. Cadagin
Donald G. Calder and
Ann M. Calder
Hilary and Joseph Califano
Judy and Ross Carson
Janina Casey
Cassin & Cassin, LLP
Russ Charlton
Ginger and Kevin Chavers
Deborah and David
Checketts
Michael P. Clifford
Marian and James Cohen
Lisa Pevaroff-Cohn and
Gary D. Cohn
David Cole
Patricia Cook
Carolyne and Neil Coplan,
M.D.
Larry Corio
Linda M. Cote
Douglas Cramer
Dana Cranmer
Alice and Daniel Cunningham
Anne N. Curtin
Ellen and Gary Davis
Constance and Yves
de Balmann
Elizabeth de Cuevas
Marilyn and Anthony
De Nicola
Diga Diga Doo NYC, LLC

PATRONS
Khalil Jackson
Michael K. Douglas
Andrea Montalbano and
Marcella and Richard
Diron Jebejian
Dresdale
Steven Joubert
Chris and Jim Drost
Laurence Jurdem
Jacqueline Moline and
Marnee and Eric Kaltman
Antoine Drye
Clarence Kam
Steven Eckhaus
Kauff McGuire & Margolis
Michael Edwards
LLP
Marsha and James Ellowitz
Elizabeth and Jean-Marie Linda and William Kaye
Karen and Tom Keating
Eveillard
Elizabeth and Dean Kehler
Judy and Tony Evnin
Risa Schifter and
Jeffrey B. Fager
Edward A. Kirtman
Shirley S. Farmer, Esq.
Anthony C. Kiser
Eric C. Fast
Jane and Charles Klein
Joseph Fazio
Alfred and Harriet Feinman Pat and John Klingenstein
Theresa Knight
Foundation
Chikako and Tomo Kodama
George Fertitta
Peggy A. Koen
Susan and Joseph Fetto
Elizabeth and Matt Fifield David L. Komar
Hitoshi Kondo
Stephen Fillo
Isobel Konecky
Christine and John
Eric Korman
Fitzgibbons
Diane Kranz
Susan and Arthur
Barbara and Marvin Kushnick
Fleischer, Jr.
Derek Kwan
Sylvia and Fred Fogel
Wendy and Jerry Labowitz
Susan and Ed Forst
Nancy and Jeffrey Lane
Mr. Tom Freston and
The Leonard and Evelyn
Mrs. Kathy Freston
Lauder Foundation
Charlotte Moss and
Bonnie and Frank
Barry Friedberg
Lautenberg
Erin A. Pond and
Eric Lax
Peter H. Friedland
Elizabeth Leckie
Fredrica and Stephen
Laurie Zucker Lederman
Friedman
and David Lederman
Frieda and Roy L. Furman
Jonathan O. Lee and
Henry Louise Gates, Jr.
Barbara Lee
Luiz Ernesto Gemignani
Alex and Rebecca Ginzburg Nyssa and Chisten Lee
Pamela Fiori and Colt Givner Sandra Shahinian Leitner
Joan Weberman and
Edythe and Michael
Roy W. Lennox
Gladstein
Pamela Sweeny and
Keith Goggin
Peter Levenson
Steven Goldman
Audrey Silver and
Arlene Goldman
Henry Levin
Patricia and Bernard
Karen Collias and
Goldstein
Geoffrey Levitt
Nancy and Gary
Ira Levy
Goodenough
Elizabeth and Mark Gormley Memrie Lewis
Loida Nicolas Lewis
Barbara and Harry Gould
Carol Sutton Lewis and
Greenwood Cemetary
William M. Lewis
Amy S. Khoudari and
Mary K. and John Libby
Frances Greenstein
Rita Fishman and
Terry and Michael Groll
Leonard Lichter
Lori E. Gross
Rhoda and Edwin Guinsburg Sharon Horn and
Jeffrey Lichtman
Dan Halsted
Fleur and Leonard Harlan Lynn Staley and Marty Linsky
Catherine and Bill Hartnett Tina and Michael Lobel
Madeleine Long
Sanjeanetta Harris
Lynn Davidson and
Laurie Hawkes
Jon Lukomnik
Gale and Richard Hayman
Ninah and Michael Lynne
Anne Farley and
Christine and Richard Mack
Peter C. Hein
Linda and Harry Macklowe
Andrew Heineman
Anne and Sean Madden
Carron Sherry and
James Manges
Richard Hogan
Katina and Ken Manne
Alan D. Holtz
Nancy and Alan
Waring Hopkins
Manocherian
Audrey Sokoloff and
Susan and Morris Mark
Tim Hosking
Joan Lee and Robert Matloff
Donna Raftery and
Valerie and Paul Marini
Vincent Inconiglios
Joy and Jonathan Ingham Lady Va and
Sir Deryck Maughan
Adam Inselbuch

