Showing posts with label Tanglewood. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tanglewood. Show all posts

Monday, June 9, 2008

Tanglewood Jazz Festival Announces Nnenna Freelon, Mulgrew Miller and Spencer Day as Special Guests on "Piano Jazz" with Marian McPartland

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE June 9, 2008

Tanglewood Jazz Festival Announces Nnenna Freelon, Mulgrew Miller and Spencer Day as Special Guests on "Piano Jazz" with Marian McPartland in Celebration of her 90th Birthday Taped Live for National Public Radio

Jazz Café Artists Include Aaron Parks, Kate McGarry, Jason Palmer, Spencer Day and Alex Brown

August 29-31, 2008
All-Day Lawn Pass Available for Saturday and Sunday

Cunard® Line is the official Cruise Line of the Boston Symphony Orchestra and Sponsor of the Tanglewood Jazz Festival

The Boston Symphony Orchestra has announced the addition of vocalists Nnenna Freelon and Spencer Day, and pianist, Mulgrew Miller to the 2008 Tanglewood Jazz Festival lineup. They will be the special guests of Marian McPartland for the live taping of "Piano Jazz" for NPR in celebration of Ms. McPartland's 90th birthday.

Returning again this year is the popular Jazz Café, an informal, cabaret style venue that features emerging talent. This year's artists in the Jazz Café are the Aaron Parks Quintet, the Kate McGarry Trio, the Jason Palmer Quintet, the Spencer Day Quartet, and the Alex Brown Trio.

Available again this year is an all-day lawn pass for Saturday and Sunday for $33 per day.

The full lineup also includes Dianne Reeves, Terence Blanchard, Donal Fox, Christian Scott, Eddie Daniels, Mark O'Connor, Jane Monheit, Joe Locke, Eliane Elias, and Edmar Castaneda.

Cunard® Line, whose fleet comprises The Most Famous Ocean Liners in the World®, the magnificent Queen Mary 2®, the legendary Queen Elizabeth 2®, and its newest ocean liner, Queen VictoriaTM, is the official cruise line and sponsor of the 2008 Tanglewood Jazz Festival. In a legendary time known as The Golden Age of Ocean Travel, crossing the North Atlantic onboard a Cunard ocean liner was a grand journey, rich with possibilities and a distinct sense of adventure. The epitome of a privileged, international lifestyle, a Cunard voyage encompassed the finest in contemporary entertainment, cuisine and culture. Today, Cunard offers all the glamour and excitement of that time on an even grander scale with modern-day amenities beautifully complementing Cunard's impeccably cultivated atmosphere of British tradition making Cunard the preferred choice of elegant travel.

Tickets for the 2008 Tanglewood Jazz Festival are available by calling SymphonyCharge at 888-266-1200 or online at www.tanglewood.org. and in person at the Tanglewood Box Office in Lenox. All ticket prices include a $1 Tanglewood Grounds Maintenance Fee. For further information, please call the Boston Symphony Orchestra at 617-266-1492.

The Tanglewood Jazz Festival is also sponsored by JazzTimes Magazine and Jazzcorner.com.

2008 Tanglewood Jazz Festival Ticket Prices

Friday, August 29, 6:30 pm
Aaron Parks Quartet
Jazz Café
Admission free with ticket to main stage event

Friday, August 29, 8 pm
Edmar Castaneda Trio with special guest Joe Locke
Eliane Elias "Something For You" A Tribute to Bill Evans
Tickets: $41-59/lawn $17

Saturday, August 30, 12:30 pm
Kate McGarry Trio
Jazz Cafe
Admission free with ticket to main stage event

Saturday, August 30, 2 pm
A Celebration of Marian McPartland's 90th Birthday
Special guests Nnenna Freelon, Mulgrew Miller, Spencer Day
A live taping for "Piano Jazz" on NPR
Tickets: $31-49/lawn $18

Saturday, August 30, 6:30 pm
Jason Palmer Quintet
Jazz Cafe
Admission free with ticket to main stage event

Saturday, August 30, 8 pm
Donal Fox: Scarlatti Jazz Suite Project with special guest Christian Scott
Dianne Reeves
Tickets: $44-70/lawn $19

