KPFK

  • Increase font size
  • Default font size
  • Decrease font size
Home Event Calendar
Events Calendar
Previous month Previous day Next day Next month
See by year See by month See by week See Today Search Jump to month
29th Annual Jazz Tribute Awards Dinner & Concert Print
Sunday, October 21 2012, 4:30pm - 10:00pm by Maggie Hits : 2431

29th Annual Jazz Tribute Awards Dinner & Concert



LOS ANGELES JAZZ SOCIETY
ANNOUNCES HONOREE AND RECIPIENTS OF
29th ANNUAL JAZZ TRIBUTE AWARDS & CONCERT

WAYNE SHORTER, Multiple Grammy Award Winner,
Saxophonist & Composer, to be Honored

Evening Includes Dinner and Concert with Honoree and Awardees

Sunday, October 21, 2012, 4:30 p.m.
Hilton Los Angeles/Universal City


The Los Angeles Jazz Society’s (LAJS) 29th Annual Jazz Tribute Awards Dinner & Concert is set for Sunday, October 21, 2012, 4:30 pm, at the Hilton Los Angeles/Universal City announces LAJS President Flip Manne. Wayne Shorter, multiple Grammy Award winner, saxophonist and composer, is the 2012 Jazz Tribute Honoree. Leonard Maltin will host the evening’s festivities and Herbie Hancock is this year’s Honorary Chair. LAJS’ 2012 Jazz Tribute awardees include Lifetime Achievement Award recipient John Pisano, Lifetime Composer/Arranger Award recipient Gordon Goodwin, Jazz Vocalist Award recipient Denise Donatelli, David L. Abell Angel Award recipient Jim Barrall, Jazz Educator Award recipients Roger Neumann & Scott Whitfield, Teri Merrill-Aarons Founder Award recipient Terence Love, and Shelly Manne Memorial New Talent Award recipient Jamael Dana Dean.  The Jazz Tribute also includes special guests, Jeff Hamilton, Larry Hathaway and Barbara Morrison.
Jazz Tribute Awards Dinner & Concert guests will enjoy a reception, market place, silent auction, dinner, awards ceremony and a special live concert with the honorees. The concert portion of the special evening will feature performances by Wayne Shorter & friends, John Pisano Trio, Denise Donatelli Trio, and Jamael Dean Dana Trio. Concert only tickets are also available.
The Annual Jazz Tribute Awards Dinner & Concert was established to recognize and honor Los Angeles based artists for their contributions in furthering the art form of jazz. This major fund-raising event attracts musicians and jazz lovers from all over Southern California and supports the general operations of the organization and its education programs.
The LAJS was founded in 1985 by a group of musicians and jazz lovers committed to elevating the image of jazz and its artists in the community. The mission of the LAJS is to excite, educate and engage public school students with the vibrant rhythms and sounds of the only indigenous American music – jazz. LAJS presents multi-cultural and interactive in-school and off-campus jazz education programs. We also promote and honor the legacy of jazz and ensure its future by identifying and nurturing the emerging jazz musicians of tomorrow. LAJS presents an ongoing calendar of activities and members are informed about these events and other “jazz news” through its website, email blasts and newsletter, Quarter Notes.

The LAJS offers four outreach programs with wide ranging impact: “Jazz In Schools” provides free jazz concerts for over 22,000 young people in 45 LAUSD elementary schools during the month of February, Black History Month. The program helps fill the educational vacuum left when schools made drastic cutbacks in the arts “Bill Green Mentorship Program” in which selected public school students receive extensive training in advanced jazz techniques from professional musicians capped by a professional recording session “Jazz CoolCats” is LAJS’s 10-week after-school jazz education class for elementary school children and “JazzGiving” is a program created by LAJS that provides donated musical instruments to schools. The youth programs are designed to identify and nurture emerging jazz musicians and help to create future audiences by stimulating an appreciation for jazz.

LAJS is also deeply supportive of professional artists, presenting the highly regarded “Vibe Summit,” a day-long celebration featuring some of the nation’s leading vibraphonists, and the “Jazz Tribute Awards Dinner and Concert,” the annual fundraiser at which legends in the field are recognized. Past honorees include Arturo Sandoval, George Duke, Herbie Hancock, Quincy Jones, Horace Silver, Buddy Collette, Shelly Manne, Louie Bellson, Benny Carter, Ray Brown, Harry “Sweets” Edison, Harold Land, Poncho Sanchez, Dee Dee Bridgewater and John Clayton, among others. These various programs and events have earned LAJS recognition across the country as a leader in preserving and promoting jazz.

Tickets to the 29th Annual Jazz Tribute Awards Dinner & Concert are $200 - $250 per person individual and corporate sponsorship tables are available from $1,000 - $10,000. Concert only tickets are $75. Substantial ticket discounts for LAJS members. The Awards Dinner and Concert takes place at the Hilton Los Angeles/Universal City, 555 Universal Hollywood Drive at Universal City. For tickets, additional information, to join the Los Angeles Jazz Society, or to make a donation to help support its educational outreach efforts, please visit www.LAJazz.org or call (818) 994-4661.

