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Dive into the rich history of jazz with Loren Schoenberg, Grammy Award-winning saxophonist, conductor, and senior scholar at the National Jazz Museum in Harlem. In this HarmonyTALK episode, Loren chats with host Lisa Champeau about his experiences performing with jazz legends, his work preserving American jazz history, and his journey as a respected educator at institutions like Juilliard and the Manhattan School of Music. If you've ever had an interest in the inside look at the career of a multi-faceted musician, this episode uncovers the stories, sounds, and cultural impact of jazz music and offers unique insights into Loren's career, dedication, and passion for the genre. FOLLOW HARMONYTALK PODCAST @harmonytalkpodcast Join Our Mailing List: https://www.harmonytalkpodcast.com/signup Instagram: https://instagram.com/harmonytalkpodcast Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/harmonytalkpodcast YouTube: https://youtube.com/@HarmonyTALKPodcast LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/harmonytalkpodcast https://harmonytalkpodcast.com/ Follow Host, Lisa Champeau: https://www.instagram.com/lisachampeau/ Email harmonytalkpodcast@gmail.com for sponsorship and guest opportunities! See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
MJQ AND FRIENDS “40TH ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION” – 1992-93 Milt Jackson (vib) John Lewis (p) Percy Heath (b) Mickey Roker (d) Bags' groove with Bobby McFerrin (vcl) Take 6 (vcl) All the things you are Phil Woods (as) Come rain or come shine Branford Marsalis (sop) Willow, weep for me Wynton Marsalis (tp) KEN PEPLOWSKI “UNHEARD BIRD” ca 2023Gold rush, You go to my head, You must believe in springTerell Stafford (tp) Keve Wilson (oboe) Ken Peplowski (ts,cl) Glenn Zaleski (p) Elizabeth Steiner (harp) Rose Kow Xiu Yi, Tia Allen, Yoonjung Hwang (vln) Kayla Williams (viola) Robin Park (cello) Peter Washington (b) Willie Jones, III (d) Loren Schoenberg (cond) ) NUBYA GARCIA “ODYSSEY” UK ca 2023 Set It Free, We Walk In Gold, Water's Path, In Other Words, LivingNubya Garcia (Arr/Comp/TS) Rosie Turton (tbn) Sam Jones, (dr) Sheila Maurice-Grey (t) Esperanza Spalding (voz) Jansen Santana (perc) Joe Armon-Jones (p/tecl) + string orchestra, background vocals) Continue reading Puro Jazz 31 de octubre, 2024 at PuroJazz.
MJQ AND FRIENDS “40TH ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION” – 1992-93 Milt Jackson (vib) John Lewis (p) Percy Heath (b) Mickey Roker (d) Bags' groove with Bobby McFerrin (vcl) Take 6 (vcl) All the things you are Phil Woods (as) Come rain or come shine Branford Marsalis (sop) Willow, weep for me Wynton Marsalis (tp) KEN PEPLOWSKI “UNHEARD BIRD” ca 2023Gold rush, You go to my head, You must believe in springTerell Stafford (tp) Keve Wilson (oboe) Ken Peplowski (ts,cl) Glenn Zaleski (p) Elizabeth Steiner (harp) Rose Kow Xiu Yi, Tia Allen, Yoonjung Hwang (vln) Kayla Williams (viola) Robin Park (cello) Peter Washington (b) Willie Jones, III (d) Loren Schoenberg (cond) ) NUBYA GARCIA “ODYSSEY” UK ca 2023 Set It Free, We Walk In Gold, Water's Path, In Other Words, LivingNubya Garcia (Arr/Comp/TS) Rosie Turton (tbn) Sam Jones, (dr) Sheila Maurice-Grey (t) Esperanza Spalding (voz) Jansen Santana (perc) Joe Armon-Jones (p/tecl) + string orchestra, background vocals) Continue reading Puro Jazz 31 de octubre, 2024 at PuroJazz.