Sunday, August 31, 12:30 pm
Spencer Day Quartet
Jazz Cafe
Admission free with ticket to main stage event

Sunday, August 31, 2:00 pm
Eddie Daniels Quartet
Mark O'Connor's "Hot Swing" with special guest Jane Monheit
Tickets: $31-49/lawn $18

Sunday, August 31, 6:30 pm
Alex Brown Trio
Jazz Cafe
Admission free with ticket to main stage event

Sunday, August 31, 8:00 pm
Terence Blanchard's "A Tale of God's Will (A Requiem for Katrina)" with 35 piece orchestra
Tickets: $41-59/lawn $17

For additional information, bios and photos on the performing artists, please review the electronic press kit at www.tanglewoodjazzfestival.org/presskit or contact:

Dawn Singh
Dawn Singh Publicity
505-771-0417 (office)
857-544-0739 (cell)
dawn@dawnsinghpublicity.com

Kathleen Drohan
Boston Symphony Orchestra Press Office
617-638-9280
kdrohan@bso.org

Thursday, February 14, 2008

BOSTON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA ANNOUNCES REMAINING PROGRAMS: 2008 TANGLEWOOD JAZZ FESTIVAL

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE FEB 15, 2008

BOSTON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA ANNOUNCES REMAINING PROGRAMS: 2008 TANGLEWOOD JAZZ FESTIVAL TO FEATURE DIANNE REEVES, TERENCE BLANCHARD, DONAL FOX, CHRISTIAN SCOTT, ELIANE ELIAS, EDDIE DANIELS, MARK O'CONNOR, JANE MONHEIT, MARIAN MCPARTLAND, EDMAR CASTANEDA, AND JOE LOCKE, AMONG OTHERS

TICKETS FOR ENTIRE TANGLEWOOD SEASON ON SALE FEBRUARY 17—VISIT WWW.TANGLEWOOD.ORG

Cunard® Line is the Official Cruise Line of the Boston Symphony Orchestra and Sponsor of the Tanglewood Jazz Festival

When the 2008 Tanglewood season goes on sale on Sunday, February 17, music fans will be able to order tickets to all Boston Symphony Orchestra concert presentations (details available at www.tanglewood.org), including the newly- announced Tanglewood Jazz Festival August 29-31, Labor Day Weekend. Jazz greats highlighting this year's festival include Dianne Reeves, Terence Blanchard, Donal Fox, Eliane Elias, Eddie Daniels, Mark O'Connor, Jane Monheit, Marian McPartland, Edmar Castaneda and Joe Locke. All shows will be held in Seiji Ozawa Hall. Tickets for the entire Tanglwood season, include the Jazz festival, go on sale Sunday, February 17th.

Photos and bios of the Tanglewood Jazz Festival artists are available at tanglewoodjazzfestival.org/presskit.

Opening the festival Friday, August 29, at 8 p.m. will be Colombian harpist, Edmar Castaneda, and his trio featuring vibraphonist, Joe Locke. Pianist Eliane Elias will follow performing material from her highly acclaimed CD, "Something For You," a tribute to Bill Evans.

On Saturday, August 30, at 2 p.m., Marian McPartland celebrates her 90th birthday in the seventh annual live taping of "Piano Jazz" for NPR. Ms. McPartland will have several very special guests for this performance who will be announced at a later date.

Saturday, August 30, at 8 p.m., pianist and composer, Donal Fox, will perform his Scarlatti Jazz Suite Project with special guest, trumpeter, Christian Scott. Renowned vocalist Dianne Reeves takes the stage in the second half of the concert.

The Sunday afternoon concert on August 31 will open at 2 p.m. with clarinetist and saxophonist, Eddie Daniels, and his quartet. The concert continues with violinist, Mark O'Connor, with special guest jazz vocalist Jane Monheit in her Tanglewood Jazz Festival debut in a show titled "Hot Swing."

Closing the festival on Sunday, August 31, at 8 p.m. will be a Tanglewood exclusive—a very special concert by trumpeter and composer, Terence Blanchard, with a 30-piece orchestra performing the material from this year's Grammy winning CD, "A Tale of God's Will (A Requiem for Katrina)."

