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104 E. 126th Street • Suite 2D • New York, NY 10035
(212) 348-8300
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Tuesday, August 26
7:00pm
A Celebration of Dr. Billy Taylor (featuring Dr. Taylor in person)
JAZZ FOR CURIOUS LISTENERS
Thursday, August 28
6:30 pm
Eddie Bert, trombonist
Friday, August 29
7:00 pm
Theo Croker Quartet w/ Marcus Belgrave
HARLEM IN THE HIMALAYAS
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Coming
in
September
JAZZ FOR CURIOUS LISTENERS
Tuesdays in September
7:00pm
What Makes it Tick? Five Classic Albums
Sept. 2: John Coltrane, A Love Supreme
Sept. 9: Miles Davis, Kind of Blue
Sept. 16: Benny Goodman, 1928 Carnegie Hal Concert
Sept: 23: Wynton Marsalis, Blue Interlude
Sept 30: Andrew HIll, Point of Departure
Thursday, September 11
6:30 pm
Cedar Walton, pianist
Thursday, September 25
6:30 pm
Chico Hamilton, drummer
Monday, Septmeber 15
6:30pm
Ron Scott
Friday, September 12
7:00 pm
Charles Davis Quartet
Friday, September 19
7:00 pm
Cindy Blackman
Friday, September 26
7:00 pm
David Ornette Cherry w/The Ensemble for Improvisors
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Jazz Museum Events, August 26- 29, 2008
Celebrating Dr. Billy Taylor Tuesday, August 26
Harlem Speaks: Eddie Bert Thursday, August 28
Theo Croker Quartet w/Marcus Belgrave Friday, August 29
Summer’s coming to a close, and cool weather peeks through the gentle breezes of early morning. Make sure to not miss this week’s set of jazz conversations and performance because no matter whether it’s hot or cold outside, we promise you’ll leave with your heart warmed and your soul enriched.
For the last three weeks, the free Jazz for Curious Listeners program has focused on the life and works of the great pianist, composer, educator, and multi-media advocate of jazz, Dr. Billy Taylor. Well, the man himself will be present this Tuesday, along with National Jazz Museum in Harlem Executive Director Loren Schoenberg, and Co-Director, Christian McBride.
And on Thursday, trombonist Eddie Bert will be present for an in-depth conversation at Harlem Speaks.
Friday, come witness a generational contest of groove and swing as we close out our August Harlem in the Himalayas series with a quartet led by one of the brightest brass players on the scene, Theo Croker, joined onstage by a man three times his age but whose trumpet playing maintains a spark lit a half century ago when he first heard Clifford Brown: the legendary Marcus Belgrave.
Tuesday, August 26,
2008
JAZZ FOR CURIOUS LISTENERS
7:00pm
A Celebration of Dr. Billy
Taylor
Location:
NJMIH Visitors Center
(104 E. 126th Street, Suite 2C)
FREE | register online
This week come greet and meet Dr. Billy Taylor in person.
Last week instructor Greg Thomas continued the month-long tribute to Dr. Taylor with a focus on trio configurations throughout his career, from the 50s ‘til this century. Tempos ballad to brisk, and styles from straight-ahead swing to spiritual solemnity to dance-groove funk to a classically-tinged composition featuring his trio with a symphony orchestra, were appreciated by the attendees at the National Jazz Museum in Harlem’s Visitors Center.
Dr. Taylor is one of the few musicians extant tutored by Art Tatum, and who, as house pianist at Birdland, can recount his days playing and recording with Charlie Parker, Dizzy Gillespie, Ben Webster, Coleman Hawkins and other standard bearers of jazz innovation. So expect the living jazz master to share wisdom in his inimitably warm style of conversation...with Loren Schoenberg and Christian McBride.
Thursday, August 28,
2008
HARLEM SPEAKS
6:30pm
Eddie Bert, trombonist
Location:
NJMIH Visitors Center
(104 E. 126th Street, Suite 2C)
FREE | Reservations: 212-348-8300
Trombonist Eddie Bert's career spans nearly seven decades of jazz, from big bands to bebop and beyond. In addition to being a jazz musician who's played with one and all, he's been a regular in Broadway show bands, and a first call studio player. Yet no matter what the musical setting, Eddie has always played his uniquely personal, warm and melodic style of jazz.
