Yonkers Waterfront Concert
What a beautiful evening it was on the Yonkers Waterfront on August 12 in concert with the blues band. For the first time, we added trombone and were knocked out by the soulful contributions of trombonist Chris Washburne. This concert also featured vocalist Charenee Wade, her first time appearing with the band since the Guatemala Jazz Festival in February and tubist Channel Crichlow, her first time appearing with the band since the Rhythm Road 2010 Tour of the Balkans. Blues Band veteran LaFrae Sci was in full effect and for I Wish I Knew How It Would Feel to Be Free we were joined by a young Yonkers resident with a fierce and rock solid stomp/clap. THE AUDIENCE WAS A DREAM joining in and breathing with us on every move, every tune. The weather was perfect and it felt as if we could play on and on…WE LOVE YOU YONKERS!
Thank-you to the Yonkers BID for sponsoring the concert and Steve Sansone, Executive Director and his assistant, Noe.
Photos by Kerry Kehoe
Arts are Basic Workshop in Crete, Nebraska
I had a tremendous time in Crete, Nebraska leading a workshop as part of Arts are Basic. This program sends teaching artists into schools throughout the state to partner with classroom teachers to create an experiential unit of study for students around a work of art. The photo above was taken by participants taking part in the visual component of the workshop led by my colleague, artist and teaching artist extraordinaire Barbara Ellman.
I’m so grateful to Barbara for recommending me to Rhea Gill, director of Arts are Basic and this tremendous community of artists and educators in Nebraska. The two days we spent together were truly magical.
Our focus of study was a music/drama/poetry performance piece inspired by the Harlem Renaissance and performed by members of Soul Lyrical, a Kansas City based group, represented by vocalist Angela Hagenbach and pianist/composer/vocalist Pamela Baskin-Watson. They brought a treasure trove of music, spoken word and narrative. It was my task to lead teachers, and teaching artists teaching towards this work ideas about how to structure a unit of study that students can sink their teeth into. On the first day, we focused on Bessie Smith, Langston Hughes and Fats Waller. We explored how to follow the contours of Bessie Smith’s blues line, to more fully appreciate the range and subtleties of her emotional expression.
We set Langston Hughes poem “Negro Speaks of Rivers” to music and we experienced swing as a rhythm, a time period and as an incredibly challenging thing people do by staying in sync with another. For this we jumped some rope in trios and compared the experience to Fats Waller and his Rhythm performing “The Joint is Jumpin'”.
I've Known Rivers by Langston Hughes I've known rivers: I've known rivers ancient as the world and older than the flow of human blood in human veins. My soul has grown deep like the rivers. I bathed in the Euphrates when dawns were young. I built my hut near the Congo and it lulled me to sleep. I looked upon the Nile and raised the pyramids above it. I heard the singing of the Mississippi when Abe Lincoln went down to New Orleans, and I've seen its muddy bosom turn all golden in the sunset. I've known rivers: Ancient, dusky rivers. My soul has grown deep like the rivers.
On the morning of the second day, I asked if anyone had any dreams or reflections.
Storyteller, Rita Paskowitz, offered the following poem she had written overnight. It knocks me out!
I met
Fats Waller
in my living room
in the fall of 1977.
I put my key into the lock
opened my front door
and heard his magic fingers
teasing
those eighty-eights
all
jaunty and sly
inviting me in
like he was going to share
my dirtiest secret
with the world
if I lingered
too long
in that hallway
So in I came
like a jitterbuggin’ fool
nodding
my blue-eyed
kinky head
in full agreement with the beat
and
anything else
he had in mind.
I had no idea
what
I was getting myself
into
lo
those forty-odd years ago
but when I heard his name
mentioned
just yesterday morning
it wasn’t just the joint
that was jumpin’…
It was also my heart.
Building on the work from the day before, participants created and scored stories of their own personal heroes, people in their life who, like artists of the Harlem Renaissance, had overcome major obstacles to achieve excellence. Final performances cut to the core of the of why we make art. Inspired by the artists of the period and performers from Soul Lyrical, creativity flowed with phenomenal focus and strong intention. Personal stake in the art was unshakable.
Huge thank-you’s to everyone involved in Arts are Basic including Doane College in Crete where the workshop took place. Thanks to Rhea’s terrific assistant Petrina Arneson and Rhea who, between her own dance studio, teaching at the college and directing Arts are Basic, is truly a pillar of the arts community. It’s always a treat to meet like minded folks throughout the globe. We are everywhere and especially in Nebraska!
