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2014: The Year in Jazz


Lionel Ferbos
trumpetb.1911
Newport at 60
The Newport Jazz Festival, granddaddy of the music festival format, held its 60th anniversary edition August 1-3. It began July 17, 1954 at historic Newport Casino, now the International Tennis Hall of Fame, on the summer resort's stately Bellevue Avenue. Producer

George Wein
piano1925 - 2021
International Jazz Day, Take Three
The United Nations truly putting the stamp on jazz, several dozen of them in fact, when the third annual International Jazz Day was celebrated around the globe on April 30, 2014. UNESCO and the Thelonious Monk Institute of Jazz sponsor Jazz Day to "highlight jazz and its diplomatic role of uniting people in all corners of the globe." The 2014 edition featured 600 events in 196 countries, highlighted by major all-star events in Osaka, Japan. An outdoor evening concert at Osaka Castle Park drew 8,000 people. The United Nations Postal Administration issued three sheets of a dozen jazz-related postage stamps in U.S. dollars, Swiss francs and Euros.
What a run
Trumpeter

Lionel Ferbos
trumpetb.1911
Satire isn't always funny
Musicians and many jazz fans found nothing funny in satirical writings published in The New Yorker and Washington Post. The most furor involved a silly July 31 piece in which Django Gold, a senior writer for The Onion, let tenor saxophonist

Sonny Rollins
saxophoneb.1930
On record
LOTS OF BLUE: As part of its 75th anniversary celebration, Blue Note Records began releasing 100 remastered jazz albums from its classic and modern eras. The series launched on March 25, 2014 and will continue through October 2015. On March 25, the Grammy Museum in Los Angeles opened an exhibit called Blue Note Records: The Finest In Jazz, to give visitors an in-depth look at the record label. Blue Note also released Best of Blue Note ICON, a 2-CD collection of 22 tracks spanning the label's history. For Record Store Day in April, it reissued the label's first two releases as limited edition 12-inch vinyl:

Meade Lux Lewis
piano1905 - 1964

Albert Ammons
piano1907 - 1949
IMPULSE! IS BACK AGAIN: The Impulse! Records imprint, home of classic recordings by

John Coltrane
saxophone1926 - 1967

Pharoah Sanders
saxophone, tenor1940 - 2022

Gil Evans
composer / conductor1912 - 1988

Sonny Rollins
saxophoneb.1930

Henry Butler
piano1949 - 2018

Steven Bernstein
trumpetb.1961

Creed Taylor
producer1929 - 2022

McCoy Tyner
piano1938 - 2020

Michael Brecker
saxophone, tenor1949 - 2007

Diana Krall
piano and vocalsb.1964

Alice Coltrane
piano1937 - 2007
Awards and honors of note
NEA JAZZ MASTERS: Multi-instrumentalist and educator " data-original-title="" title="">Jamey Aebersold, saxophonist

Anthony Braxton
woodwindsb.1945

Richard Davis
bass, acoustic1930 - 2023

Keith Jarrett
pianob.1945

Carla Bley
piano1938 - 2023

George Coleman
saxophone, tenorb.1935

Charles Lloyd
saxophoneb.1938
GRAMMY AWARDS: Winners of jazz-related categories at the 2014 Grammy Awards included

Wayne Shorter
saxophone1933 - 2023

Gregory Porter
vocalsb.1971

Terri Lyne Carrington
drumsb.1965

Randy Brecker
trumpetb.1945

Gil Goldstein
piano
Bobby McFerrin
vocalsb.1950

Esperanza Spalding
bassb.1984

John Coltrane
saxophone1926 - 1967
Also,

Clare Fischer
piano1928 - 2012

Gordon Goodwin
composer / conductorb.1954

Gordon Goodwin's Big Phat Band
band / ensemble / orchestrab.1999

Maria Schneider
composer / conductor
Paquito D'Rivera
clarinetb.1948

Herb Alpert
trumpetb.1935

Snarky Puppy
band / ensemble / orchestra
Lalah Hathaway
vocalsLATIN GRAMMY TIE:

