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Week
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Catch the Latest Stanford Jazz Festival Buzz: Show Cancellation: Mose Allison
Tickets may also be returned to the Stanford Ticket Office for a full refund. You may call the box office at 650-725-ARTS (2787) or email them at ticketorders@stanford.edu. Click here to redeem your Mose Allison tickets immediately. We apologize for any inconvenience. From Amateur hour to America's First Lady of Song We're also proud to share a recent Palo Alto Weekly article about SJW participants Holly Smolik and Laila Smith, and their role in our upcoming tribute. [Read the Palo Alto Weekly article online] This Week at Stanford Jazz Festival:
Order Tickets: Complete Festival Calendar |
> Early Bird Latin Jazz for Kids: John Santos Sextet |
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Fred Hersch: Jobim & More Friday, July 9 | 8 pm | Campbell Recital
Hall Pianist Fred Hersch is truly a "musician's musician." His esteem among his fellow artists and his influence on the jazz zeitgeist are enormous. Whether he's performing his own original music or interpreting a classic, everything he plays is transformed and enhanced by his unmistakable musical personality.
Honored with a 2003 Guggenheim Foundation Fellowship, an NEA grant and several Grammy nominations, Hersch's influence on the sound of contemporary jazz extends beyond his own playing; he has been a mentor to such influential pianists as Ethan Iverson of the Bad Plus and Brad Mehldau. His 2009 album Fred Hersch Plays Jobim (which was actually recorded much earlier, but rediscovered in 2008 when Hersch was critically ill - he's since recovered) is what the New York Times has dubbed "one of his deepest records." Through the prism of Hersch's inimitable solo piano style, Jobim's songs sparkle with "a loveliness that reaches down into the heart" (All About Jazz). | ||||||||||
Early
Bird Latin Jazz For Kids: John Santos Sextet
In addition to being an acclaimed bandleader, five-time Grammy nominee, and master percussionist, Santos is a renowned expert on the history of Latin and Afro-Caribbean music and the winner of the 2008 "Best of the Bay" Latin Artist award from the East Bay Express. He is also a dedicated educator, devoted to enriching children's lives and strengthening communities through music. His knowledge is astounding, his enthusiasm is irresistible, and his comfortable rapport with audiences of all kinds makes him an ideal ambassador for Latin jazz. In this special program for kids and families, he illuminates the music's rich, multicultural traditions and demonstrates an extended family of amazing percussion instruments. With its roots in Africa and the Caribbean and its cosmopolitan spirit, Latin jazz is a wonderful part of the Bay Area's musical heritage. The John Santos Sextet will have listeners of all ages dancing in the aisles, even as they learn! |
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Tuck
and Patti
Tuck Andress and Patti Cathcart have been making music together for almost 30 years, and their musical empathy and communication are astonishing. Singer Bobby McFerrin calls them "the best duo on the planet," and their previous Stanford Jazz Festival performance in 2006 is still talked about as a high point of the season.
A largely self-taught guitarist (and Stanford University attendee), Tuck can evoke the power and complexity of a big band with his guitar, or set a delicate mood with a few carefully chosen notes. Patti's versatile vocal style grew from a childhood immersed in the diverse sounds of the San Francisco music scene. Both are virtuoso performers, capable of astonishing feats of musicianship, but their formidable technique never lapses into self-indulgence. Instead, it serves the music, bringing out each song's beauty and feeling with precision, subtlety, and grace. With more than a dozen albums to their credit and decades of performances in the Bay Area and internationally, Tuck and Patti have cultivated a loyal fan base and cemented their reputation as one of the Bay Area's musical treasures. It's a privilege to be invited into this family's kitchen for musical comfort food - warm, nourishing, and served with love. |
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Ella Fitzgerald: America's First Lady of Song
Inside Jazz: Ella: Simply the Best
No jazz singer has ever been able to emulate Ella's one-of-a-kind sound exactly. But it's also true that no vocalist can completely escape her pervasive influence. Mary Stallings, whom the New York Times calls "perhaps the best jazz singer alive today," counts Ella among a broad range of influences. Like Ella, Stallings spent time as a featured singer with the Count Basie band. Vocalist Kenny Washington has his own virtuosic take on vocal improvisation. With a four-octave range and the harmonic facility of a horn player, Washington's scatting carries on Ella's legacy, but filters it through his own unique sensibility. With musical direction by Larry Dunlap, this special tribute will celebrate Ella's contribution to the world of jazz and the songs she made famous. Also featuring young Workshop vocal program participants Laila Smith and Holly Smolik (Ella recorded her breakthrough hit, "A-Tisket, A-Tasket," when she was only 21). |
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Next Week at Stanford Jazz Festival
Order Tickets: stanfordjazz.org / 650 725-ARTS (2787)
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