Loren Schoenberg, jazz scholar, educator, writer, musician, band leader and producer and music director of the original film documentary, "Wham-Re-Bop-Boom-Bam: The Swing Jazz of Eddie Durham," a production of WVIA, speaking about Eddie Durham and his music in anticipation of a concert of Durham's music on July 21, 2024 at 5:30 pm, at Harmony in the Woods in Hawley, PA. Schoenberg will lead a top-flight seven-piece band in a performance that is a benefit for WVIA. For tickets and information:www.wvia.org/
Jazz88's Peter Solomon spoke with Loren Schoenberg, senior scholar at the National Jazz Museum in Harlem, about a new documentary airing this week on PBS about pioneering trombonist, electric guitarist, composer, and arranger, Eddie Durham.
Jazz88's Peter Solomon spoke with Loren Schoenberg, senior scholar at the National Jazz Museum in Harlem, about a new documentary airing this week on PBS about pioneering trombonist, electric guitarist, composer, and arranger, Eddie Durham.
A podcast by WVIA's George Graham featuring award-winning filmmaker Kris Hendrickson and jazz musician, historian, educator and author Loren Schoenberg, talking about Eddie Durham, the great jazz pioneer in connection with the new WVIA documentary, "WHAM Re-Bop-Boom-Bam: The Swing Jazz of Eddie Durham," that will have its broadcast premiere on Thursday, February 1, 2024, at 9:00 pm, with a number of airings in the month of February. For more information: www.wvia.org/wham
I have been looking forward to this one because I love music. I love all kinds of music, and today we are going to talk about Jazz. Jazz is one of the earliest forms of pop music in The United States and Jazz is a distinctively American style of music originating in the early decades of the 20th century. Its roots include Afro-American folk music traditions, such as spirituals, work songs, and blues. Jazz music is much more lively and upbeat than blues music. Jazz is often associated with swinging and swaying movements, lively atmospheres and improv. Lots of modern musicians will say they are greatly influenced by Jazz. Some of the great Jazz musicians include Louis Armstrong, Duke Ellington, John Coltrane, Bessie Smith, Fletcher Henderson, and Billie Holiday. In fact, Performers like Elvis Pressley, Chuck Berry, The Rolling Stones, The Doors, The Grateful Dead, and Aerosmith all talk about their Jazz influences. Music styles like Rock, R&B, Hip-hop, Latin, and others that produce a swaying rhythm have been influenced by Jazz. In today's podcast we have a very special guest, the very accomplished Loren Schoenberg. He is the Founding Director at The National Jazz Museum in Harlem, a published author, and teaches Jazz History at The Julliard School in NYC. Always more to learn. Talk to you soon.
In Episode no.16, Andrew Moxon discusses the large part that his students' external music-making plays within his school'sl life; and Musical Futures' Fran Hannan introduces their online TV channel #mufutv.Plus, Patrick discusses various approaches to teaching Jazz to beginners, with Grammy Award-winning Jazz musician Loren Schoenberg, from the Juilliard School of Music.Presented and produced by Patrick Johns
A child prodigy on the piano, then a glamorous jazz and popular music entertainer, a civil rights campaigner and the first black American woman to host her own TV show: for the first three decades of her life, Hazel Scott's rise to fame was vertiginous. Born in Trinidad in 1920, Scott was the headliner in some of New York's most fashionable clubs by the time she was 20. A couple of years later she became one of Hollywood's highest paid entertainers and then married one of the most high-profile US Congressmen of her day. Their celebrity lifestyle regularly featured on newspaper front pages, Scott's records were selling well, her syndicated TV show was given double airtime because it was so popular. And then, almost overnight, she vanished from public view. What happened? That's one of the questions Rajan Datar discusses with Scott's biographer and actor Karen Chilton; Loren Schoenberg, saxophonist, bandleader and Senior Scholar of the National Jazz Museum in Harlem; and playwright, lyricist and broadcaster Murray Horwitz. (Image: Hazel Scott in the 1950s. Credit: Archive Photos/Getty Images)