Chick Corea
piano1941 - 2021

Paquito D'Rivera
clarinetb.1948

Arturo O'Farrill
pianob.1960

Chico O'Farrill
composer / conductor1921 - 2001
JJA AWARDS: Winners of the 18th annual Jazz Awards presented by the Jazz Journalists Association included pianist and composer

Herbie Hancock
pianob.1940

Wayne Shorter
saxophone1933 - 2023

Cecile McLorin Salvant
vocalsb.1989
JJA winners in the Journalism and Media categories for work published or broadcast in the year 2013 included Jazz Times (print periodical of the year); allaboutjazz.com (Website of the year),

Ethan Iverson
pianob.1973

Gary Burton
vibraphoneb.1943

Dee Dee Bridgewater
vocalsb.1950

Marian McPartland
piano1918 - 2013
MONK TRUMPET COMPETITION: Chicago trumpeter

Marquis Hill
trumpetb.1987

Adam O'Farrill
trumpetb.1994

Arturo O'Farrill
pianob.1960

Chico O'Farrill
composer / conductor1921 - 2001

Billy Buss
trumpetSASSY AWARDS: Ashleigh Smith of Lewisville, Texas, won the third annual Sarah Vaughan International Jazz Vocal Competition on Nov. 16 at the New Jersey Performing Arts Center in Newark. Smith won a $5,000 cash award and the opportunity to record an album for Concord Records. The second-place winner was Shacara Rogers from Washington, D.C., and the third-place winner was

Sarah McKenzie
pianoGUGGENHEIM FELLOWS: Three members of the jazz community were among the 178 scholars, artists and scientists awarded prestigious Guggenheim Fellowships in 2014. They are saxophonist/composer

Steve Coleman
saxophone, altob.1956

Jamie Baum
flute
Elliott Sharp
guitar, electricb.1951
EMPOWERMENT FOR IMPACT AND ARTISTRY: Billionaire Doris Duke often was a low-key attendee at jazz events. More than 20 years after her passing, Duke's impact on jazz and other performing arts remains her legacy. The Doris Duke Charitable Foundation gave Doris Duke Artist Awards of $275,000 to six jazz musicians:

Oliver Lake
saxophoneb.1942

Steve Lehman
saxophone, alto
Roscoe Mitchell
saxophoneb.1940

Zeena Parkins
harp
Craig Taborn
pianob.1970

Randy Weston
piano1926 - 2018

Muhal Richard Abrams
piano1930 - 2017

Ambrose Akinmusire
trumpetb.1982

Steve Coleman
saxophone, altob.1956

Ben Monder
guitarb.1962

Aruán Ortiz
pianob.1973

Matana Roberts
saxophone, alto
Jen Shyu
vocalsb.1978
MACARTHUR FELLOW: Saxophonist and composer

Steve Coleman
saxophone, altob.1956
HALL OF FAMERS:

Betty Carter
vocals1929 - 1998

Fletcher Henderson
arranger1897 - 1952

Elvin Jones
drums1927 - 2004

Wes Montgomery
guitar1923 - 1968
WALL OF FAMERS: The American Society of Composers, Authors & Publishers added five music greats to the its ASCAP Jazz Wall of Fame in June. They were

Kenny Burrell
guitar, electricb.1931

Dick Hyman
pianob.1927

Helen Merrill
vocalsb.1929

Bessie Smith
vocals1894 - 1937

Juan Tizol
trombone1900 - 1984

Gregory Porter
vocalsb.1971
A JAZZ FEATHER IN HIS CAP: Longtime Michigan Congressman John Conyers was honored for his public and legislative advocacy of jazz with ASCAP's first Jazz Advocate Award.
TRIBUTES TO LATE GREATS:

Professor Longhair
piano1918 - 1980
In New York City, West 77th Street between Riverside Drive and West End Avenue was renamed

Miles Davis
trumpet1926 - 1991

Les Paul
guitar, electric1915 - 2009
Late saxophonist, composer and bandleader Sir

