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Jazz Innovations, Part I

Wednesday, December 1, 2021 - 7:30pm
  • Small jazz combos perform in Brechemin on May 16 (photo: Steve Korn).

Student jazz ensembles pay homage to the icons of jazz and break new ground with original progressive jazz compositions.

 Masks are required in all indoor spaces on the UW campus. Capacity in Brechemin Auditorium is limited to 100. Proof of vaccination or negative COVID-19 test (within 72 hours of the performance) required. Details of these protocols available here.


Program

Part I: Wednesday, December 1

JACOB LINDEN GROUP

Rhumba Flamenco ............................................................................................................ Chick Corea (1941-2021)

Monk's Dream .......................................................................................................... Thelonious Monk (1917-1982)

Monk's Mood ................................................................................................................................ Thelonious Monk

In Walked Bud ............................................................................................................................... Thelonious Monk

Andromeda .......................................................................................................................................... Jacob Linden

Martin Nguyen: alto saxophone; Max Young: bass; Jacob Linden: piano; EJ Brannan: drums

RYAN/MARKUS/SOLOMON/TED
Ted Poor, advisor

Alone Together ..................................................................................................Arthur Schwartz (1900-1984)

Beatrice .................................................................................................................................... Sam Rivers (b. 1977)

Little B's Poem ........................................................................................................ Bobby Hutcherson (1941-2016)

Black Villain Music ............................................................................................................... Ben Williams (b. 1984)

Ryan Featherman: alto saxophone; Solomon Lubell: bass; Markus Teuton: guitar; Ted Poor: drums

SEALES THE DEAL
Marc Seales, advisor

You Must Believe in Spring ............................................Marilyn Bergman (b. 1929) & Alan Bergman (b. 1925)

Monk’s Dream ............................................................................................................ Thelonius Monk (1917-1982)

Goodbye Pork Pie Hat ................................................................................................. Charles Mingus (1922-1979)

Au Privave ...................................................................................................................... Charlie Parker (1920-1955)

Natalie Song, piano; Beau Wood, bass; Galin Jordan, drums; Jai Kobi Kaleo”Okal, guitar

……………………...

Part II: Thursday, December 2

CUONG VU GROUP
Cuong Vu, Advisor

Manhã De Carnaval ............................................................................................................. Luiz Bonfà (1922-2001)

Luiz Bonfà’s milestone composition and theme to the 1959 film Black Orpheus. The song and the film helped establish the Brazilian music and artistic movements of the 1960s.

Au Private ...................................................................................................................... Charlie Parker (1920-1955)

Charlie Parker fittingly has one of his compositions featured in our set, though it is the Cannonball Adderley version from 1960 which informed our interpretation.

Misty ................................................................................................................................ Erroll Garner (1921-1977)

A fabulous Erroll Garner tune and one of our favorites for a relaxed jam. It opens with a straight-eighths feel fitting the songs at the start and end of the set.

Jordu ............................................................................................................................... Duke Jordan (1922-2006)

Another bebop representative, this Duke Jordan composition has a mysterious stop time feel in the head and some masterful recordings by Clifford Brown and Max Roach.

Solidado .......................................................................................................................... Toshiko Akiyoshi (b. 1929)

We hope to bring more ears to Japan-born Toshiko Akiyoshi’s lesser-played gem from 1953. It is a remarkable Latin composition reminiscent of Poinciana.

Maximilian Czerwinski, alto saxophone; Kai Hill, drums; Marek Magana, electric bass; Shai Permilovsky, piano


THE FREDS
Steve Rodby, Advisor

Sea Journey ...................................................................................................................... Chick Corea (1941–2021)

Infant Eyes .......................................................................................................................... Wayne Shorter (b. 1933)

Fred .......................................................................................................................... Alan Holdsworth (1946–2017)

Ana Maria ........................................................................................................................................... Wayne Shorter

A Night In Tunisia ......................................................................................................... Dizzy Gillespie (1917–1993)

Elliot Halpern, saxophone; Trevor Eulau, guitar; Noah Brown, piano, keyboards; Tony Lafaive, bass; Matt Camgros, drums


DIRECTOR BIOS

Cuong Vu is widely recognized by jazz critics as a leader of a generation of innovative musicians. A truly unique musical voice, Cuong has lent his trumpet playing to a wide range of artists such as Pat Metheny, Laurie Anderson, and David Bowie.

As a youngster, Cuong's intense dedication and love for music led him to a full scholarship at the New England Conservatory of Music where he received his Bachelor of Music in Jazz studies with a distinction in performance. Transitioning from his studies in Boston, he moved to New York in 1994 and began his career actively leading various groups while touring extensively throughout the world. As a leader, Cuong has released eight recordings, each making critics’ lists of the 10 best recordings of their respective years and has received rave reviews from notable publications such as the New York Times, The New Yorker, Harper’s, the Guardian, BBC Music Magazine, JazzTimes and Downbeat. Each record displays how he has carved out a distinctive sonic territory as a trumpet player, blurring all stylistic borders while developing his own compositional aesthetic and sound world.

