 Phil Palombi and Keith Hall with the Curtis Stigers Quartet, IAJE 2006 © Andrea Canter
Where at one time can you
find nearly 8,000 jazz performers, educators, journalists,
photographers, producers, promoters, students and serious fans
outside of the world’s largest jazz festivals? At the International
Association of Jazz Educators’ 34th Annual Conference!
The 2007 event will be held on the same site as the 2006 conference,
right in the heart of midtown Manhattan at the New York
Hilton/Sheraton New York, January 10-13. Over 200 concerts, panels
and workshops are scheduled.
The world’s largest
conference in the name of jazz draws individuals and ensembles from
45 nations for four days of performances, clinics, demonstrations,
panel discussions, artist and industry exhibits, research
presentations, award ceremonies, interviews, and informal networking.
And that’s just what takes place within the convention centers.
Outside of the hotels, area jazz clubs typically schedule special
shows, taking advantage of the surge of jazz-bent tourists and the
congregation of the world’s top artists. Notes IAJE Executive
Director Bill McFarlin, “The IAJE Conference
always takes on a special energy when we meet in New York. It’s
exciting to see the city, already credited as the epicenter of the
jazz universe, explode with thousands of jazz professionals and
educators, many of whom can be found patronizing New York’s jazz
clubs and live music venues throughout the week.”
 Nancy Wilson © Charles Bush
Highlights
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Pre-conference
(Wednesday afternoon): “Envisioning
the Future of Jazz” kicks off the conference with an interactive
program
that considers the necessary tools for success in jazz education,
business and performance, and how IAJE can support members toward these
goals. A special performance from the LaGuardia High School Jazz Combo
follows.
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7th
Annual IAJE Gala Dinner (Wednesday evening): Hosted by Nancy
Wilson, the annual Gala will honor Past IAJE President David Baker with
the Lawrence Berk Leadership Award, while French composer Michel
Legrand will receive the 2007 IAJE President’s Award. This ticketed
event is a fund raiser for the IAJE Campaign for Jazz, a landmark $12
million dollar initiative.
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NEA
Jazz Masters Concert (Friday evening). All attendees are
invited to the annual National Endowment for the Arts Jazz Masters
Awards Concert. Since 1982, the Arts Endowment has recognized 87 living
legends for their major contributions to jazz. In addition to the
highest honor in the field, each NEA Jazz Master receives a $25,000
honorarium and special recognition from the White House. The seven new
NEA Masters to be honored this year include bandleader Toshiko
Akiyoshi; trombonist Curtis Fuller; pianist Ramsey Lewis; vocalist
Jimmy Scott; flutist Frank Wess; and alto saxophonist Phil Woods. In
addition, writer/historian Dan Morgenstern will receive the A.B.
Spellman NEA Jazz Masters Award for Jazz Advocacy. The awards concert
will feature The Dizzy Gillespie All Star Band (directed by Slide
Hampton) and the Clayton Brothers Quintet.
 NEA Jazz Master, Toshiko Akiyoshi
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Special
focus—France. Each IAJE includes a special regional focus, and
this year a series of presentations and performances will highlight the
music of France. Said IAJE President Chuck Owen, “We are honored to
welcome French Ambassador to the United States, Jean David Levitte,
who, along with Michel Legrand, will host an evening of French jazz on
Saturday, January 13 featuring the Richard Galliano Trio and the French
Elite All Stars: violinist Didier Lockwood, guitarist Sylvain Luc,
harmonica player Olivier Ker Ourio, bassist Remi Vignolo and drummer
Stephane Huchard. During the concert, special recognition will be given
to the French government for their response to the New Orleans musician
community following Hurricane Katrina.” Other French artists performing
at IAJE include Mina Agossi, Anne Ducros, Orchestre National de Jazz
(ONJ) with Louis Winsberg, and Pierrick Pedron.
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The IJFO International Jazz
Award for New
Talent. Each year, emerging talent is recognized by the
International Jazz Festivals Organization in collaboration with IAJE.
The 2007 award will be presented to Norwegian trumpeter and band
leader, Mathias Eick. As a catalyst for the recipient’s career, the
award includes a fully-funded international tour.
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Jazz Educators Awards.
IAJE is of course
all about jazz education, and several awards to esteemed educators will
be presented: the IAJE Jazz Education Hall of Fame Award to the late
pianist and composer Frank Mantooth; IAJE Humanitarian Award to Sheila
Jordan; second annual IAJE Jazz Ambassador Award to the executive
director of IAJE Canada, Brent Campbell;the inaugural Jazz Educator of
the Year award, named in memory of jazz education pioneer John LaPorta
and underwritten in part by Berklee College of Music, to Milton Academy
Director of Jazz, Bob Sinicrope.