Joanne and Norman


Matthews
Steven Mazzuchelli
Mary and R. Lawrence
McCaffrey
Merridith and Robert
McCarthy
Sandy and Michael McManus
Joyce F. Menschel
Irene Weiss Miller and
Jeffrey D. Miller
Lybess Sweezy and
Ken Miller
Jennifer and Scott D. Miller
Cheryl and Philip Milstein
Cheryl and Michael Minikes
Marcia and Richard Mishaan
Nancy and Joseph Misset
Adriana and Robert Mnuchin
Kimberly and Nicholas
Moore
Susan and Alan Morris
John Morris
Kimberly and David Morse
Richard Moylan
Mary and Roger Mulvihill
Marion and Timothy
Murphy
Gaya and Vinay Nair
Mary Katherine and
Alexander Navab
Metin Negrin
Brooke and Daniel Neidich
Judith E. Neisser
Lynn Nesbit
Michael Neuman
Susan and Peter Nitze
Josiane and Thierry Noufele
Joan O'Connor
Jason Olaine
Laura and John Olson
Harry OMealia
Robert G. O'Meally
Paula and William
Oppenheim
Judy and Steve Orich
Gideon Panter
Pamela and Edward Pantzer
Claudine and Bernard Parisot
Janet Charles Parker
Susan and Alan Patricof
Margo Bridger and
Joseph G. Paul
Michael Peffer
Mary and Edwin Peissis
Dara Perlbinder
Paula and Dominic Petito
Caroline Wamsler and
DeWayne Phillips
Jane Poole
Mark G. Prentiss
Robert Press
Harold Prince
Karen and Timothy Proctor
Judith Garson and
Steven Rappaport
Cheryl and Louis Raspino
Caryl Ratner
Pixie and Jimmy Reiss
Richard Reitknecht
Paula and Ira Resnick
Jennifer and Tim Rice
Megan and William Ried
Barbara J. Riley
Danea Riley
Ralph G. Roberts, Jr.

Alicia and William


Robertson
Donna and Benjamin M.
Rosen
Carla and H. David
Rosenbloom
Judith Zarin and
Gerald Rosenfeld
Laura and James Ross
James Rubin
Ethel Rubinstein
Susan Cluff and
Neil Rudolph
James Ryan
Stuart Saal
George H. Sands, MD
Phyllis W. Bertin and
Anthony M. Saytanides
Cynthia and Brian Scanlan
Barabar and James Schadt
Amy Katz and Irving Scher
Andrew N. Schiff
Irwin Schloss
Shari and Jay Schuster
Annette Mitchell Scott
Deborah and Phillip Scott
Kathy and Joel Segall
Robin and Enrique Senior
Ronald Sheer
Robert B. Shepler

Dr. David Sherman


Patricia W. Shifke
Randall Eron Shy
Angelia and George Siber
Jerome Siegel
John Siffert
Carla Emil and
Richard Silverstein
Nancy and Andrew
Simmons
Ann and James Sitrick
Carra Sleight
Dana Anderson and
Aaron Smidt
Elizabeth Smith-Malik
Helena and Steve Sokoloff
Yuriko and Leonard Solondz
Chang and Lisa Spaide
Robert E. Spatt
Jimmie E. Spears
Janet and Gilbert Spitzer
Louise A. Springer
Deirdre Stanley
Barbara and Mitchell Stein
Joan and Michael Steinberg
Leonore and Walter Stern
James Stevens
Jennifer and Joel Stevens
Bonnie and Thomas Strauss
Sabin C. Streeter

Barbra Streisand
Foundation Inc.
Betsy Miller and
Stuart Sucherman
Joe Sullivan
Becky and Mark W. Swift
Mark Tallman
Gloria and Phillip Talkow
Jay Tanenbaum
Lynne Tarnopol
Aulston Taylor
Kendall Thomas
Tiffany and Co.
Billie Tisch
The Wilma S. and Laurence
A. Tisch Foundation
Barbara and Donald Tober
Jean and Raymond Troubh
Michael Tuch Foundation,
Inc.
Diane and Thomas Tuft
Sandra and Bruce Tully
Jade Netanya Ullman
Ann and Thomas Unterberg
Jacqueline T. Uter
Cheryl Vollweiler
Mary Ellen and
Karl Von der Heyden
Margaret and George
Vranesh