Awards and honors that Cuong has garnered include grants from the Royalty Research Foundation, the Donald E. Petersen Professorship, ArtistTrust, 4Culture, CityArts and the Colbert Award for Excellence.  Cuong is currently associate professor and chair of Jazz Studies at the University of Washington and was awarded the University of Washington's prestigious Distinguished Teacher Award in his third year on faculty. In 2002 and 2006, Cuong was a recipient of the Grammy for Best Contemporary Jazz Album as a member of the Pat Metheny Group. He’s been recognized as one of the top 50 Jazz Artists in an article called “The New Masters” from the British magazine, “Classic CD” and in 2006 was named the Best International Jazz Artist by the Italian Jazz Critics’ Society. Amazon listed Vu’s “Come Play With Me” on their “The 100 Greatest Jazz Albums of All Time.”

Marc Seales

A noted pianist, composer and leading figure in the Northwest jazz scene, Marc Seales has shared stages with many of the great players of the last two decades. He has played with nearly every visiting jazz celebrity from Joe Henderson and Art Pepper to Benny Carter, Mark Murphy, and Bobby Hutcherson. With the late Don Lanphere he performed in such places as London, England; Kobe, Japan; The Hague in the Netherlands; and the North Sea Jazz Festival.

The musicians he admires most are Herbie Hancock, Charlie Parker, John Lewis, John Coltrane, Miles Davis, and Wynton Kelly, though he is quick to acknowledge that he owes the basically be-bop/post be-bop sound of his playing to his mentors, Don Lanphere and Floyd Standifer.

Critics have praised Seales variously for his "meaty piano solos," and "blues inflected, Hancock-inspired modernism." Winner of numerous Earshot awards (Instrumentalist of the Year in 1999 and Acoustic Jazz Group in 2000 and 2001; Jazz Hall of Fame, 2009), Seales is today promoting jazz awareness and molding young talents as a Professor of Music at the University of Washington, where he is a professor in the Jazz Studies Program. He teaches an array of courses, including History of Jazz, Jazz Piano, and Beginning and Advanced Improvisation, as well as leading various workshops and ensembles.

Ted Poor is a New York-born, Seattle-based drummer and composer whose adventurous, soulful playing has vaulted him to the stages of some of today’s most vital artists. Modern Drummer describes his playing as “adventurous, truly dynamic, and forward-thinking.” A graduate of the Eastman School of Music, Ted has toured and recorded with renowned artists such as Paul Simon, Marcus Mumford, Bill Frisell, Rufus Wainwright, Pat Metheny, Blake Mills, Madison Cunningham, Chris Thile, John Scofield, Cuong Vu, My Brightest Diamond, Kurt Rosenwinkel, and Gabriel Kahane. 

Having signed with Verve Records (UMG), his debut album, You Already Know, was released in 2020 to critical acclaim.  The album, which is co-produced with Blake Mills features Andrew D’Angelo, Andrew Bird, Rob Moose, Paul Kowert and Sebastian Steinberg. JazzTimes calls the album “profound and moving” and states, “intimate, involving, and lasting, You Already Know balms the senses, wakes them up, slaps them around, and offers positive affirmations.” 

Ted is a member of Los Angeles based singer/song-writer Andrew Bird’s band; appearing on and touring the albums Are You Serious and My Finest Work Yet (Loma Vista/Concord).  He also performed regularly in the house band on the live radio broadcast of Live From Here with Chris Thile (formerly A Prairie Home Companion). Ted is an Associate Professor of Jazz Studies and the acting Associate Director of the School of Music at the University of Washington in Seattle. 

Steve Rodby
Acoustic and electric bassist, audio and video editor and producer Steve Rodby was born in Joliet, Illinois. He began studying classical orchestral bass at age 10, and quickly developed parallel interests in pop and jazz. A graduate of Northwestern University with a degree in classical bass performance, Steve spent many years as a multi-style studio musician on both acoustic and electric bass in Chicago recording studios, while also playing with the leading contemporary classical chamber music group in the city, the University of Chicago's CCP. Playing regularly at the Jazz Showcase also gave him the opportunity to play with numerous jazz masters. In 1981, Steve joined the Pat Metheny Group, and would play with the PMG for 3 decades. Steve also started, in the early 80s, producing records for the PMG and many others, as well as working as a video editor for both PBS music specials and other music DVDs. In all, Steve has won 15 Grammy awards. Recently, Steve has been touring and recording with the international group The Impossible Gentlemen.
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