When renowned jazz leaders needed a dependable, original trombonist for a significant recording or event in the second half of the twentieth century, they turned to Eddie Bert. In fact, his resume reads like a Who's Who of modern Jazz, including musical relationships with Thelonious Monk, Charles Mingus, Coleman Hawkins, Woody Herman, Stan Kenton, Machito, Tito Puente, Benny Goodman, Thad Jones and Mel Lewis.
There's a reason Eddie Bert has played with the jazz masters--he's a truly gifted musician, a trombonist who has easily traversed eras and genres, from bop to swing, Mingus to Hampton, and Kenton to Herman. Eddie straddled the racial divide as well. He played in one of the first integrated big bands, Charlie Barnet's 1943 aggregation, which included Howard McGhee, Buddy DeFranco and Oscar Pettiford.
In addition to being one of the most dependable players in jazz history, always in demand because of his sight-reading skills and his ability to lend a passionate and individual approach to all music, Eddie is a soloist and arranger with a distinctive musical voice. In 1955, when he stopped playing only to sleep, he won Metronome's Musician of the Year award. He followed that with a top rated album of the same name for Savoy. He has led a number of other recordings during his distinguished career, featuring such sidemen as Duke Jordan, Joe Morello, Hank Jones and Kenny Clarke.
Yet during Eddie's teenage years, 52nd Street was a hotbed of musical activity. At fifteen, he began frequenting "The Street," where musicians of all generations played and gathered nightly. Being too young to get into the clubs at night, Eddie hung around during the afternoon when he knew the bands would be rehearsing.
Fast-forwarding several decades, in the 1990s Eddie started working with drummer T.S. Monk's group. "We did a European tour in 1997 and an album that featured a lot of Thelonious' new material that T. S. had found around the house. He hired me because I had played with his father-if you hang around long enough, you find that you have played with everyone's father!"
Now in his eighth decade, Eddie Bert is still playing the trombone, still traveling, and still married to Mollie, his wife of 60+ years. With three daughters and four grandchildren, he enjoys spending time with his family and, when not playing, also likes photography.
Friday, August 29,
2008
HARLEM IN THE HIMALAYAS
7:00pm
Theo Croker Quartet w/Marcus Belgrave
Location:
Rubin Museum of Art
(150 West
17th Street)
$18 in advance | $20 at door |
Box Office: 212.620.5000 ext. 344
Marcus Belgrave, trumpet
Theo Croker, trumpet
Joe Sanders, bass
Sullivan Fortner, piano
Kassa Overall, drums
Trumpeter Theo Croker, Doc Cheatham’s grandson, has been featured all summer at Harlem in the Himalayas. This last performance promises to be hot, with Croker locking horns in antagonistic cooperation with elder trumpet legend Marcus Belgrave.
Trumpeter, composer, arranger, educator, recording artist, and producer Marcus Belgrave was born in Chester, Pennsylvania June 12 1936.
He began playing the trumpet at age six and professionally at age twelve. Mr. Belgrave describes himself as "born into bebop." An early inspiration and mentor was Clifford Brown. At age eighteen, Marcus earned his initial reputation joining the Ray Charles Orchestra. His solo on Alexander's Ragtime Band from the album The Genius of Ray Charles put him on the map. He toured for five years and is heard on such Charles hits as Night Time is the Right Time, What’d I Say, You are My Sunshine, Margie, Ruby and Stella by Starlight.
In the early 60’s he worked and recorded in the bands of leading innovators of post-bop modern jazz: Max Roach, Charles Mingus and Eric Dolphy. In 1963 Marcus settled in Detroit, becoming one of the prominent studio musicians with Motown Records. He is heard on many Motown hit recordings including Dancing in the Street, The Way You Do the Things You Do, and My Girl. His distinguished career as a player includes performances with legendary stars from both the pop music and jazz world: Ella Fitzgerald, Bud Powell, Tony Bennett, Aretha Franklin, Sammy Davis Jr., Wynton Marsalis, Lena Horn, Liza Minnelli, Doc Cheatham, Sarah Vaughn, Dizzy Gillespie, Billy Eckstein, Gene Krupa (with whom he recorded) and many others.