As of April 17, 2014

Find us on

jalc.org

Ellen and Barry Wagenberg


Tanna and Michael Wall
Cathy and James Wallick
Faye Wattleton
Jane L. Overman and
Paul Weltchek
Joan and Howard Weinstein
Mildred Weissman
Robert C. Wesley, Jr.
Lola C. West
Western Oil & Gas J.V. Inc.
Naida S. Wharton
Foundation
Katherine C. Wickham
Maria and David
Wildermuth
Michael E. Wiles
Shelley and Robert Willcox
Janice Savin Williams and
Christopher Williams
Audrey Strauss and
John Wing
Richard M. Winn III
Benjamin Winter
The Craig E. Wishman
Foundation
Wolfensohn Family
Foundation
Karen Wood
Anne Youngblood

UPCOMING EVENTS
Jazz at Lincoln Centers
Frederick P. Rose Hall

May 2014
ROSE THEATER
JLCO Hosts: Christian McBride &
Kurt Rosenwinkel
May 2324 at 8pm
For the second JLCO Hosts concert, Music
Director Wynton Marsalis and drummer Ali Jackson
present the compositions of a pair of Philadelphiaborn, post-Boomer virtuosos: 2014 GRAMMY
Award nominee, bassist Christian McBride and guitarist Kurt Rosenwinkel. Rosenwinkels JALC debut
will culminate a musical relationship that began two
decades ago at Smalls in Greenwich Village, where
Rosenwinkel refined his unique guitar sound and
influential compositions, blending dense harmonies,
gorgeous melodies, and complex forms with, as
Jackson states, a very conscious and present
understanding of the blues and what the blues are in
jazz music. Himself the leader of a big band that
earned a 2012 GRAMMY Award, McBride will continue a relationship with JALC that began in 1995
when he met Marsalis while still in high school. The
full Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra appears.
Free pre-concert discussion, nightly, 7pm.

THE APPEL ROOM


The Music of Cole Porter
May 14 at 7pm, May 15 at 7pm & 9pm
Michael Feinstein focuses on the genius of Cole
Porter, who, he notes, was in that rare echelon of
songwriters who supplied both words and music.
Feinstein himself is ideally suited to interpret Porters
archly comic, ambiguous, pointed lyrics, and to execute his memorable melodies, several dozen of which
have inspired generations of jazzfolk to improvise at
the highest level. Mr. Porter didnt go out and get
loaded because of an arrangement somebody else
made of his music, Feinstein quotes Frank Sinatra.
It made no difference to him, as long as the song was
done in its entirety. Marilyn Maye, Denzal Sinclair,
Kate Davis, and Vince Giordano and the Nighthawks
join Feinstein to bring Porters music to life.

New Jazz Standards


May 16 at 7pm, May 17 at 9:30pm
On a program that may impel those of the opinion that
21st century jazz doesnt concern itself with melodic
values to question their assumptions, New Jazz
Standards convened under the auspices of Jazz at
Lincoln Centers new A Side, B Side series presents an all-star ensemble of melody-masters who

have written new works specifically for this freshlyassembled collaboration. Songwriters include Tin Hat
violinist Carla Kihlstedt, pianist-composer Guillermo
Klein, tenorman Bill McHenry, The Bad Plus bassist
Reid Anderson, and drummer Eric Harland.

Nuevo Jazz Latino


May 16 at 9:30pm, May 17 at 7pm
Nuevo Jazz Latinoconvened under the auspices of
Jazz at Lincoln Centers new A Side, B Side series
presents an all-star ensemble of a decidedly Afro-Cuban
orientation, whose members have written new
works specifically for this freshly-assembled collaboration. Songwriters include Jazz at Lincoln Center
Orchestra bassist Carlos Henriquez, a Bronx native, and
four brilliant Cubans: pianist Elio Villafranca, saxophonist
Yosvany Terry, drummer (and MacArthur Award winner)
Dafnis Prieto, and conguero-vocalist Pedrito Martinez.

IRENE DIAMOND EDUCATION CENTER


Swing University Spring Term
May 6June 4
Jazz at Lincoln Centers jazz education program,
Swing University, offers students of all ages a chance
to learn about jazz from musicians and scholars.
Spring Term classes include Discography, with former
curator of the Institute of Jazz Studies Ed Berger, and
Cecil Taylor, with WKCR director Ben Young.
Please visit jalc.org/swingu, call 212-258-9922, or
email sinwgu@jalc.org for more information. Single
tickets are available.