John Dankworth
saxophone1927 - 2010

Cleo Laine
vocals1927 - 2025
Jazz venues, ups and downs
NEW PIANO ROOMS: The Big Apple welcomed two new jazz piano rooms in 2014: Mezzrow was opened in Greenwich Village in September by the management of Smalls jazz club, which is located next door. Jazzhaus opened in November within Klavierhaus in LeParker Meridien Hotel in midtown Manhattan. Their respective opening night performers were

Johnny O'Neal
pianob.1956

Benito Gonzalez
pianob.1975

Pedrito Martinez
percussionST. LOUIS: Jazz St. Louis opened a new $10 million performance and education center Oct. 2 with a performance by

Wynton Marsalis
trumpetb.1961

Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra with Wynton Marsalis
band / ensemble / orchestrab.1987
NEW ORLEANS: The New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Foundation opened its $9 million new education and 200-seat performance facility, the George and Joyce Wein Jazz & Heritage Center, in December. It will serve as the permanent home of foundation's Don "Moose" Jamison Heritage School of Music, a free program for young musicians founded 14 years ago. Yamaha donated nine full drum sets to the facility. On a similar front, the New Orleans Jazz Orchestra broke ground last February for The New Orleans Jazz Market, which will open in the spring of 2015 as a 600-seat performing arts venue, New Orleans jazz archive and office space.
SAN FRANCISCO: Developer Michael Johnson and a new ownership group bought Yoshi's San Francisco, changing its name (to The Addition) and its menu, but kept its wide range of musical styles, including jazz, folk and blues.
BERLIN: The K?penick Blues & Jazz Festival "Jazz in Town" summer concert series ended after 18 yearswith no 2014 edition. It was one of many local events shelved due to extensive construction work on its backdrop, Berlin's 100-year-old neo-Gothic K?penick Town Hall.
OutBeat festival debuts
Described by its promoters as "America's first queer jazz festival," OutBeat was held over four days in September in Philadelphia. The William Way LGBT Community Center sponsored the event with support from the Pew Center for Arts & Heritage. Headliners included

Andy Bey
piano1939 - 2025

Fred Hersch
pianob.1955

Patricia Barber
pianob.1955

Terri Lyne Carrington
drumsb.1965

Dena DeRose
piano and vocalsb.1966

Bill Stewart
drumsb.1966
JALC-Juilliard education link strengthened
Trumpeter

Wynton Marsalis
trumpetb.1961
Crime Logs
New Orleans bassist Doug Potter, best known for his work in the bands of Steamboat Willie and Al Hirt, continues his recovery from a savage beating on a French Quarter sidewalk after a late-night gig at Café Beignet on January 21, 2014. Potter was placed in a medically induced coma to help his recovery from a severe brain injury. Local musicians rallied to raise funds to defray Potter's medical and rehabilitation expenses. Two men were arrested for the crime.
Detroit's jazz godfather,

Marcus Belgrave
trumpet1936 - 2015
A bronze statue of Canadian jazz icon

Oscar Peterson
piano1925 - 2007
Grammy-winning trumpeter

Roy Hargrove
trumpet1969 - 2018
Retirement bluesfor us
Harmonica player

Toots Thielemans
harmonica1922 - 2016

Pete Fountain
clarinet1930 - 2016
On the legal front...
The estate of the late B-3 organist

Jimmy Smith
organ, Hammond B31925 - 2005
Pianist

Eric Reed
pianob.1970

Willie Jones III
drumsb.1968
Pianist

Cecil Taylor
piano1929 - 2018
Jazz off Broadway
The U.S. premiere of the musical Café Society Swing opened December16 at New York's 59E59 Theater for a limited engagement ending January 4, 2015. The show traces the demise of the 1940s Greenwich Village jazz venue that featured

Billie Holiday
vocals1915 - 1959

Lena Horne
vocals1917 - 2010

Sarah Vaughan
vocals1924 - 1990

Count Basie
piano1904 - 1984

Allan Harris
vocals
Charenee Wade
vocals
Alex Webb
pianoJazz on film
Academy-Award nominated actor Don Cheadle used a crowdfunding initiative to raise additional production funds forand interest inhis

