Summer's nearly here! There are so many ways for our kids to spend the Summer
of 2011. We hope you'll consider signing your kids up for Jazz Camp. It's jazz, and a
whole lot more!
(((NEW MEXICO JAZZ WORKSHOP))) ((((((((((JAZZ CAMP 2011)))))))))) Three Sessions: JUNE 13 -- JULY 22 Location: Alice King Community School 1905 Mountain Road North West Albuquerque, New Mexico 87104 (Next to Explora and the New Mexico History Museum) Join us for the 17th year of the New Mexico Jazz Workshop's popular music-based day camp for children ages 6-12. Each session is 2 weeks in length and includes instrument, voice, dance and art instruction all wrapped up in fun! No previous musical experience necessary! Classes include: African drumming Caribbean Jam Marimba Mask Making Blues Band Studio Art Capoeira Drums, Drums, and More Drums! Hip Hop Dance African Dance Camp sessions, dates and themes include: Session A: Jazz Roots - June 13 thru 24 Session B: Jazz, An American Original- June 27 thru July 8 (except July 4) Session C: Jazz Around the World- July 11 thru 22 Discounts for siblings. For costs and additional information, please visit www.nmjazz.org For more information please call Debbie @ 505-255-9798
Following on the heels of opening weekend, young lions John Maestas and Asher Barreras bring their jazz ensemble, Humoso to the stage. Veteran sax man Doug Lawrence will also perform a set that evening, in an UndertheStars event that won’t soon be forgotten.
No one can forget the great evening of jazz that featured some of our favorite artists of the male persuasion. Men’s Voices returns with the New Mexico Gay Men’s Chorus Le Chat Lunatique, Clay Benard, Deian McBryde, and more, as well as Women’s Voices: Ladies Sing theBlues, curated by Joan Cere featuring Hillary Smith, Busy McCarroll, The Rhinestones, Lydia Clark and newcomer Ali Rae. A second evening of Women’s Voices happens later in the season, and offers a tribute to Abbey Lincoln, Nina Simone, and Carmen McCrae, curated by local Diva, Patty Stephens. The night also features Zenobia and Susan Abod. The Summer Music Festival continues through August 20th with Mystic Vic, Ben Martinez Project, Red Hot & Red, Ryan McGarvey, Tribute Trio: Acoustic and Electric, Soul Kitchen, Memphis P’Tails, a special night with the former Tonight Show music director, Kevin Eubanks and Grammy-winning artist Larry Mitchell and so much more, UndertheStars.
Here's the full schedule of concerts!!!!
New MexicoJazz Workshop’s 35th Anniversary Season
2011 Summer Music Festival Performance Schedule
June 3 – August 20
6/3Jaleo/En-Joy $13/$11/$10
6/4Big Band Extravaganza $13/$11/$10
6/10Nosotros $13/$11/$10
6/11Humoso/Doug Lawrence $13/$11/$10
6/17Havana Son $13/$11/$10
6/18Women’s Voices: Ladies Sing theBlues $15/$13/$12
6/24Son Como Son $13/$11/$10
6/25Tribute Trio: Acoustic and Electric $13/$11/$10
7/8Charanga del Valle $13/$11/$10
7/9Mystic Vic/Ryan McGarvey $13/$11/$10
7/15Ivon Ulibarri y Cafe Mocha $13/$11/$10
7/16Kevin Eubanks/Larry Mitchell $30/$25$20
7/22Calle 66 $13/$11/$10
7/23NO PERFORMANCE
7/29Team Havana $15/$13/$12
7/30Soul Kitchen/Memphis P’Tails $13/$11/$10
8/5Quemozo $13/$11/$10
8/6Women’s Voices: Tribute to Carmen McCrae,
Abbey Lincoln & Nina Simone $15/$13/$12
8/12Son Como Son $13/$11/$10
8/13Ben Martinez Project/Red Hot & Red $13/$11/$10
New Mexico Jazz Workshop to be beneficiary of 2011 Mayor and First Lady Berry Gala
Albuquerque--New MexicoJazz Workshop has been named one of the five charities designated as a beneficiary of the 25thAnniversary Mayor and First Lady’s Charity Gala. Albuquerque’s First Couple will host an evening that includes an auction, live music and fine dining. The black tie event will be held on Saturday, May 14, 2011 from 6pm to 11pm at the AlbuquerqueConvention Center. For more information about the Gala, pleasevisitwww.mayorscharitygala.comor via email:charitygala@cabq.govor by phone:505-768-3045.