 NEA Master, Phil Woods
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Jazz Alliance
International Industry Track. This popular series of panels
and workshops addresses career development, new
media, the recording industry, journalism, retail, performance and
radio. Sponsored by JazzTimes, Jazziz, Down Beat, JazzWeek,
NARAS, the Jazz Journalists
Association, Billboard
Magazine, and
DL Media, this year’s track features one-on-one interviews with Ornette
Coleman (interviewed by Greg Osby), Joe Lovano, Eddie Palmieri and NEA
Jazz Masters Hank Jones, Phil Woods and Randy Weston; Down Beat’s
Dan Ouilette will conduct his “Blindfold Test” with bassist Ron Carter.
Host radio stations WBGO Jazz 88 FM and XM Satellite Radio will
broadcast daily from the Hilton. Another feature this year is the IAJE
Health Fair, free to participants to check blood pressure and lung
capacity, as well as diabetes and cholesterol screening.
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African
American Jazz Caucus. A special strand of sessions sponsored by
the AAJC includes a student all-star big band performance, tributes to
recently passed musicians, dance, panel discussions, and business
meeting.
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Commissions
performances. The 2007 IAJE will include premiere
performances of commissions by 2006 IAJE Gil
Evans Fellowship recipient Sherrisse Rogers, 2006 ASCAP/IAJE Commission
Established Composer Rufus Reid and Emerging Composer Oscar Perez; and
by 2006 SOCAN/IAJE Commission Established Composer Ian McDougall and
Emerging Composer Michael McClennen.
Clinics
and Workshops  IAJE Clinic with Cuong Vu's Quintet, 2006 © Andea Canter
Jazz
Education is of course the focus of IAJE, and throughout the
Convention, musicians (and nonmusicians!) will find a smorgasbord of
clinics, demonstrations and workshops geared to both performance and
instruction. A teacher training track is geared to school and college
instructors, while clinicians include a Who’s Who of jazz artists
and educators, including Kenny Werner, Matt Wilson, George Colligan,
Jerry Bergonzi, Peter Erskine, and more. Note that jazz educators can
earn graduate credits for sessions through the University of Miami
(see IAJE website for more information).
Performances
Of course one of the
perks
for attending the IAJE Convention is the opportunity to hear nearly
nonstop music by performers ranging from high school and college lab
bands to legendary soloists and ensembles. Among the student
performers this year are the 2007 Sisters in
Jazz Collegiate All-Stars, the 2007 Clifford Brown/Stan Getz
Fellowship All-Stars, the 2007 Community College All-Star Student Big
Band, 2007 AAJC/HBCU Student All-Star Big Band, and the winners of
the 2006 Montreux Jazz Festival competition. Esteemed artists and
ensembles performing this year include: Avishai Cohen; Charles
Tolliver Big Band; Charlie Haden and the Liberation Music Orchestra;
David Liebman Group; Henry Mancini Institute Big Band; Ingrid Jensen;
JoAnne Brackeen Quartet; Joey DeFrancesco Trio featuring Ron Blake;
John Patitucci Trio; Kate McGarry Trio; Kevin Hays Trio; Luis Perdomo
Trio; Doc Severinsen; Marcus Strickland/“Twi-Life” Group; Matt
Wilson’s Arts and Crafts; One For All; The Randy Brecker/Bill Evans
Soulbop Band; Sara Gazarek; Sean Jones Quintet; The United States Air
Force Academy Band Falconaires; Will Calhoun and the “Native Lands
Experience”; Double Image with Dave Samuels and David Friedman;
Marcus Miller; and the Taylor Eigsti Quartet featuring Julian Lage.
Also scheduled is a 30th anniversary performance of Mike Manieri and
Steps Ahead with very special guests.
Registration
and Conference Information
The
final conference brochure and registration information are available
on the IAJE website at www.iaje.org.
Advance registration fee is available only through December 15th!
Come to New York and participate in the world’s largest and most
dynamic gathering of jazz artists, educators and enthusiasts during
the conference, January 10-13. And while you’re in the Big Apple,
take advantage of multiple performance options throughout the city.
It’s the conference that never sleeps!
Future
IAJE conferences are scheduled for Toronto, Seattle and New Orleans.
It might be a while before IAJE returns to New York, so don’t miss
the 2007 event! |