Tickets for the 2008 Tanglewood season go on sale Sunday, February 17, and are available by calling SymphonyCharge at 888-266-1200 or online at tanglewood.org and in person at the Symphony Hall Box Office. The Tanglewood Box Office in Lenox opens June 13. For further information, please call the Boston Symphony Orchestra at 617-266-1492 or visit our website at tanglewoodjazzfestival.org.

Cunard Line, whose fleet comprises The Most Famous Ocean Liners in the World®, the magnificent Queen Mary 2®, the legendary Queen Elizabeth 2®, and its newest ocean liner, Queen Victoria™, is the official cruise line and sponsor of the 2008 Tanglewood Jazz Festival. In a legendary time known as The Golden Age of Ocean Travel, crossing the North Atlantic onboard a Cunard ocean liner was a grand journey, rich with possibilities and a distinct sense of adventure. The epitome of a privileged, international lifestyle, a Cunard voyage encompassed the finest in contemporary entertainment, cuisine and culture. Today, Cunard offers all the glamour and excitement of that time on an even grander scale with modern-day amenities beautifully complementing Cunard's impeccably cultivated atmosphere of British tradition making Cunard the preferred choice of elegant travel.

The Tanglewood Jazz Festival is sponsored by Cunard and JazzTimes Magazine.

2008 Tanglewood Jazz Festival Ticket Prices

Friday, August 29, 8 p.m. The Edmar Castaneda Trio with Special Guest, Joe Locke Eliane Elias "Something For You" A Tribute to Bill Evans $41/$48/$59/lawn $17

Saturday, August 30, 2 p.m. A Celebration of Marian McPartland's 90th Birthday Live taping for NPR's "Piano Jazz with special guests TBA $31/$38/$49/lawn $18

Saturday, August 30, 8 p.m. Donal Fox: Scarlatti Jazz Suite Project featuring Christian Scott Dianne Reeves $44/$57/$70/lawn $19

Sunday, August 31, 2 p.m. The Eddie Daniels Quartet Mark O'Connor's "Hot Swing" with special guest Jane Monheit $31/$38/$49/lawn $18

Sunday, August 31, 8 p.m. Terence Blanchard's "A Tale of God's Will (A Requiem for Katrina)" with 30 piece orchestra $44/$48/$59/lawn $17

For additional information, bios and photos on the performing artists, please review the electronic press kit at tanglewoodjazzfestival.org/presskit or contact:

Boston Symphony Orchestra: Bernadette Horgan (bhorgan@bso.org) and Kathleen Drohan (kdrohan@bso.org) 617-638-9280 (September –June) 413-637-5280 (July and August)

Dawn Singh Publicity: Dawn Singh dawn@dawnsinghpublicity.com 505-771-0417 (office) 857-544-0739 (cell)

Sunday, July 29, 2007

Boston Symphony Orchestra Presents 2007 Tanglewood Jazz Festival

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE July 30, 2007

BOSTON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA PRESENTS 2007 TANGLEWOOD JAZZ FESTIVAL, TO TAKE PLACE AUGUST 31-SEPTEMBER 2, 2007 IN LENOX, MASSACHUSETTS,

FEATURED PERFORMERS INCLUDE RANDY CRAWFORD & JOE SAMPLE, KURT ELLING, AHMAD JAMAL, PONCHO SANCHEZ LATIN BIG BAND, HANK JONES, ROBERTA GAMBARINI, JIMMY HEATH, MARIAN MCPARTLAND, RENEE ROSNES, MARIA SCHNEIDER, KEVIN MAHOGANY, RED HOLLOWAY, CYRUS CHESTNUT, HUGH MASEKELA, CESAR CAMARGO MARIANO, ROMERO LUBAMBO, LENY ANDRADE, ARUAN ORTIZ, EDMAR CASTANEDA, MINA AGOSSI, GRACE KELLY, CHIARA CIVELLO, SACHAL VASANDANI

Cunard Line Comes Aboard as the Official Cruise Line of the Boston Symphony Orchestra and Sponsor of the Tanglewood Jazz Festival