As an original member, starting in 1988, he toured with the Lincoln Center Jazz Orchestra, appearing on national television and recording for CBS/Sony. Marcus Belgrave’s own recordings began in 1974 with the release of his self-produced album Gemini II, showcasing a collective of Detroit jazz artists, which he led. This record was the first to garner the attention of the international jazz press, about new “cutting edge” jazz activity emanating from that famous music city. Belgrave’s recordings from the 1980’s and ‘90’s include the critically acclaimed Detroit Piano Legacy with Tommy Flanagan and Geri Allen and Working Together, Marcus’ collaboration with composer/drummer Lawrence Williams. Recording more traditional jazz material in this period, Marcus co-led on albums with several of the last surviving “pioneers” of the pre-bebop era including saxophonist Franz Jackson (Live at Windsor Jazz Festival III) and pianist
Art Hodes (Hot ‘n Cool Blues). Critical accolades for these releases are cited in The Biographical Encyclopedia of Jazz, The Rolling Stone Guide to Jazz and Blues on CD, other jazz reference books, and major news publications.
Since 2001 Marcus Belgrave has led his Tribute to Louis Armstrong octet, appearing in thirty states, Canada and Puerto Rico and playing Armstrong’s music in pops programs with the Detroit Symphony and other US orchestras.
As a soloist, Marcus continues to travel the US for appearances at jazz festivals, night clubs and concert hall performances. In January 2006 he was featured on three concerts at Jazz at Lincoln Center’s presentation Detroit: Motor City Jazz, later broadcast on National Public Radio.
Mr. Belgrave is internationally known for his dedication to educational endeavors. He is founder of Detroit’s Jazz Development Workshop and co-founder of the Jazz Studies Program at the Detroit Metro Arts Complex (recognized with grants from federal and state levels). He was also an original faculty member with the Oakland University Jazz Studies Program and in 2003 became the first Chair of Jazz Education and Programming for the Detroit Symphony Orchestra. Beneficiaries of his musical tutelage include leading names of today’s jazz scene: pianist Geri Allen, bassist Robert Hurst, saxophonist Kenny Garrett, violinist Regina Carter and bassist Rodney Whitaker. The past five years Marcus has served as Professor of Jazz Trumpet at Oberlin University in Ohio.
In recognition of his outstanding artistry, vision, and life-long achievement in jazz education, Marcus Belgrave is the recipient of numerous honors including the Arts Midwest Jazz Master Award, the Michigan Governor’s Arts Award, and the Louis Armstrong Award.
Upcoming September Events Trumpeter Theo Croker, Doc Cheatham’s grandson, has been featured all summer at Harlem in the Himalayas. This last performance promises to be hot, with Croker locking horns in antagonistic cooperation with elder trumpet legend Marcus Belgrave.
Trumpeter, composer, arranger, educator, recording artist, and producer Marcus Belgrave was born in Chester, Pennsylvania June 12 1936.
He began playing the trumpet at age six and professionally at age twelve. Mr. Belgrave describes himself as "born into bebop." An early inspiration and mentor was Clifford Brown. At age eighteen, Marcus earned his initial reputation joining the Ray Charles Orchestra. His solo on Alexander's Ragtime Band from the album The Genius of Ray Charles put him on the map. He toured for five years and is heard on such Charles hits as Night Time is the Right Time, What’d I Say, You are My Sunshine, Margie, Ruby and Stella by Starlight.
