http://www.freep.com/story/entertainment/music/2016/04/19/jazz-fest-announces-more-headliners/83154286/" rel="nofollow - http://www.freep.com/story/entertainment/music/2016/04/19/jazz-fest-announces-more-headliners/83154286/ A made-in-Detroit theme defines the slate of additional
headliners announced Tuesday by organizers of the 2016 at Detroit Jazz
Festival. The musicians and events that will honor Detroit’s jazz legacy at this year's annual Labor Day weekend festival include: - A homecoming band co-led by Detroit-born heroes Kirk Lightsey on piano and Louis Hayes on drums.
- Performances
designed to highlight the contributions of the late pianist-composer
Kenn Cox and late trumpeter-composer Charles Moore.
- A celebration
of the music of the influential Pontiac-born composer-arranger Thad
Jones built around a rare appearance by the New York-based Vanguard Jazz
Orchestra, which was founded 50 years ago as the Thad Jones-Mel Lewis
Orchestra.
- An appearance by former Detroiter Charlie Gabriel,
a clarinetist and saxophonist born in New Orleans but who spent decades
in Detroit and in recent years has been touring with the Preservation
Hall Jazz Band.
Other newly announced acts include
pianist Stanley Cowell’s Quintet featuring trumpeter Charles Tolliver
and tenor saxophonist Billy Harper, the Herlin Riley Quintet and the
John Abercrombie Organ Trio. The 37th annual Detroit Jazz Festival
will be held Sept. 2-5 in downtown Detroit. Featuring some 70 national,
local and student groups, the event remains the largest
free-of-charge jazz festival in the world. The legendary Detroit-bred
bassist Ron Carter was previously announced as the 2016
artist-in-residence of the 2016 festival. Carter, the most widely
recorded bassist in jazz history and best known for his landmark tenure
with Miles Davis in the 1960s, will perform four times during the
weekend — with a trio, quartet, nonet and big band. http://www.freep.com/story/entertainment/2016/02/29/ron-carter-detroit-jazz-fest/81009486/" rel="nofollow"> DETROIT FREE PRESS Ron Carter named Detroit Jazz Fest artist-in-residence The
festival has always made it point to honor Detroit’s jazz heritage, but
Carter's position at the top of the bill combined with Tuesday’s newly
announced acts gives the 2016 event an extra pop of Motor
City soul. Like Carter, Kirk Lightsey and Louis Hayes represent the
migration of top local talent to the national scene in the 1950s and
‘60s. Thad Jones, who died in 1986, was one of three
Pontiac-raised brothers who became jazz immortals — the others were
Hank, an elegant pianist, and Elvin, a revolutionary drummer. Thad Jones
joined the Count Basie band as a trumpeter in the mid ‘50s, but his
place in the pantheon rests on his innovative compositions and
arrangements for the big band that he co-founded in 1966 with drummer
Mel Lewis. Its current incarnation, the Vanguard Jazz Orchestra, takes
its name from the Village Vanguard, the basement club in Greenwich
Village in New York where the band has had a steady Monday night gig for
50 years. http://www.freep.com/story/entertainment/2016/02/07/thad-jones-mel-lewis-jazz/79845538/" rel="nofollow"> DETROIT FREE PRESS Thad Jones: 50 years of big band jazz in present tense Kenn
Cox, who died in 2008, spent most of his career in Detroit, where he
was a stalwart bandleader, standard-bearer and mentor to young
musicians. Cox founded the Contemporary Jazz Quintet, a bracing
modernist ensemble that captured the progressive currents of the
'60s and had a hot moment in the sun when it recorded two LPs for Blue
Note in 1968-69. Those recordings are now highly prized by aficionados. At
the festival, New York trumpeter David Weiss and his band Point of
Departure will perform compositions by Cox and the late Charles Moore,
the original trumpeter in the CJQ. On another front, a band of Detroit
musicians associated with Cox in later decades will also perform his
music. In the late '60s, Cox and Moore created Strata, an
artist-run collective that produced concerts and recordings.Their
efforts at self-determination inspired Stanley Cowell and Charles
Tolliver to start Strata-East, which in the end became far more widely
known and celebrated than its Detroit progenitor. So Cowell and
Tolliver's appearance at this year's festival offers yet another
allusion to Detroit's impact on wider currents in jazz. Other
previously announced national headliners at the festival include
guitarists George Benson and John Scofield; pianists Jason Moran, Randy
Weston, Brad Mehldau, Marcus Roberts, Omar Sosa and Alfredo Rodriguez;
saxophonists Chris Potter and Jimmy Heath; trumpeter Roy Hargrove;
drummer Terri Lyne Carrington and vocalists Freddy Cole and Roberta
Gambarini. Contact Mark Stryker: 313-222-6459. [email protected] 37th annual Detroit Jazz Festival Sept. 2-5 Downtown Detroit http://www.detroitjazzfest.com/" rel="nofollow - www.detroitjazzfest.com
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