Litchfield Jazz Camp
For the third year in a row I spent a week performing and teaching at Litchfield Jazz Camp in Kent, Connecticut. It was a wonderful week immersed in jazz. It’s always a treat to be surrounded by so many young people so eager to learn and experiment with the language of jazz. I love seeing how each student makes this language their own. It shows me how enduring our art form is. In addition to working with students, I performed two concerts with the tremendous faculty of the camp including director Don Braden, Claire Daly, Claudio Roditi, Joris Teepe, George Schuller, Mike DiRubbo, Chris Allen, Pete McEachern, Russ Johnson, Nilson Matta, Roni Ben-Hur, Steve Johns and Champian Fulton. What fantastic week it was full of art!
Thanks for an amazing year!
It has been an amazing year and I thank you for listening. What a joy it is to meet in communities around the globe in celebration of our music. It’s a true gift and I’m grateful to all the musicians, audience members and support staff who make it all happen. Thank-you thank-you thank-you. Can’t wait to do it again. Keep swinging everyone and let’s be in close contact to expand our reach and build our community far and wide!
Eli Yamin Blues Band CD Release Concert Monday, June 20 at 8pm at Lincoln Center. Information and tickets.
The Eli Yamin Blues Band returns to the Clark Studio Theater at Lincoln Center Institute to perform a homecoming concert in celebration of their new release, I Feel So Glad.
This is no ordinary blues band,” former Living Blues magazine editor Scott Barretta declares in his liner notes to I Feel So Glad, the debut recording by the Eli Yamin Blues Band. “There’s no denying that this is a unique ensemble,” he rightly says of the group led by pianist/vocalist-composer/arranger Eli Yamin, which features Grammy© nominated lead singer Kate McGarry, the master tuba player Bob Stewart and multitalented drummer LaFrae Sci, drums, voice.
The band will play tunes from the new album including their unique arrangements of Hound Dog, I Wish I Knew How It Would Feel To Be Free, Trouble of the World, John Henry and Fishin’ Blues as well as new arrangements of the band’s original hit songs like Rwandan Child and A Healing Song.
MORE INFORMATION
PURCHASE TICKETS
Montenegro Premiere of Nora’s Ark, the jazz musical by Eli Yamin and Clifford Carlson
What an unbelievable week we had in Montenegro at Jazz Art Jam, celebrating Jazz Appreciation Month, a co-production with Jazz Art Montenegro and The Jazz Drama Program with support from the U.S. Embassy in Montenegro, the municipality and Porto Montenegro. I never dreamed that this production of Nora’s Ark could take off the way it did. The kids were fantastic! 40 students from the Middle School for Music, 20 students from the High School for Music and 8 ballet dancers made the show come alive. When I arrived all the kids were singing the songs from memory with great gusto and spirit. We spent the days staging and refining the music while integrating ballet dancers into the instrumental solo breaks and narration in English and Montenegrin. In the evenings my jazz quartet of LaFrae Sci, drums, vocal Ari Roland, bass, Zaid Nasser, saxophone and myself on piano and voice played concerts-3 in total. By day we rehearsed with the students. What a spirited week it was. The kids rose the occasion and worked like professionals improving their pronunciation of the lyrics in English and deeply imbibing the feel of swing and the expression of the blues. The spirit of jazz is alive and well in Montenegro!
Hats off to my right hand–the amazing LaFrae Sci for stepping in as choreographer and more. Also thanks to Ari Roland and Zaid Nasser for taking the week out of their other extensive cultural ambassador duties to lay down the spirit of the blues so soulfully for the kids and roll with our extensive theatrical and musical schedule.
Thanks to the unbelievable vision and resourcefulness of producer Maja Popovic and all the teachers and staff who partnered with us along the way including Irena Radenovic, Vjera Nikolic, Tamara Vujosevic Mandic, Mira Popovic, Sonja Dragovic, Slobodan Bob Stanisic, Miroslav Stanisic, Mili Malovic, Nemanja Klikovac and Goran Brnovic. Also thanks to our friends at the U.S. Embassy for supporting the project!
Posted in Arts Education, Cultural Diplomacy, Eli Yamin Jazz Quartet, Jazz education, Montenegro, The Jazz Drama Program Leave a comment
Guatemala International Jazz Festival
From Idaho, it was straight South to Guatemala with the Blues Band. This time, for the first time with Charenee Wade, vocal and Ben Stapp, tuba, along with LaFrae Sci, drums and yours truly at the piano and hollering. Man, what a gas. The first night we opened the festival with a concert on the central square of Guatemala City plaza. We were the first concert on the plaza ever, a great honor indeed. There was such a warm feeling in the audience. And this continued throughout the week in concerts and workshops in Antigua and Santa Catarina Pinula. What an amazing journey. Thanks to our unbelievable head of security/road manager and crowd rouser-Yuval. Thanks also to the great organizers of the festival Thelma Castillo and Ana Sylvia Ramirez of Instituto Guatemala American (IGA). Also hats off to Todd Robinson of the U.S. Embassy and the Department of State for supporting our tour!