Miles Davis
trumpet1926 - 1991
Hyatt Hotels heir Dan Pritzker resumed production on his self-financed, long-in-the-making biopic about New Orleans jazz pioneer

Buddy Bolden
cornet1877 - 1931

Wynton Marsalis
trumpetb.1961
Rapper, actress and talk show host Queen Latifah will star in and is an executive producer of a

Bessie Smith
vocals1894 - 1937
On the air
NPR Music, Jazz at Lincoln Center and radio station WBGO announced in October the startup of "Jazz Night in America," which they called "the next generation of jazz programming in public radio." The new weekly program began airing on more than 100 stations nationwide, hosted by bassist

Christian McBride
bassb.1972
Investing in jazz
Jazz at Lincoln Center received a $20 million gift from Robert J. Appel, the organization's Chairman of the Board, to benefit the organization's performance, education and broadcasting efforts. It was described as the largest single private philanthropic contribution in support of jazz.
A Love Supreme is golden
A tenor saxophone owned by

John Coltrane
saxophone1926 - 1967

Ravi Coltrane
saxophone, tenorb.1965
The case of the bass
A double bass that belonged to the late

Scott LaFaro
bass1936 - 1961

Bill Evans
piano1929 - 1980
eau de Ra x 2
How do you celebrate a jazz musician's centennial? For the late Sun Ra, the 100th anniversary of his birth last May saw the release of two celebrity-branded perfumes. The Norton Records label marketed Saturnia, which "transport[s] you out of the doom and into orbit as you ponder THIS PLANET IS DOOMED" with the aphrodisiac smell of "Neroil distillate of bitter orange blossoms," and the more demure Prophetika, which "invokes a mirage of memories and mysteries and incites a call to action." Prophetika is also the name of a Norton Records book imprint's three-volume release of the avant-garde bandleader's poetry and prose.
Hang out near greatness forever
Woodlawn Cemetery in the Bronx announced the addition of 2,275 new burial plots near its famed "Jazz Corner." The section is the final resting place for

Miles Davis
trumpet1926 - 1991

Duke Ellington
piano1899 - 1974

Max Roach
drums1925 - 2007

Celia Cruz
vocals1925 - 2003

Lionel Hampton
vibraphone1908 - 2002

Coleman Hawkins
saxophone, tenor1904 - 1969

Jackie McLean
saxophone, alto1932 - 2006
Final Bars
The jazz world lost seven of its NEA Jazz Masters during 2014, and a considerable number of other singers, players and industry figures. The NEA Jazz Masters who passed away were clarinetist