201415 SEASON
SUBSCRIPTIONS
Join us for the 27th season of Jazz at Lincoln Center.
Anchored by the renowned Jazz at Lincoln Center
Orchestra with Wynton Marsalis, we kick off the
201415 season with the debut of a new collaboration by Chucho Valds, Pedrito Martinez, and
Marsalis. Brazilian ensemble SpokFrevo Orquestra
makes its JALC debut, and Bill Frisell returns to
curate our Roots of Americana series. We honor legendary baritone saxophonist Joe Temperley of Duke
Ellingtons band and our own, and showcase jazzs
varied cultural interpretations with Elio Villafrancas
Music of the Caribbean and Sherman Irbys
Journey Through Swing. We welcome visionaries
like Michael Feinstein, Wayne Shorter, Rubn
Blades, and Dianne Reeves, and honor the music of
Count Basie, Betty Carter, Billie Holiday, Muddy
Waters, Frank Sinatra, and more. Customize your
season with the Take 3,4,5 series.
For more information, visit jalc.org/subs.

Except where noted, all venues are located in Jazz at Lincoln Centers Frederick P. Rose Hall,
Time Warner Center, 5th floor
Tickets starting at $10
To purchase tickets call CenterCharge: 212-721-6500 or visit: jalc.org. The Jazz at Lincoln Center Box Office
is 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 Centers


Frederick P. Rose Hall

May 2014
Fairview Baptist Church Brass Band
featuring Shannon Powell
with Kevin Louis, David Harris, Darryl Adams,
Jeffrey Hills, and Terrence Andrews
May 24
7:30pm & 9:30pm
Temple University Jazz Band
featuring Jon Faddis & Jimmy Heath
May 5
7:30pm & 9:30pm
Cincinnati College Conservatory of Music
Jazz Ensemble
with Scott Belck and special guests Craig Bailey,
Rick Van Matre, and Fareed Haque
May 6
7:30pm & 9:30pm
The Juilliard Jazz Orchestra: Celebrating
Duke Ellington & Gerald Wilson
May 711
7:30pm & 9:30pm
Monday Nights With WBGO
Oran Etkin CD Release: Gathering Light
with Lionel Loueke, Ben Allison, and Curtis Fowlkes
May 12
7:30pm & 9:30pm
Mary Lou Williams Zodiac Suite:
Chris Pattishall Quintet
with Ricardo Pascal and Alphonso Horne
May 13
7:30pm & 9:30pm

Ted Rosenthal Trio CD Release:


Rhapsody in Gershwin
with Martin Wind and Tim Horner
May 14
7:30pm & 9:30pm
Ren Maries I Wanna Be Evil:
With Love to Eartha Kitt
with Kevin Bales, Elias Bailey, Quentin Baxter,
Robert Stringer, Adrian Cunningham, and
Etienne Charles
May 1518
7:30pm & 9:30pm
Juilliard School Ensemble
May 19
7:30pm & 9:30pm
Donald Harrisons Berklee Quintet: Part of the
Berklee Masters on the Road Program
with Donald Harrison, Santiago Bosch, Osmar
Okuma, and Darryl Stave
May 20
7:30pm & 9:30pm
Terell Stafford and the Jazz Orchestra
of Philadelphia
May 21
7:30pm & 9:30pm
Ben Wolfe Quintet featuring Nicholas Payton
with Dave Kikoski, Donald Edwards, and
Stacy Dillard
May 2225
7:30pm & 9:30pm
Ryan Kisor Quintet
with Peter Zak, Willie Jones III, John Webber, and
Peter Bernstein
May 2627
7:30pm & 9:30pm

In deference to the artists, patrons of Dizzys Club Coca-Cola


are encouraged to keep conversations to a whisper during the performance.
Artists and schedule subject to change.
Dizzys Club Coca-Cola is located in Jazz at Lincoln Centers 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: $2040. 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 Dizzys Club Coca-Cola Fridays and Saturdays.
Jazz at Lincoln Center merchandise is now available at the concession stands during performances in Rose Theater
and The Appel Room. Items also available in Dizzys Club Coca-Cola during evening operating hours.
Dizzys Club Coca-Cola gift cards now available.
Find us on Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, and Foursquare.

Potrebbero piacerti anche