On the last night, we sang our theme song, I Feel So Glad, in Spanish and English with all the children and the Mayor of the town.
“Me ciento feliz, las problemas nunca mas.”
Thanks to my Spanish tutor-the towering, inspiring and clear Gabriella Ruiz-Andrews.
Por que necesitamos el blues by Eli Yamin (from liner notes to “I Feel So Glad” the Eli Yamin Blues Band, RELEASE DATE APRIL 1, 2011
Translated by Gabriella Ruiz-Andrews
Viajamos a Chile y visitamos tres de las ciudades más afectadas por el terremoto devastador de 2010. Ahí vimos a la gente traumatizada pero fuerte, triste pero con ánimo de recuperarse. Fuimos a Brasil y vimos a algunos de los habitantes más pobres y con los rostros más brillantes. Todos totalmente inmersos en la música.
Vemos a nuestro país, los Estados Unidos; tenemos de las peores escuelas y también de las mejores; somos de los más abiertos y también de los más cerrados ante las diferencias. Hay tanto liderazgo y tan limitada cooperación.
¿Cómo podemos llegar a entendernos y aprender a trabajar juntos?
¿Cómo podemos apoyarnos unos a otros en los tiempos difíciles?
Yo, no he encontrado mejor manera que el blues.
Surgido en la hora más obscura del sufrimiento humano, es ahora bienvenido en todo el mundo.
¿Por qué el blues es universalmente apreciado?
Porque lo necesitamos.
El blues es música laica sagrada y sana el alma, creamos en la religión o no. Nos ayuda a tratarnos los unos a los otros como hermanos. LaFrae Sci afirma “el shuffle es el latido del corazón del blues”, Kate McGarry canta “The blues is a Healing song” (El blues es una canción sanadora), y Bob Stewart predica con su corno.
El público de todas las edades alrededor el mundo canta con nosotros y genera una fuerza vital imparable, vigorizante y eterna. El blues nos hace darnos cuenta de nuestra humanidad compartida. Escuchemos su mensaje y compartámoslo con cada respiración.
Lionel Hampton Jazz Festival 2011
What a phenomenal festival this is. 7,000 young people from all over the Northwest descend on Moscow, Idaho where they are embraced by the entire University of Idaho community. And I mean the whole community from the president to the freshmen and families in neighborhoods. Students, teachers, jazz fans and curious bystanders are all swept up in the joy and excitement of jazz for the week. I could not be happier to take part. Huge thanks to everyone who makes this festival possible and special gratitude to the great leaders of the charge, most especially, Artistic Director, John Clayton and Education Coordinator extraordinaire, Dwina Howey. What a tremendous treat this festival is. It makes you feel great about the future and present of our music. All the school groups play, there are great performances at night-Jimmy Heath, Bill Charlap/Renee Rosnes Duo, Victor Wooten, Manhattan Transfer and then workshops all day long.
I gave concerts in area elementary schools for kids with a sextet of young pros from the area. They are swinging too. The first day of workshops had me coaching 2 middle school bands then the first of 2 hands-on workshops based on my Chamber Music Magazine article entitled “Jazz Culture and Swing Rhythm.” Next, I gave a Free Improvisation Workshop. The penultimate day I had a one-day rehearsal with a combined middle and high school group to prepare songs and scenes from Nora’s Ark, the jazz musical by myself and Clifford Carlson. The great teaching artist Charenee Wade co-taught with me for that. On the final day, we presented a Jazz Drama Workshop for around 60 people and got everyone “jazzifying” 2 poems: “Jazz Is…” by Clifford Carlson and “The Jazz Aesthetic” by Shireen Dickson. Creativity was flowing. We topped everything off by sharing the work of the kids from the day before and presented 3 songs from Nora’s Ark (pictured above).
To top that all off I met and spent time with one of my newest heroes, the composer, singer, conductor Roger Treece. He blew me away with his performance with Bobby McFerrin’s “Vocabularies” last November at Jazz at Lincoln Center. Roger scored all that MUSIC. In Idaho we were riffing off each other almost non-stop for about 48-hours. Thank goodness our friend, jazz singer Rosana Eckert. Her equipoise and grace struck the perfect balance.
A Healing Song, AVAILABLE NOW as single
In anticipation of our new CD with The Eli Yamin Blues Band, “I Feel So Glad,” we just released a single from the album:
A Healing Song
by Eli Yamin and Clifford Carlson
This song is a message to the world about the healing power of the blues. It’s great to groove to and sing along features voice and tuba. “It’s not just a song for me. Take a breath and you will see. Why the blues has the power to be. A healing song. A healing song.
You can download it now at itunes and at cdbaby
Please purchase the download for 99 cents and tell all your friends and family. You can make this song a hit and spread its healing message throughout world!
Here’s a clip of A Healing Song from the recording session.