Buddy DeFranco
clarinet1923 - 2014

Charlie Haden
bass, acoustic1937 - 2014

Jimmy Scott
vocals1925 - 2014

Horace Silver
piano1928 - 2014

Joe Wilder
trumpet1922 - 2014

Gerald Wilson
composer / conductor1918 - 2014
Accordionist Ollie Viljoen; accordionist, pianist, composer and educator Evan Harlan.
Actor, drummer, pianist and singer Mickey Rooney.
Arranger, conductor, orchestra leader and songwriter Glenn Osser; arranger and saxophonist Eddie Quarless.
Bandleader and educator Bruce Cook.
Banjoist Mac Reynolds; banjoist and guitarist Brian Herbert; banjoist, clarinetist, singer and writer Kerry Ashmore.
Bassists Jean-Jacques Avenel, Glenn Cornick, Niels Foss, Bob Frettlohr, Rob Langereis, Lou Mauro, Steve McManus, Joe Mudele, Fred Natkin, Eddie "Guagua" Rivera, Bernie Upson, Rozzano Zamorano; bassist, composer, bandleader, educator and NEA Jazz Master Charlie Haden; bassists and singers Jack Bruce, Jano Buchem, Hal Champeness, Johnny Gus (John Gustafson), Ernie Williford; bassist, composer, singer, producer and bandleader Juan Formell; bassist, broadcaster and writer Maceo Wyro; bassist, composer, arranger, bandleader and educator Miljenko Prohaska; bassist, composer, educator, writer and historian Misa Blam; bassist, bandleader, composer and photographer Bill Sinegal; bassist and sculptor David Holgate; bassists, composers, producers and educators Richard Evans, Chris White; bassist and saxophonist Buddy Catlett; bassist and musicians' union official Augustin Moniania Wren.
Clarinetist and NEA Jazz Master Buddy DeFranco; clarinetist and bandleader Acker Bilk, clarinetists and saxophonists Frank "Doc" Adams, Sam Armato, Teddy Ehrenreich, Liston Johnson, Jean Kesteman, Aaron Sachs; clarinetist, composer, arranger, orchestra leader and big band authority Norman Leyden.
Composers Antoine Duhamel, Mitch Leigh, Ela O'Farrill, Patric Standford; composer, arranger and multi-instrumentalist Roby Seidel; composer and bassist Tomislav Simovi?; composers and pianists Lee Hyla, Riz Ortolani; composer, arranger and singer Johnny Mann; composer, arranger and educator Fred Sturm; composer, arranger, producer and guitarist Dave Appell.
Drummers Yacub Addy, Ray Barker, Ronnie Bedford, Dick Berk, Barbu Calinescu, Bobbie Clarke, Richard Crooks, Frankie Dunlop, Paul Ferrara, Al Harewood, James "Blessed Drums" Knowles, Tony Liégeois, Andras Moháy, Idris Muhammad, Mike Murphy, Derek Rieth, Greg Sergo, Jacques Thollot; drummers and educators Ralph Penland, Sam Ulano, Bill Watson; drummer and musicians union executive Joe MacDonald; drummers and producers Bobby Gregg, Stefan Krachten, Bobby Schmidt; drummer, producer and radio host Bud Spangler; drummer and bandleader Foxxy Fatts; drummer, bandleader and impresario Kurt Müller; drummer, composer and artist Luke Lindenmaier; drummer and jazz festival co-founder Beto Garcia; drummer, writer and educator Chuck Silverman; drummer, discographer and Benny Goodman expert Russ Connor; drummer and vibraphonist Joe Locatelli.
Electronics player, composer, educator and music software researcher David Wessel.
Flutist and clarinetist Kenneth Schmidt; flutist, saxophonist, composer and New Age music pioneer Paul Horn; flutist, musicologist, composer, conductor, educator and writer Salah El Mehdi (Zérieb); flutist, jazz impresario, broadcaster and writer James Galway.