The Boston Symphony Orchestra will present its annual Labor Day Weekend Tanglewood Jazz Festival August 31-September 2 at the Orchestra's summer home in the Berkshire Hills in Lenox, Massachusetts. Cunard Line, whose fleet comprises The Most Famous Ocean Liners in the World (SM), Queen Mary 2 and QE2, and our newest royal, Queen Victoria, comes aboard for the first time as the official cruise line and sponsor of the 2007 Tanglewood Jazz Festival. During its storied 167-year history, Cunard's renowned ships have transported society's luminaries, notables, and famed artists around the world in unrivaled style. Sumptuous surroundings and the line's legendary White Star Service (SM) have made Cunard the preferred choice of luxury travel for generations. Tickets for the 2007 Tanglewood Jazz Festival are available by calling SymphonyCharge at 888-266-1200 or online at www.tanglewood.org. and in person at the Tanglewood Box Office in Lenox. All ticket prices include a $1 Tanglewood Grounds Maintenance Fee. For further information, please call the Boston Symphony Orchestra at 617-266-1492.

2007 Tanglewood Jazz Festival Ticket Prices

All-day lawn pass Saturday and Sunday @ $33 per day

Friday, August 31, 6:30 pm Aruan Ortiz, Cuban jazz pianist Jazz Café Admission free with ticket to main stage event

Friday, August 31, 8 pm Hugh Masekela Poncho Sanchez Latin Jazz Band Tickets: $40-57/lawn $17

Saturday, September 1, 1:30 pm Mina Agossi, French jazz vocalist Jazz Cafe Admission free with ticket to main stage event

Saturday, September 1, 3 pm Live taping of Marian McPartland's "Piano Jazz" for NPR Special guest Renee Rosnes Tickets: $30-47/lawn $18

Saturday, September 1, 6:30 pm Grace Kelly, saxophone Jazz Cafe Admission free with ticket to main stage event

Saturday, September 1, 8 pm Kurt Elling with very special friends Randy Crawford & Joe Sample Tickets: $43-68/lawn $20

Sunday, September 2, 12 noon Sachal Vasandani, jazz vocalist Jazz Cafe Admission free with ticket to main stage event

Sunday, September 2, 1:30 pm

1) Kevin Mahogany's Kansas City Revue Featuring the music of Big Joe Turner Starring Cyrus Chestnut & Red Holloway Featuring Kathy Kosins & the Chuck Bergeron Trio

2) BossaBrasil Featuring the Cesar Camargo Mariano-Romero Lubambo Duo and special guest from Brazil, vocalist Leny Andrade

3) The Maria Schneider Orchestra Tickets: $30-47/lawn $18

Sunday, September 2, 5 pm The Edmar Castaneda Trio, harp Jazz Cafe Admission free with ticket to main stage event

Sunday, September 2, 6:30 pm Chiara Civello, Italian jazz vocalist Jazz Cafe Admission free with ticket to main stage event

Sunday, September 2, 8 pm Hank Jones & Roberta Gambarini Ahmad Jamal & Jimmy Heath Tickets: $40-57/lawn $17

Tickets: BSO Symphony Charge at 888-266-1200 Website: www.tanglewoodjazzfestival.org

The 2007 Tanglewood Jazz Festival is sponsored by Cunard, Borders Books & Music, and JazzTimes Magazine. Our media partner is Jazzcorner.com.

For additional information, bios and photos on the performing artists, please review the electronic press kit at www.tanglewoodjazzfestival.org/presskit or www.tanglewoodjazzfestival.com/presskit or to request a first-class mailing contact:

Kathleen Drohan Boston Symphony Orchestra Press Office 617-638-9280 kdrohan@bso.org

Dawn Singh Dawn Singh Publicity 505-771-0417 (office) 857-544-0739 (cell) dawn@dawnsinghpublicity.com

Tuesday, May 1, 2007

Boston Symphony Orchestra Presents 2007 Tanglewood Jazz Festival, To Take Place August 31-September 2, 2007 In Lenox, Massachusetts

TANGLEWOOD JAZZ FESTIVAL 2007

BOSTON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA PRESENTS 2007 TANGLEWOOD JAZZ FESTIVAL, TO TAKE PLACE AUGUST 31-SEPTEMBER 2, 2007 IN LENOX, MASSACHUSETTS