“We were thrilled to receive the news,” says Vicki Dugger, Assistant Director of the New Mexico Jazz Workshop. “We knew that there would be a lot of great organizations submitting proposals. We’re grateful to have been selected.”
This year, funds raised at the Gala will support five worthy organizations, including The New Mexico Jazz Workshop’s Empowerment Through Music program-- NMJW’s arts and social services programming. “Empowerment Through Music is making a difference in the lives of low-income, at-risk and incarcerated youth,” says Dugger. “Through this program, youth increase their musical and technological understanding in order to better navigate their futures.” Dugger explains that Empowerment Through Music also helps stem what is known as, “summer slide;” the loss of educational gains over the summer break. Dugger adds that, “Children without healthy stimulation and activities lose an average of 25% of what they learned over the school year, which becomes cumulative over time.”
Funds raised at the Gala will allow New Mexico Jazz Workshop to increase therapeutic instruction at the BernalilloCountyJuvenileDetentionCenter and expand the South Valley Band Project, which provides music mentoring for at-risk middle school students. “We are so grateful for the ability to expand our programs that help kids creatively cope with the world around them.” Dugger says.
For more information about Empowerment Through Music, please contact Debra Orlofsky, Empowerment Through Music Coordinator at The New Mexico Jazz Workshop at505-255-9798ordebo@nmjazz.org.
Empowerment Through Music is sponsored by: Sennheiser, Target, Bernalillo County, Wells Fargo, Grandmas Music and Sound, United Way of Central New Mexico and Cardinal Health.
Nu Jazz, Japanese Jazz, Punk Jazz. . . there are as many styles of jazz as there are rivers on earth; each rivulet, creek and brook leads back to the original aquifer that never seems to run dry. Jazz, Deconstructed Volume 2, celebrates the diverse world of experimental jazz from four very different perspectives and tributaries.
Volume 2 of the series explores everything from ancient sounds on analog instruments to electronic playback and streaming audio/visuals. Using atonality, dissonance, improvisation and traditional song structure, the artists in the series add a verse to the new vanguard of the movement, changing the way we experience jazz.
Bring your cash money-- Tractor Brewery will be serving up the beer and wine and the Kosmos Cafe will be open for all of you coffee and tea drinkers. Hurray!
Deconstructed: Wednesdays, April 6-27, 7pm at The Kosmos, 1715 5th Street, downtown Albuquerque. Tickets are $10 general, $8 students, seniors and NMJW members. Tickets are available online at www.eventbrite.com.
quite ready to settle in for Winter just yet! One more concert for the year, Adult Education classes are shaping up, and we're gearing up for a a busy 2011!
12/12 Middle School and High School Youth Honor Bands RECITAL: Sunday, December 12th 1PM -3PM at the Cooperage, 7220 Lomas NE. Don't miss an afternoon of music with the future of jazz in New Mexico (and beyond!) Middle-High and High School Honor Band kids go on to great things. Get in on the ground floor of their assent to amazing heights!
Consider an alternative to the hustle and bustle of holiday gift shopping by purchasing a gift card fromNew Mexico Jazz Workshop.Give the gift of Jazz -- buy NMJW Jazz Bucks. A gift card of $50, $100, $150 or $200 is a wonderful way to offer the artist in your life the opportunity to take a class, attend a concert, present dollars towards a Jazz Camp session, or even join NMJW as a Member! Call us for more information: 505-255-9798.
