Thursday, March 10, 2011

Reaching the Audience: Jazz in the Digital Age

Saturday, 3/12, 1PM
Vail-Leavitt Music Hall, Riverhead
ADMISSION IS FREE
 
  For many listeners, experiencing Jazz from the outside has left them wondering what all the fuss is about. The goal of this series, sponsored by the East End Arts Council, is to shed new light on the subject of Jazz from the inside, and to reveal its role and relevance in our current times. Newcomers and experts alike are invited to enjoy these entertaining and informative discussions.
  
  “Reaching the Audience: Jazz in the Digital Age,” will be a three-speaker panel discussion at the Vail-Leavitt Music Hall in Riverhead on March 12 at 1PM. The featured speakers are Lara Pellegrinelli, NPR journalist and Princeton University Professor; Adam Schatz, concert promoter and founder of Search and Restore; and Ken Druker, General Manager, Jazz at Lincoln Center Media. Sharing thoughts on Jazz through the ages, and the impact of digital technology and social media on traditional and modern improvised music, this panel will be moderated by Vail-Leavitt president and Jazz educator Bob Barta.
 
  In particular, anyone interested in business or arts promotion will especially benefit from this Saturday's event.
 
Saturday, 3/12, 1PM
ADMISSION IS FREE

Thursday, February 24, 2011

Ellington, Jazz, the Opposites - and You!

How do the music of Duke Ellington and the philosophy of opposites fit in with anything relevant to American life in 2011? Getting inside the outside of jazz this Saturday, February 26, 1PM at the Southampton Cultural Center, our audience may be surprised by the direction of this discussion.




I first met Dr. Edward Green at my Manhattan School of Music graduate placement exam in 1991. At that time he encouraged me to become more familiar with my knowledge of early jazz music. Over the next couple of years I also got to know him as a professor of film scoring, whose encyclopedic familiarity with Ellington's music, as well as his philosophical viewpoints on the arts were impressive and thought-provoking.



The theory behind this series is to provide all participants with a deeper understanding of the inner workings of music, art and our life experience. Expect to be guided through a variety of pathways that may previously have seemed unrelated, yet will prove to reveal much about the way we perceive the world in which we live.

ELLINGTON, JAZZ, THE OPPOSITES - AND YOU!
Saturday, February 26, 1PM
Southampton Cultural Center. 25 Pond Lane Southampton, NY 11968
ADMISSION IS FREE.
Click here for DIRECTIONS

Tuesday, February 15, 2011

Giant Steps to Ascension


  Round one was a great success! Check out this review by Henry Powderly, as an example. Meanwhile, a follow up post with video and additional musical examples is coming soon!

  Save the date for our next discussion with Dr. Edward Green on Saturday, February 26, 1PM at Southampton Cultural Center. "Ellington, Jazz, the Opposites - and You!"

Monday, January 24, 2011

Inside the ‘Out’ Side of Jazz

By Steve Watson
Education Director, EEAC School of the Arts

  I didn’t really care for Jazz. Or maybe I just didn’t get it. Could be as simple as that, but the truth is that I suppose it just kind of sounded the same to me and tended to go on for a long time…

  Then someone taught me how to listen to Jelly-Roll Morton and Bill Evans; how the players each take turns with their own version of the song, and how the audience applauds after each solo. Then I started getting into it.

  Dubbed by Congress as a “National Treasure,” the public persona of Jazz may be that it’s out of the mainstream, and even out of the loop. But this year’s new series of panel discussions at the Long Island Winterfest aims to put that illusion to rest.

  Catering to the Jazz neophyte and aficionado alike, “Inside the ‘Out’ side of Jazz” is a three-event series of one-hour talks presented by the East End Arts Council at locations in Greenport, Southampton and Riverhead. Topics ranging from John Coltrane and Duke Ellington, to Social Media, Aesthetic Realism, YouTube and Kickstarter.com will orbit around the general theme of the ‘relevance’ of Jazz music in today’s world.

  The series launches at 1PM on Saturday, February 12 at Brecknock Hall in Greenport with Internationally renowned saxophonist David Liebman and author, scholar and pianist Dr. Lewis Porter. Hosted by trombonist Ray Anderson, these heavyweights will be discussing the recorded artistry of the great John Coltrane in “Trane’s Travels: Giant Steps to Ascension.” In addition, Dr. Porter and Mr. Liebman (who has performed and recorded with Miles Davis, Elvin Jones and Chick Corea, among others) will also demonstrate musical examples by performing them in the spectacular surroundings of Brecknock Hall’s Victorian mansion atmosphere.

  Dr. Edward Green is an award-winning composer and Fulbright Specialist in American Music.  Speaking on the value of the Aesthetic Realism method for the future of musicology, Dr. Green’s presentation will be held at the Southampton Cultural Center on February 26, at 1PM. This event, entitled “Ellington, Jazz, the Opposites - and You!” will examine the creative process and sociology of music as they relate to our everyday lives. Dr. Green will also be making use of recorded examples and his own demonstration at the piano.

  The third event, “Reaching the Audience: Jazz in the Digital Age,” will be a three-speaker panel discussion at the Vail-Leavitt Music Hall in Riverhead on March 12 at 1PM. The featured speakers are Lara Pellegrinelli, NPR journalist and Princeton University Professor; Adam Schatz, concert promoter and founder of Search and Restore; and Ken Druker, General Manager, Jazz at Lincoln Center Media. Sharing thoughts on Jazz through the ages, and the impact of digital technology and social media on traditional and modern improvised music, this panel will be moderated by Vail-Leavitt president and Jazz educator Bob Barta.

  For many listeners, experiencing Jazz from the outside has left them wondering what all the fuss is about. The goal of this series is to shed new light on the subject of Jazz from the inside, and to reveal its role and relevance in our current times. Newcomers and experts alike are invited to enjoy these entertaining and informative discussions.