In the early 60’s he worked and recorded in the bands of leading innovators of post-bop modern jazz: Max Roach, Charles Mingus and Eric Dolphy. In 1963 Marcus settled in Detroit, becoming one of the prominent studio musicians with Motown Records. He is heard on many Motown hit recordings including Dancing in the Street, The Way You Do the Things You Do, and My Girl. His distinguished career as a player includes performances with legendary stars from both the pop music and jazz world: Ella Fitzgerald, Bud Powell, Tony Bennett, Aretha Franklin, Sammy Davis Jr., Wynton Marsalis, Lena Horn, Liza Minnelli, Doc Cheatham, Sarah Vaughn, Dizzy Gillespie, Billy Eckstein, Gene Krupa (with whom he recorded) and many others.
As an original member, starting in 1988, he toured with the Lincoln Center Jazz Orchestra, appearing on national television and recording for CBS/Sony. Marcus Belgrave’s own recordings began in 1974 with the release of his self-produced album Gemini II, showcasing a collective of Detroit jazz artists, which he led. This record was the first to garner the attention of the international jazz press, about new “cutting edge” jazz activity emanating from that famous music city. Belgrave’s recordings from the 1980’s and ‘90’s include the critically acclaimed Detroit Piano Legacy with Tommy Flanagan and Geri Allen and Working Together, Marcus’ collaboration with composer/drummer Lawrence Williams. Recording more traditional jazz material in this period, Marcus co-led on albums with several of the last surviving “pioneers” of the pre-bebop era including saxophonist Franz Jackson (Live at Windsor Jazz Festival III) and pianist
Art Hodes (Hot ‘n Cool Blues). Critical accolades for these releases are cited in The Biographical Encyclopedia of Jazz, The Rolling Stone Guide to Jazz and Blues on CD, other jazz reference books, and major news publications.
Since 2001 Marcus Belgrave has led his Tribute to Louis Armstrong octet, appearing in thirty states, Canada and Puerto Rico and playing Armstrong’s music in pops programs with the Detroit Symphony and other US orchestras.
As a soloist, Marcus continues to travel the US for appearances at jazz festivals, night clubs and concert hall performances. In January 2006 he was featured on three concerts at Jazz at Lincoln Center’s presentation Detroit: Motor City Jazz, later broadcast on National Public Radio.
Mr. Belgrave is internationally known for his dedication to educational endeavors. He is founder of Detroit’s Jazz Development Workshop and co-founder of the Jazz Studies Program at the Detroit Metro Arts Complex (recognized with grants from federal and state levels). He was also an original faculty member with the Oakland University Jazz Studies Program and in 2003 became the first Chair of Jazz Education and Programming for the Detroit Symphony Orchestra. Beneficiaries of his musical tutelage include leading names of today’s jazz scene: pianist Geri Allen, bassist Robert Hurst, saxophonist Kenny Garrett, violinist Regina Carter and bassist Rodney Whitaker. The past five years Marcus has served as Professor of Jazz Trumpet at Oberlin University in Ohio.
In recognition of his outstanding artistry, vision, and life-long achievement in jazz education, Marcus Belgrave is the recipient of numerous honors including the Arts Midwest Jazz Master Award, the Michigan Governor’s Arts Award, and the Louis Armstrong Award.
Visitors Center
104 East 126th Street, Suite 2C
Monday through Friday 10 a.m. - 4 p.m
close to 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 trains to 125th Street
We’re waiting for you! Yes, that’s right. Our new Visitors Center is now open Monday through Friday (10 a.m. – 4 p.m.) and chock full of books, CDs and DVDs for your perusal. There is also a first-class exhibit of photos on the walls, so we hope you will come up and see us and also spread the word to any other curious folk who want to spend some time getting jazzed in Harlem.
Also, to find audio and video clips, event summaries, program updates and photographs galore from our previous events, venture here:
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The National Jazz Museum in Harlem is deeply dedicated to the legacy and continued growth of jazz. Your continued support of our events demonstrates your love of jazz and the level of community appreciation and interest in its further development. As we continue our efforts to bring you the best insights and live music (at little or no cost), your participation translates into a favorable reflection upon our efforts to build a physical museum worthy of this profound, emotionally riveting art form. We look forward to seeing you at our future events, and when you come, please bring a friend! |
This press release was composed and edited by Greg Thomas,
host of the web’s only jazz news and entertainment TV show, Jazz It Up!
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