Guitarists Franny Beecher, Gabe Bianchini, Bruce Brucato, Paco de Lucía, Manitas de Plata, Désiré Gadeau, Brian Griffith, Ronny Jordan, David Moodie, Carlos Emilio Morales, Bobby Redfield, Lulu Reinhardt, Sonny Richter, Unge Schmidt, Paolo Schroeber, Frédéric Sylvestre, Darryl Thompson, Antonin Viktora, Paul Wingo; guitarist and cellist Pierre Cullaz; guitarist and composer André Condouant; guitarists and singers Sam Coenegrachts, Kip Meaker, Daniel Segère, Beloyd Taylor, David Winters; guitarists and educators Gary Benson, André Bush, Phillippe D'Huy, Jeff Friedman, Mimi Lorenzini, Chris Mello, Jeff Ray; guitarist and banjoist Arthur Smith; guitarist, singer, composer, arranger, educator and bandleader Vladimir "Nanka" Szomański; guitarist, songwriter, record producer and banker Don Davis.
Harmonica players and educators Art Ferguson, Gustavo Lezcano.
Harpist Catherine Gotthoffer.
Mandolin player U. Srinivas (aka Mandolin Srinivas).
Multi-instrumentalist, producer and educator Billy Adair; multi-instrumentalist and educator Yvonne Busch; multi-instrumentalist and big band leader Johnny Lewis; multi-instrumentalists and writers Jack Massarik, John Postgate; multi-instrumentalist, bandleader and singer Val Eddy.
Organists Lincoln Berry, Cherry Wainer.
Percussionists Stan Barrett, Milton Cardona, Willie "El Ruso" Everich, Martin Grupp, David "La Mole" Ortiz, Armando Peraza, Luis Santiago; percussionist, bandleader and dancer Paul Hawkins; cajon player Rafael Santa Cruz; percussionist and music publisher Brian Innes; timbales player Pat Rodriguez.
Pianists Joe Bonner,Hal Buice, Ray DeForest, King Fleming, Eric Fontes, Tommy Gill, Friggi Hoffmann, Eddy Loozen, Pat Matshikiza, Roland Meighan, Frankie Randall, Janice Scroggins, Stephanie Stone, Frank Strazzeri, Jan Strinnholm, Frank Vincent, Forrest Westbrook, George Ziskind; pianist, bandleader, composer and NEA Jazz Master Horace Silver; pianists and composers Frank Dominguez, Kenny Drew Jr., Giorgio Gaslini, Patrick Gowers, Fred Kaz, Naoya Matsuoka, Enrique Nery, Konstantin Orbelian, Joe Sample, Davide Santorsola, Renato Sellani, Petr Skoumal, Erik van der Wurff, Thilo von Westernhagen, Terry Whitney; pianists and arrangers Johnny Allen, Brian Lemon, Al Lerner; pianists, composers and arrangers Bruno Aragosti, Powhatan "Brad" Bradbie; pianist, composer, arranger and singer Coco Fernández; pianist, drummer and educator Frank Ficarra; pianist and union executive Ray Petch; pianist, author, educator and broadcaster Trebor Tichenor; pianist and singer Patti Wicks; pianist, jazz festival organizer and newspaper publisher Tony Biggs; pianist, broadcaster, educator and writer Fritz Herdi; pianist, bandleader and broadcaster Jim Manard; pianists and educators Jay Flippin, Mark Flugge. Eric Prud'homme; bishop, author and pianist Guy Gaucher; pianists, composers and educators Jan Jarczyk, Ray Santisi; pianist, trumpeter and poet Frank Miller; pianist, organist and composer Bernd K?ppen.
Saxophonists Waymon "Punchy" Atkinson, Al Belletto, Alexis Berranger, Benjamin Brea, Everett Carroll, Will Connell, Dick Dale, Olav Dale, Ray Downey, Arthur Doyle, Jim Galloway, Johnnie Gray, Tim Green, George Harper Jr., Klaus Kreuzeder, Samuel Leon (Sammy Sax), Des Lumsdon, Robert Moore, Raphael Ravenscroft, Kathy Stobart, Gene Walker, Henry Warner; saxophonists, flutists, clarinetists, composers and educators Jim Allard, Stu Buchanan; saxophonist and clarinetist Vic Ash; saxophonist and flutist Horace Washington; actor, comedian and saxophonist Sid Caesar; saxophonist and conceptual artist Terry Adkins; saxophonist, actor and screenwriter Med Flory; saxophonists and educators Buster Alston, Jacky Azéma, Simon D'souza, Peter Massink, Michael Schl?per, José Théresè; saxophonist, painter and poet Alan Davie; saxophonist, composer, bandleader, writer and activist Fred Ho; saxophonist, author and educator George Yoshida; saxophonists, bandleaders and educators Omar Lamparter, Mike Stewart; saxophonist and bassoonist Dave Kurtzer; saxophonist and percussionist Gilles Laheurte; saxophonist, pianist, composer and educator Daniel Jackson; saxophonist, clarinetist and songwriter Johnny Rotella; saxophonist, composer, arranger and bandleader Alvy West.