You really have a feeling that here is a building that looks fantastically beautiful, and it's got its whole façade simply blown off by this war. -Philipp Blom World War I presented civilization with unprecedented violence and destruction. The shock of the first modern, “industrial” war extended far into the 20th century and even into the 21st, and changed how people saw the world and themselves. And that was reflected in the cultural responses to the war – which included a burgeoning obsession with beauty and body image, the birth of jazz, new thinking about the human psyche, the Harlem Renaissance, Surrealism...and more. WNYC's Sara Fishko and guests sift through the lingering effects of the Great War on modern art and life in Shell Shock 1919: How the Great War Changed Culture. Guests include Jon Batiste, Ann Temkin, David Lubin, Philipp Blom, Jay Winter, Ana Carden-Coyne, Sabine Rewald, David Levering Lewis, Emma Chambers, Marion von Osten, Emily Bernard, and Gail Stavitsky ‘L.H.O.O.Q.' by Marcel Duchamp; readymade [postcard reproduction of Leonardo da Vinci's Mona Lisa] and pencil (1919) (Philadelphia Museum of Art) James Reese Europe and the 369th Regiment band, also known as the Harlem Hellfighters (1918) (U.S. National Archives and Record Administration) Margaret Gorman, the first Miss America, on the Atlantic City boardwalk (1921) (Wikimedia Commons) Still from Wallace Worsley's The Hunchback of Notre Dame (1923, Universal) starring Lon Chaney as Quasimodo and Patsy Ruth Miller as Esmeralda (Universal Pictures) The Cenotaph in Whitehall, London on November 9, 2015, surrounded by poppy wreaths for Remembrance Day (Bailey-Cooper Photography / Alamy Stock Photo) Producer/Host: Sara FishkoAssociate Producer: Olivia BrileyTechnical Director: Ed HaberEditor: Karen Frillmann Production help from Terence Mickey, Meara Sharma, and Frederic Castel With the voices of Michael Wist and Alexis Cuadrado Thanks to Loren Schoenberg, Jennifer Keene, Jo Fox, Katy Wan, Marion von Osten, Marion Kiesow II, Patrick Helber, Shannon Connolly, and Natalia Ramirez Shell Shock 1919 is supported by the Revada Foundation of the Logan Family On the Media is supported by listeners like you. Support OTM by donating today (https://pledge.wnyc.org/support/otm). Follow our show on Instagram, Twitter and Facebook @onthemedia, and share your thoughts with us by emailing onthemedia@wnyc.org.
You really have a feeling that here is a building that looks fantastically beautiful, and it’s got its whole façade simply blown off by this war. -Philipp Blom World War I presented civilization with unprecedented violence and destruction. The shock of the first modern, “industrial” war extended far into the 20th century and even into the 21st, and changed how people saw the world and themselves. And that was reflected in the cultural responses to the war – which included a burgeoning obsession with beauty and body image, the birth of jazz, new thinking about the human psyche, the Harlem Renaissance, Surrealism...and more. WNYC's Sara Fishko and guests sift through the lingering effects of the Great War on modern art and life in Shell Shock 1919: How the Great War Changed Culture. Guests include Jon Batiste, Ann Temkin, David Lubin, Philipp Blom, Jay Winter, Ana Carden-Coyne, Sabine Rewald, David Levering Lewis, Emma Chambers, Marion von Osten, Emily Bernard, and Gail Stavitsky ‘L.H.O.O.Q.’ by Marcel Duchamp; readymade [postcard reproduction of Leonardo da Vinci’s Mona Lisa] and pencil (1919) (Philadelphia Museum of Art) James Reese Europe and the 369th Regiment band, also known as the Harlem Hellfighters (1918) (U.S. National Archives and Record Administration) Margaret Gorman, the first Miss America, on the Atlantic City boardwalk (1921) (Wikimedia Commons) Still from Wallace