It's time for volume 2 of New Mexico Jazz Stories, an intimate evening with the artist! We're very excited by the line-up!
Life is an improvisation, a mixed tape, an unfinished work-- and no one knows that better than the five professional musicians NMJW has lined up for New Mexico Jazz Stories. They've played everywhere, from juke joints to concert halls, for sophisticated, international audiences, to salty bar flies in dives. The artists of New Mexico Jazz Stories Volume 2 have collected their stories throughout their colorful journeys, and they plan to share them with you, for the first time.
John Rangel kicks off the series. Rangel, a dynamic composer and pianist comes from a musical family full of opera singers. Find out how he got into jazz on October 6th.
Next up is bassist Milo Jaramillo. Born and raised in New Mexico, Jaramillo lives and commutes from his native Isleta Pueblo to perform everything from jazz to funk, reggae to world music. Jaramillo shares his jazz stories on October 13th.
Patty Stephens is a Diva of the highest order. Stephens captivates audiences with her golden pipes, and her tales are sure to be equally mesmerizing. Don’t miss Jazz Stories with Patty Stephens on October 20th.
On October 27th Jazz Stories presents trumpeter Paul Gonzales.Gonzales, a KUNM DJ and member of various salsa groups, including Son Como Son is also an Army Veteran. What was it like to have musician Arlen Asher visit your first grade class? Find out from Gonzales at Jazz Stories.
Closing out the 2010 Jazz Stories series is well-respected guitarist and bassist Lewis Winn. Winn has performed professionally for nearly 40 years, and he certainly has many, many interesting tales to tell.Volume 2 ofNew MexicoJazz Stories: An Intimate Evening with the Artist is sure to be a lively series you won’t want to miss.
New Mexico Jazz Stories: An Intimate Evening with the Artist, October 6th through November 3rd at 7pm. The Cooperage 7220 Lomas NE. Tickets are $15 General, $10 NMJW Members/Seniors/Students. Series passes available. Please call NMJW at 505-255-9798 or visit our website www.nmjazz.org for more information. Tickets are also available online at www.brownpapertickets .com.
Alex Maryol's bio is crazy impressive. This young blues artist has been on the circuit for years, opening for Etta James, Bo Diddley, Ani DiFranco, Michael Franti, Leon Russell, and G. Love and Special Sauce, to name a few. He has shared the stage with artists, oh, like James Brown, Johny Lang, John Mayer, Otis Taylor and Buddy Miles.
Alex is on the bill with Todd Tijerina as well as Combo Special TONIGHT at 7pm, at the final Jazz & Blues Under the Stars at the Albuquerque Museum Amphitheater in Old Town. We thought we'd pin Alex down for a short interview:
NMJW: Why the Blues? What made you gravitate towards this genre of music?
AM: Blues is a very emotional sounding music... I felt the blues from a very young age... from the first moment I heard it when I was around 4 or 5. Blues is a music -like all music- that is not in the "notes" but rather that is in the person.
NMJW: You credit musicians like Chuck Berry, Fats Domino and Elvis Presley as people who've influenced you. When did you first become aware of these artists and how?
AM: I first heard these artists on my dad's radio in his truck as he drove me to kindergarten when I was four. He would then play more of these artists for me on his record player in our living room.
NMJW: You mention being the son of Greek-American restaurateurs in your biographical information. Were you expected to enter the family business? When did it become clear that you were charting your own course through music?
AM: I was never expected to be or do anything in particular. I always had the freedom to choose what I wanted to do... however, growing up in the restaurant is a very important detail in my life. I always wanted to be involved with music. My mom tells me that I would pick my head up in the crib when I was a baby to "see what was going on" when there was music being played in the room.
NMJW: Tell us about Face the Day. How have you approached the material on this record, in contrast to your earlier releases?
AM: Face the Day is an album that deals with my experience of life through my mid 20's.
NMJW: What's your favorite guilty pleasure in terms of music?
AM: Kelly Clarkson, Shania Twain, and Cindi Lauper.
NMJW: Who would you most like to share the stage with?