#  #  #

Multiple Grammy award winner, saxophonist and composer, Wayne Shorter, is one of the few jazz musicians who can, without a doubt, be called “a living legend.” Many of his compositions are jazz standards many of his records are studied endlessly. He’s one of the artists who both musicians and fans obsess over – and even at 77, he continues to reinvent his musical personality with every performance. Following a short time with Horace Silver, he moved on to join Art Blakey’s Jazz Messengers, becoming the band’s music director. Miles Davis, after several attempts, finally convinced Shorter to join his Quintet where he became the band’s most prolific composer. Though some will argue about whether Wayne Shorter’s primary impact on jazz has been as a composer or as a saxophonist, hardly anyone will dispute his overall importance as one of jazz’s leading figures over a long span of time. Shorter’s continually expanding body of work is inextricably linked to the history of modern music. His music transcends genre while keeping the improvisational genius and surprise of jazz burning at the center. Regarded as one of the most significant and prolific performers and composers in jazz and modern music Wayne Shorter has an outstanding record of professional achievement in his historic career as a musician. He has received substantial recognition from his peers, including 9 Grammy Awards and 17 other Grammy nominations to date as well as the prestigious Jazz Master award from the NEA. Shorter’s childlike imagination and ceaseless innovation in music invite comparison to the enduring vitality of Picasso in the world of art or of Bergman in film. Today, Shorter continues to dazzle audiences with his Quartet featuring Danilo Perez, John Patitucci, and Brian Blade, creating some of the most powerful music of his career.

John Pisano began his musical career playing the piano, and at age 14, he took up the guitar. Despite his exceptional accomplishments as soloist in his early professional years, Pisano favored and chose the role as supporting player which he says is his “comfort zone.” Over the years, he recorded and played with such jazz legends as Benny Goodman but his greatest commercial success came with his many years with the Herb Alpert band when he recorded and published some of his own compositions. Pisano has left an indelible mark on the history of jazz guitar and continues to influence the jazz guitar community today and is being awarded for his weekly guitar night that the acclaimed jazz guitar virtuoso hosts with some of the best guitarists in the world at his weekly guitar night event in Southern California.

Keyboard and woodwind player, Gordon Goodwin has built a larger-than-life reputation throughout the music industry for his composing, arranging and playing skills. A Grammy and Emmy Award winner, Goodwin has worked with such jazz greats as Ray Charles, John Williams, Natalie Cole, Mel Torme and Quincy Jones and his cinematic scoring and orchestration craft can be heard on many films. His Big Phat Band takes the big band tradition into the new millennium with a highly contemporary, highly original sound featuring Goodwin’s witty, intricate and hard-swinging compositions.

Described as “a musician’s singer,” jazz singer, Denise Donatelli first revealed a music inclination when she picked out “Silent Night” on the piano at the age of three. At six, she was a winner at the National Music Federation piano competition, and 14 years of classical piano study followed. Today, Denise is critically acclaimed as one of the most interesting and important jazz singers on the scene today. Her 2010 release When Lights are Low, which received Grammy Nominations for Best Jazz Vocal Album, confirms Denise’s status in the upper echelons of talented and engaging jazz artists in the country.

Jim Barrall is a partner in the law firm of Latham & Watkins, and in addition to his pro bono legal services on Skid Row, he is actively involved in organizations promoting jazz. He has served as President of the Board of Directors of the Friends of Jazz at UCLA and has worked to raise funds for Jazz Legacy Scholarships for outstanding African American students entering the Jazz Studies Program. Jim was also involved in the establishment of the Los Angeles Jazz Society’s Bill Green Mentorship program. He is dedicated to help nurture jazz musicians of tomorrow.

Roger Neumann has been with the Bill Green Mentorship Program for twelve years as a Workshop Leader, mentor/teacher of reed instrument students, and does musical arrangements for the group bands. He is also involved in Jazz America and several teaching programs in his home state of Iowa. Roger is a top arranger and was presented with the Los Angeles Jazz Society’s Composer/Arranger Tribute Award in 2002.

Scott Whitfield has been with the Bill Green Mentorship Program for seven years. He conducts the workshop and recording sessions, writes arrangements for the students and is a mentor/teacher to trombone students. He formerly taught at Rutgers University for several years before moving west. He currently plays in the Mike Vax Stan Kenton Reunion Band and conducts student workshops throughout the country.

Terrence Love has always been emotionally moved and motivated by music. Though occasionally gigging as a sax man and a sound engineer with various bands throughout the years, he always dreamed he might someday own a jazz club and in 1994, he opened the doors to Steamers in Fullerton. Proof that his instincts were correct is found in the ever-growing list of internationally known musicians who have appeared there. Cuts in schools for the performing arts motivated Terrence in 1998 to join with others in founding Friends of Jazz, dedicated to helping school jazz programs. He is dedicated to the survival of jazz.

Thirteen year old Jamael Dana Dean is the grandson of the legendary drummer, Donald Dean and a graduate of the Jazz Society’s Bill Green Mentorship Program. His musical journey began when he was 8 years old when, at his request, his parents bought him a small keyboard and began playing songs he heard on the radio. Now in the 8th grade, he’s a straight A student and practices and listens to music 24/7. With Grammy Award Winner, Bill Cunliffe, as his mentor and instructor, he is well on his way toward a bright future in jazz.



Presenter / Producer: Los Angeles Jazz Society


Event Phone: 818-994-4661

Venue
Hilton Los Angeles/Universal City
555 Universal Hollywood Drive
Universal City CA 91608

Regions:
LA - NoHo, Valley & Ventura


Performance Dates: 10/21/2012

Sunday, 10/21/2012


Performance Times
4:30pm

Ticket Information:
$75 - $250

Websites:
Event Information

Back