Singers Jimmy Armstrong, Alice Babs, Erick Bamy, Claire Barry, Jackie Cain, Ruby Carter, Lulu Dikana, Cheo Feliciano, Tim Hauser, Gina Hill, Dionne Jeroue, Brita Koivunen, Erzsi Kovács, Maria Luisa Landin, Rufus McKay, Peggy Morgan, Frances Nero, Tom Passamonte (Tom Monte), Mary Ellen Tanner, Jerry Vale, George Winfield; singer and NEA Jazz Master Jimmy Scott; singer and actor Elaine Stritch; singers and guitarists Ralf Bendix, Luke Rachwalski, Pepe Vásquez; singer, jazz club owner and actor Herb Jeffries; singer, actor, cellist, guitarist and trumpeter Fred Bertelmann; singer and journalist Renee Doruyter; singers, songwriters and guitarists Raúl Carnota, Santiago Feliu; singer-songwriter Melissa Mann; singer, songwriter, saxophonist and record producer Ray Kennedy; singer and composer Muhidin Thunder (Muhidin Maalim Gurumo); singer, beader, lecturer and Golden Star Hunters Mardi Indian Tribe Big Chief Larry Bannock; actor, comedian and singer Robin Williams; singer, composer and educator Christian Le Mounier; singer, broadcaster and educator Kerrie Biddell; singer and educator Andrew Alexander; singer, bandleader, composer, arranger and producer Augie Johnson; singer, drummer, guitarist and painter Georges Lecler; singer pianist and educator Alicia Cunningham.
Trombonists André Paquinet, George Roberts, Frank Vaccaro; trombonist, composer, arranger and conductor Bill Motzing; trombonist and record producer Wayne Henderson; trombonist and pianist Walter Terharen; trombonist and tuba player Alain Palizeul.
Trumpeters Roy Campbell Jr., Spanky Davis, Billy Edwards, Lionel Ferbos, Max Herman, Allen Houser, Warren "Porgy" Jones, Joe Loria, Michael Manthey, Lloyd Michels, Al Neese, Simo Salminen, Igor Shirokov, Nisse Skoog, Manfred Stapput, Andrey Tovmasyan, Cliff Wilson; trumpeter and NEA Jazz Master Joe Wilder; trumpeter, bandleader, composer, arranger, educator and NEA Jazz Master Gerald Wilson; trumpeter, composer and bandleader Kenny Wheeler; trumpeter, composer, arranger, singer, bandleader and producer Tony Pabon; trumpeter, arranger and educator Guy Longnon; trumpeter, composer and writer Heinz Schachtner; trumpeter, composer and music director and producer Gil Askey; trumpeter, composer and arranger Naohiro Iwai; trumpeters and educators John Haynie. Pierre Lessard, Charles Moore; trumpeter, violinist and bandleader Alfons Rogg; trumpeter and jazz festival founder Phil Mason; trumpeter, big band manager, educator and record store owner Chris Wilson; trumpeter, bandleader, jazz festival namesake and jazz society executive Sid Kyler; trumpeter, bandleader and educator Paisan Mallet; trumpeter and bandleader Allen Houser; trumpeter and pianist Ed Farley; trumpeter and Hot Club Leipzig co-founder Kurt "Hot-Geyer" Michaelis.
Vibes players Sir John Jeffrey, Rupert Stamm.
Violinists and educators Keith Alsop, Cliff Brunzell; violinist, composer, producer and educator John Blake Jr.
Educator and bandleader Jeff Peronto.
Film and music producer Saul Zaentz; documentary filmmaker Robert Drew.
Jazz poet John Alberts; poet Maya Angelou.
Tap dancers Bunny Briggs, Will Gaines; mambo dancer Augie Rodriguez.
