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Week
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This
Week at Stanford Jazz Festival
Order Tickets:
>>Online: stanfordjazz.org
>>Phone: 650 725 ARTS (2787)
>>Group Sales: 650 736 0324
Complete Festival Calendar
Info about our new TAKE
5! Discount Ticket Program and Group Sales
Venue
information & Directions
Special
Event Info such as the Coho Jams
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> A Night of Brazilian Jazz: Luciana Souza/Romero Lubambo, plus Alegritude
> A History of African Rhythms
and Jazz
> Randy Weston's African Rhythms
Trio
> Freddy Cole Quartet
> Next Week at Stanford Jazz Festival |
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A
Night of Brazilian Jazz!
Luciana Souza: Brazilian Duos featuring Romero Lubambo
plus Harvey Wainapel's Alegritude
First set: Harvey Wainapel, woodwinds; Jeff Buenz, guitar; Scott
Thompson, bass; Celso Alberti, drums
Second set: Luciana Souza, vocals; Romero Lubambo; guitar
Friday, June 25 | 8 pm | Dinkelspiel Auditorium
Tickets: $34 general | $20 students | TAKE 5!
“A
uniquely talented vocalist who organically crosses genre borders” (Billboard),
Brazilian-born Luciana Souza is equally at home singing jazz, Brazilian music,
contemporary art songs, or pop. She received a Grammy award for her performance
on Herbie Hancock’s River: The Joni Letters, and her 2007 release, The
New Bossa Nova, was named Billboard’s Latin Jazz Album of the Year.
She is a graduate of Berklee College of Music and the New England Conservatory,
and was on the faculty at the Manhattan School of Music for four years. Romero
Lubambo, whom Herbie Mann calls “quite simply… the best Brazilian
guitarist there is,” accompanied Souza on her two Grammy-nominated albums
of duets. Their “inspired excellence [and] utter musical involvement” make
each duo performance a “must-hear musical destination” (LA Times).
New York-born saxophonist Harvey Wainapel truly “understands Brazilian
music,” says Brazilian composer and icon Ivan Lins. “He’s got
the spirit!” Wainapel has played and toured worldwide with artists including
McCoy Tyner, Joe Henderson, Flora Purim, Airto Moreira and Joe Lovano, as well
as his own groups. Lovano says that Harvey has “the performance attitude,
which for me is what jazz and improvisation is all about.” Wainapel’s
new all Brazilian-jazz quartet, Alegritude, celebrates the joyful spirit and
diverse sounds of Brazil, absorbed over a decade of Latin American musical pilgrimages.
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A
History of African Rhythms and Jazz
Randy Weston, piano; Alex Blake, bass; Neil Clarke, percussion
Saturday, June 26 | 11 AM | Dinkelspiel
Auditorium
Tickets: $5 advance purchase | $10 at the door | Kids under 18 free!
Jazz has its roots in the musical traditions of Africa, and pianist
Randy Weston has spent his distinguished career discovering and exploring
these roots.
In this special presentation, Weston and his African Rhythms Trio will
discuss and illustrate - with musical examples - the history of jazz
in the context of its African origins, deepening listeners' understanding
and appreciation.
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Randy
Weston's African Rhythms Trio
Randy Weston, piano; Alex Blake, bass; Neil Clarke, percussion
Saturday, June 26 | 8 pm |
Dinkelspiel Auditorium
Tickets: $34 general | $20 students | TAKE 5!
If
you love music," says pianist Randy Weston, "you have to know
where it came from." New Orleans may call itself the birthplace
of jazz, but the special alchemy that took place there couldn't have
happened without untold centuries of African musical traditions.
An NEA Jazz Master and "a magnificent, inspired and
powerful pianist" (San Francisco Examiner), Weston creates
music that embraces these traditions and explores the continuity between
modern and ancient sounds. By digging deep into African rhythms to find
the roots of jazz - and, ultimately, the origin of all music and culture
- Weston creates music that honors and illuminates the past while sounding
fresh and contemporary.
Randy Weston's fascination with African music and culture
dates back to his childhood in Brooklyn. Several musical tours to Africa
throughout the 1960s deepened Weston's connection to the continent.
After a 1967 tour he relocated to Morocco, where he remained for six
years, running his own nightclub and studying with master musicians.
Cultivated over decades of immersion and careful study,
Weston's deep knowledge and artistic perspective bridge the historical
gap between jazz and the rich traditions of African rhythms. When Weston
says that jazz is ultimately African music, "those who have experienced
Mr. Weston and African Rhythms know he is right by how the music makes
us feel" (New York Times).
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Freddy
Cole Quartet
Freddy Cole, vocals/piano; Randy Napoleon, guitar; Elias
Bailey, bass; Curtis Boyd, drums
Sunday,
June 27 | 2:30 PM | Dinkelspiel Auditorium
Tickets: $32 general | $18 students | TAKE
5!
Inside Jazz: A Touch of Cole & the American
Songbook
Speakers: Sonny Buxton, KCSM
Jazz 91.1 & Freddy Cole, 1:30 pm (free with concert ticket)
Refusing to stand in the shadow of his older brother, Nat "King" Cole,
Freddy Cole has distinguished himself as "the most maturely expressive
male jazz singer of his generation, if not the best alive" (New
York Times). Freddy's elegantly swinging piano style is all
his own, and a subtle hint of bluesy growl gives his rich baritone voice
an unmistakable character.
Even more distinctive is Freddy's phrasing; with exquisite
timing and subtlety, he makes melodies and lyrics come vividly to life.
His interpretations of classic songs are mature and often understated,
allowing him to find the essential spirit of each composition and make
it his own. Cole began playing piano at the age of five, studying at
Julliard and the New England Conservatory of Music; he has developed
what the Boston Globe describes as "a body of work as richly
detailed, diverse, and satisfying as that of any other jazz-inflected
male singer over the past two decades."
His most recent album, The Dreamer in Me, deftly captures Cole's
signature swing in a live set at Dizzy's Club Coca-Cola. "If
you quiet your thoughts and really listen," R&B diva Ruth Brown
once said, "Freddy Cole will open the door to your heart with a
key that you did not even know existed."
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Next
Week at Stanford Jazz Festival
Order Tickets: stanfordjazz.org /
650 725 ARTS (2787) |
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Thanks To Our Sponsors
Whether through cash sponsorships or in-kind donations, the support of our corporate sponsors helps to make the Stanford Jazz Festival and Workshop possible. SJW gratefully acknowledges the following sponsors for their generosity: See’s Candies, Presenting Sponsor of the 2009 Stanford Jazz Festival; KCSM FM 91.1, Official Radio Sponsor; Palo Alto Weekly, Official Print Media Sponsor, Rosewood Sand Hill Hotel; Stanford Park Hotel; Vin, Vino, Wine; Department of Music at Stanford University; Western Jazz Presenters Network; CoHo; JazzWest.com; Grooveyard Jazz; Avid; Gallien Krueger; Gordon Biersch Brewing Company; Stanford Blood Center; Yamaha Drums. |
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