Worsley’s The Hunchback of Notre Dame (1923, Universal) starring Lon Chaney as Quasimodo and Patsy Ruth Miller as Esmeralda (Universal Pictures) The Cenotaph in Whitehall, London on November 9, 2015, surrounded by poppy wreaths for Remembrance Day (Bailey-Cooper Photography / Alamy Stock Photo) Producer/Host: Sara FishkoAssociate Producer: Olivia BrileyTechnical Director: Ed HaberEditor: Karen Frillmann Production help from Terence Mickey, Meara Sharma, and Frederic Castel With the voices of Michael Wist and Alexis Cuadrado Thanks to Loren Schoenberg, Jennifer Keene, Jo Fox, Katy Wan, Marion von Osten, Marion Kiesow II, Patrick Helber, Shannon Connolly, and Natalia Ramirez Shell Shock 1919 is supported by the Revada Foundation of the Logan Family
You really have a feeling that here is a building that looks fantastically beautiful, and it’s got its whole façade simply blown off by this war. -Philipp Blom World War I presented civilization with unprecedented violence and destruction. The shock of the first modern, “industrial” war extended far into the 20th century and even into the 21st, and changed how people saw the world and themselves. And that was reflected in the cultural responses to the war – which included a burgeoning obsession with beauty and body image, the birth of jazz, new thinking about the human psyche, the Harlem Renaissance, Surrealism...and more. WNYC's Sara Fishko and guests sift through the lingering effects of the Great War on modern art and life in Shell Shock 1919: How the Great War Changed Culture. Guests include Jon Batiste, Ann Temkin, David Lubin, Philipp Blom, Jay Winter, Ana Carden-Coyne, Sabine Rewald, David Levering Lewis, Emma Chambers, Marion von Osten, Emily Bernard, and Gail Stavitsky ‘L.H.O.O.Q.’ by Marcel Duchamp; readymade [postcard reproduction of Leonardo da Vinci’s Mona Lisa] and pencil (1919) (Philadelphia Museum of Art) James Reese Europe and the 369th Regiment band, also known as the Harlem Hellfighters (1918) (U.S. National Archives and Record Administration) Margaret Gorman, the first Miss America, on the Atlantic City boardwalk (1921) (Wikimedia Commons) Still from Wallace Worsley’s The Hunchback of Notre Dame (1923, Universal) starring Lon Chaney as Quasimodo and Patsy Ruth Miller as Esmeralda (Universal Pictures) The Cenotaph in Whitehall, London on November 9, 2015, surrounded by poppy wreaths for Remembrance Day (Bailey-Cooper Photography / Alamy Stock Photo) Producer/Host: Sara FishkoAssociate Producer: Olivia BrileyTechnical Director: Ed HaberEditor: Karen Frillmann Production help from Terence Mickey, Meara Sharma, and Frederic Castel With the voices of Michael Wist and Alexis Cuadrado Thanks to Loren Schoenberg, Jennifer Keene, Jo Fox, Katy Wan, Marion von Osten, Marion Kiesow II, Patrick Helber, Shannon Connolly, and Natalia Ramirez Shell Shock 1919 is supported by the Revada Foundation of the Logan Family On Thursday, November 7, hear more from Sara Fishko and guests, live at The Greene Space. Tickets are available now. Radio Air Dates: Sunday, November 10 at 11 am on 93.9 FM. Sunday, November 10 at 6 pm on AM 820. Veterans Day, Monday November 11 at 2 pm on 93.9 FM. Saturday, November 16 at 10 pm on AM 820.
Host: CCNY President Vincent Boudreau Guests: Steve Wilson, Associate Professor and Director of Jazz Studies at CCNY’s Division of Humanities and the Arts; Tracy Hyter-Suffern, Executive Director of the National Jazz Museum in Harlem; Loren Schoenberg, Senior Scholar at the National Jazz Museum in Harlem. Recorded: June 26, 2019
Dr. Anne Lusk identifies the challenges of creating a truly bike-friendly city and how to make sure everyone has equal opportunity in our urban surroundings. Diego Rose talks to us about how to make our dietary choices more environmentally-friendly. Steve Young explains his fascination with industrial musicals in his recent documentary "Bathtubs Over Broadway." Loren Schoenberg discusses the indelible influence of jazz music in American history and his work at the National Jazz Museum in Harlem.
A sketch for a new piece by 20th century jazz violinist Stuff Smith has surfaced. As WNYC's Sara Fishko tells us in this Fishko Files, it may be a small work, but it's a reminder of Smith's big influence on music. The Stuff Smith concerto can be heard at Le Poisson Rouge this Sunday, November 5. For details on this Composers Concordance concert, visit lpr.com. Jazz violinist Regina Carter performs at NJPAC as part of Ella & Dizzy: The Centennial Celebration on Sunday, November 12. For tickets, visit NJPAC.org. Limited edition and rare Stuff Smith recordings, including his unfinished concerto, are available through Anthony Barnett's AB Fable Archive. The Savory Collection Volumes 1-3 are available exclusively on Apple Music and iTunes. Special thanks to Loren Schoenberg and Dave Soldier Music: “Minuet in Swing”The Stuff Smith TrioStuff Smith, violin; Jimmy Jones, piano; John Levy, bassThe Stuff Smith Trio: 1943“Tain’t No Use”Burton Lane/Herbert MagidsonStuff Smith, violinThe Complete 1936-1937 Sessions “After You’ve Gone”Turner Layton/Henry CreamerStuff Smith, violinThe Complete 1936-1937 Sessions “Artistya”Mariam DoumbiaRegina Carter, violin; Gary Versace, accordion; Chris Lightcap, bass; Alvester Garnett, drumsReverse Thread (2010) “A Ghost of a Chance”Victor Young/Ned Washington/Bing CrosbyStuff Smith, violin; Jimmy Jones, piano; John Levy, bassThe Stuff Smith Trio: 1943 “Humoresque”(After Dvořák Humoresque)Stuff Smith, violin; Jimmy Jones, piano; John Levy, bassThe Stuff Smith Trio: 1943 “Rio Pakistan”Dizzy GillespieDizzy Gillespie, trumpet; Stuff Smith, violin; Wynton Kelly, piano; Paul West, bass; J.C. Heard, drumsDizzy Gillespie & Stuff Smith (1957) Fishko Files with Sara Fishko Assistant Producer: Olivia BrileyMix Engineer: Bill MossEditor: Karen Frillmann
Loren Schoenberg, Founding Director and Senior Scholar at the National Jazz Museum in Harlem talks about the newly released Savory Collection of recently discovered recordings from the 1930's of artists including Ella Fitzgerald, Lionel Hampton, Coleman Hawkins, Fats Waller and others. For more information, go to http://jazzmuseuminharlem.org/
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The show starts out in silence after the introduction. I tried something new again which didn't work. I thought the audience could hear a Youtube broadcast, but it was only audible to me. I can't edit the archived show because it is live, so just stay with me and after 7 minutes of silence, Jonathan calls in and we start. For reference, the link is: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pBpLKm8vw4M We'll be speaking to New Orleans native, Jonathan Batiste, (pianist), who is the musical director of Stanford Lively Art's "Miles Davis/50 Years of KIND OF BLUE," this Saturday, April 18, a project headed by National Jazz Museum in Harlem, Loren Schoenberg, ED. He'll be joined by Darryl Green on drums; David Ewell on bass; Dayna Stephens on saxophone; Dominick Farinacci on trumpet, and Vasko Dukovski, clarinet. Okpara Danjuma, Unity Concepts, Inc., and Val Serrant join us next to talk about the first of many fundraisers called "Bridge to Bridge: A Gift from the Bay Area to the Youth of Katrina." The project is designed around a series of fundraisers to raise monies to establish a youth center in New Orleans' 6th Ward. The event is at Shashamne, 2507 Broadway in Oakland. Besides featured guests: Paradise, Val and Muhammad Hanif and the Sound Messengers, there is also an open mic. The donation is $5. The focus of the center will be to train youth in the areas of Human Rights and Social Justice advocacy. For information call (510) 759-7577. We close the show with a conversation with Joyce Jenkins, editor of Poetry Flash and member of the Northern California Book Reviewers Association's annual Book Awards, Sunday, April 19, at the San Francisco Main Library, Koret Auditorium. The event, 1-2:30 p.m. Awards Ceremony, 2:30-4:00 Book signing & reception. The event is free. Visit www.poetryflash.org/NCBA.html
(April 18, 2009) Loren Schoenberg, director, National Jazz museum in Harlem, gives a mini tutorial on modal jazz and the way that Miles Davis changed jazz forever.
(April 18, 2009) Loren Schoenberg, director, National Jazz museum in Harlem, gives a mini tutorial on modal jazz and the way that Miles Davis changed jazz forever.