Record producers Steve Backer, Alan Douglas, Herman Lubinsky, John McClure, Richard McDonnell; producer and manager Russ Nichols; producer, manager and record label owner Bill Traut; record company executive, producer and trumpeter Henry Stone; Mercury Records co-founder Irwin Steinberg; club owners Paul Colby, Pete Douglas, Jean-Claude Rayne, Lennie Sogoloff; club promoter and tour manager Eric Scriven; club owner, artist manager, concert producer and record producer Jeff Kruger; cultural center organizer and painter Horst Dietrich; club manager Dennis Hewitt; recording studio owner and sound engineer Cosimo Matassa; artist manager and concert producer Buck Spurr; artist manager and producer Martha Glaser. Newport Jazz Festival publicist and concert producer Charlie Bourgeois; Newport Festivals Foundation executive director Herb Chesbrough; artists' manager Izumi Uchida; jazz festival organizers Charles Camara, Mike Howes, Al Johnson; concert producer and flutist Rick Gee; business manager, lyricist and educator Iola Brubeck (wife of Dave Brubeck); entertainment lawyer and drummer Alan S. Bergman; music promoter Terry Eastwood; entertainment lawyer Val Scheurich; jazz festival director and instrument maker Christian Nogaro; club manager, publicist, tour manager and writer John Gee; record store owner Pete Russell; festival director, trombonist, musicologist and editor Armin K?hler; Jazz at Lincoln Center board member and pianist Alan Cohn; promoter and concert organizer Barry Storey.
Broadcasters Ginny Coleman, Doug Gruber, Leigh Kamman, LJ Palardy, Reiner Schwarz, Bill Thissen, Leah Tourkow, China Valles, Don Voltmer; broadcaster, educator, producer and writer Herb Wong; broadcaster and writer Bob Tkacz; broadcaster and jazz festival executive Don Lahey; broadcaster and record store owner Jim Russell; broadcaster, writer and trombonist Sheila Tracy.
Photographers Charlotte Brooks, Chuck Gee, David Redfern, Phil Stern; photographer, writer, researcher and pianist Duncan Schiedt.
Writers Jack Berry, Laurent Leblond, Jack McNamara, José Domingos Raffaelli, Michael Rieth, Manfred Sack, Gottfried Schalow; writers and broadcasters Stan Britt, Javier de Cambra, Masood Hasan; writer, poet, playwright and lecturer Amiri Baraka; writer and photographer Tony Gieske; musicologist and educator Joseph Kerman; writer and historian Ralph Matthews Jr.; writer, producer and promoter Teruto Soejima; writer and multi-instrumentalist Jack Massarik; writer and producer Zane Knauss.
Artist Bruce Brice.
Blues and gospel artists and industry executives Alberta Adams, Bud Andrews, Gwen Avery, Roger Wyndham Barnes, Mark Burgess, Mickey Champion, Nick Charles, Jessica Cleaves, Michael Coleman, Melvin Crispell, Bambi Fossati, James Govan, Hal Henry, Teenie Hodges, Linda Hornbuckle, Melvin Jackson, Alvin Jett, Barbara Jones, Peter Kaberere, Bobby Keys, James Kinds, Jerry LaCroix, Lee McBee, Dennis McCarthy, Roger Pomphrey, Duffy Power, Wendy Rene, Linda Rodney, George Shuffler, Joe Silva, Jeff Strahan, Tabby Thomas, Geraldine Washington, Little Joe Washington, Johnny Winter, Bobby Womack.
Tags
Best of / Year End
Ken Franckling
New Orleans
Lionel Ferbos
George Wein
Sonny Rollins
Meade "Lux" Lewis
Albert Ammons
John Coltrane
Pharoah Sanders
Gil Evans
Henry Butler
Steven Bernstein
Creed Taylor
McCoy Tyner
Michael Brecker
Diana Krall
Alice Coltrane
Jamey Aebersold
anthony braxton
Richard Davis
Keith Jarrett
carla bley
George Coleman
charles lloyd
Chicago
Wayne Shorter
Gregory Porter
Terri Lyne Carrington
randy brecker
W?odek Pawlik
Gil Goldstein
Bobby McFerrin
Esperanza Spalding
Clare Fischer
Gordon Goodwin
Gordon Goodwin's Big Phat Band
Maria Schneider
Paquito D'Rivera
Trio Corrente
Herb Alpert
Snarky Puppy
Lalah Hathaway
Chick Corea
Arturo O'Farrill
Chico O'Farrill
Herbie Hancock
Cecile McLorin Salvant
Ethan Iverson
Gary Burton
Dee Dee Bridgewater
Marian McPartland
Marquis Hill
Adam O'Farrill
Billy Buss
Sarah McKenzie
Steve Coleman
Jamie Baum
Elliott Sharp
Oliver Lake
Steve Lehman
Roscoe Mitchell
Zeena Parkins
Craig Taborn
Randy Weston
Muhal Richard Abrams
ambrose akinmusire
Ben Monder
Aruan Ortiz
Matana Roberts
Jen Shyu
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