FEATURED PERFORMERS INCLUDE RANDY CRAWFORD & JOE SAMPLE, KURT ELLING, AHMAD JAMAL, PONCHO SANCHEZ LATIN BIG BAND, HANK JONES, ROBERTA GAMBARINI, JIMMY HEATH, MARIAN MCPARTLAND

Cunard Line Comes Aboard as the Official Cruise Line of the Boston Symphony Orchestra and Sponsor of the Tanglewood Jazz Festival

The Boston Symphony Orchestra will present its annual Labor Day Weekend Tanglewood Jazz Festival August 31-September 2 at the Orchestra's summer home in the Berkshire Mountains in Lenox, Massachusetts. Jazz greats highlighting this year's festival include Randy Crawford & Joe Sample, Kurt Elling, Ahmad Jamal, the Poncho Sanchez Latin Big Band, Hank Jones, Roberta Gambarini, Jimmy Heath, and Marian McPartland. All shows will be held in Seiji Ozawa Hall.

Opening the festival Friday, August 31, at 8 p.m. will be the Poncho Sanchez Latin Jazz Band. One of the most popular Latin jazz groups in the world today, the Poncho Sanchez Latin Jazz Band pays homage to the glories of a half-century tradition that was born when Afro-Cuban rhythms merged with bebop. The program will feature selections from Do It! , the latest in a long series of releases that began on the Concord Picante label in 1982 and features a duet between the trombone and tenor sax. Two tracks on the CD feature the entire nine-member Tower of Power, the high-octane symbol of the funk era of the 1970s. Another two tracks boast guest artist and legendary South African musician Hugh Masekela.

Poncho Sanchez's life story has become a well-known part of Latin jazz lore. He was born in Texas on October 30, 1951 into a large Mexican-American family but grew up in the Los Angeles area, where he heard a broad range of Latin and non-Latin popular music. Inspired by the conga playing of Cuban great Mongo Santamaria, he honed his skills as a percussionist and broke into the limelight at the age of 23 when he joined vibraphonist Cal Tjader's famed Latin jazz ensemble in 1975. Poncho performed with him until Tjader's untimely death in 1982. A year later, he began his unprecedented 23-year relationship with Concord Records, which has produced two dozen recordings, a Grammy Award, and several Grammy nominations.

On Saturday, September 1, the lineup will kickoff at 3 p.m. with a live taping of NPR's 'Piano Jazz' with host Marian McPartland on her sixth year at Tanglewood. Her guest for this year's taping will be announced at a later date. Ms. McPartland has interviewed more than 500 musicians and performers including Norah Jones (recorded live at Tanglewood), Diana Krall, Dave Brubeck, Dizzy Gillespie, Rosemary Clooney, Herbie Hancock, Bill Evans, Brad Mehldau, Ray Charles, Carmen McRae, and even William F. Buckley. Her easy, comfortable style, charm and quick wit engage her guests in fascinating and sometimes revealing conversations while seated at the piano.

Headlining the festival on Saturday, September 1, at 8 p.m. will be Kurt Elling with some very special friends, followed by Randy Crawford and Joe Sample.

Kurt Elling has been nominated for seven Grammy Awards for his recordings on Blue Note. For six consecutive years, he has been at the top of the DownBeat Critics and JazzTimes readers' polls, has won three Jazz Journalists Association Awards for best male vocalist, and the Prix Billie Holiday from the Academie du Jazz in Paris. His quartet has toured the world performing to critical acclaim in Europe, the Middle East, South America, Asia, and Australia, and at jazz festivals and concert halls across North America.

One of Kurt Elling's major contributions is as a writer and performer of vocalese, the art of putting words to improvised solos of jazz artists. The natural heir to jazz pioneers Eddie Jefferson, King Pleasure and Jon Hendricks, Elling is the contemporary voice in vocalese. Kurt Elling has been featured in profiles for CBS Sunday Morning, CNN, and for hundreds of newspaper and magazine articles.

For more than three decades, Randy Crawford has traversed a musical spectrum ranging from jazz and soul to R&B and pop. