Member Since: 9/19/2006
Band Website: jazzinchicago.org
Band Members:
Jazz Links – Creative Ways to Forge the Future
The Jazz Links program began in 2002 from grassroots advocacy from the band teachers in several high schools across Chicago who were seeking support for their efforts to develop young jazz musicians. The Jazz Institute responded to their immediate needs by creating artist residencies as well as helping to develop other ideas, such as the Jazz Links Jam Sessions and the All City Jazz Band Competition that came from regularly convening what we came to call the Jazz Links Teachers Advisory Board.
Artist Residencies have since grown from four to eight, including three elementary schools; the All City Jazz Band Competition invites 14 jazz bands form across the city, the Jazz Links Jam Sessions serve over 20 schools, and the Jazz Links Student Council (JLSC) gives students an opportunity to develop leadership skills, take master classes and form small performing ensembles. A partnership with Columbia College Chicago includes master classes for the Jazz Links Student Council members, opportunities for the JLSC members to perform with the Chicago Jazz Ensemble and the development of a new collaboration with all of the CPS band and music instructors.
Visit the Jazz Links Student Council's Myspace.
For the third year, Made in Chicago: World Class Jazz series highlights Chicago’s own jazz musicians who explore everything from the roots of blues and ragtime to big band swing and beyond. Co-programmed by the Jazz Institute of Chicago and the Department of Cultural Affairs, and presented by Millennium Park, the series is sponsored by the Chicago Jazz Partnership whose members include The Boeing Company, Kraft Foods, The Joyce Foundation, JP Morgan Chase, and The Chicago Community Trust.
“One of the delights of programming this series is the ability to approach our city's world class artists and offer them free reign to create new work composed specifically for Millennium Park,†said Jazz Institute of Chicago Executive Director Lauren Deutsch. “The end result has quickly proved to the world that the jazz musicians of Chicago are second to none. This year's series shines a light on the women whose voices have eloquently contributed to the musical conversation we call jazz.â€
The JazzCity free concert series is a collaboration that we initiated with the Chicago Park District in 1997 that explores cultural connections in communities throughout Chicago.
The simple premise of the JazzCity series is to connect people of all ethnicities and generations to the legacy (both musical and spiritual) of jazz in Chicago. Make it accessible by presenting it free of charge, and located right in the neighborhood; interview musicians onstage to add some historical context and invite people to share food and conversation with the musicians afterward. Five programs travel citywide--repeating the themes of Bebop Brass, Big Band/Big Dance, Sonidos Calientes (Hot Sounds), Saxophone Summit and Jazz Cabaretwith a different roster of performers presenting their interpretations of the themes at each venue. Other concerts in the program defy category, such as Tatsu Aoki's Miyumi Project, coming up in May of this year. For the musicians, it's been a great opportunity for them to present and create new compositions. For the audiences, it's been an opportunity to bring families and friends to see world class musicians in their own backyard. It has also been a unique venue for artists to create and present major experimental projects. In 1998 at Washington Park for 3 on 3: Music is the Game, under the direction of Douglas Ewart , basketball players became dancers and poets. A year later at Fuller Park, composer Maia was commissioned to collaborate with residents to write and produce a performance piece that combined poetry, music, dance and sports, using basketball as a metaphor to examine issues in women's lives. Community residents participated in Playin' Ta Win as poets, dancers and players. In 2002 Ameen Muhammad's Roots N D Blues jazz opera re-interpreted the book of Genesis with blues and jazz music and dance. Nicole Mitchell's inspirational Vision Quest explored urban teen issues in a multi-media project that involved community memberson the west side of Chicago.
JazzCity fosters greater awareness of the continuing legacy of Chicago's vibrant jazz community and an unparalleled opportunity for musicians to reach audiences where they live.
Influences: Chicago jazz musicians past and present...
Type of Label: None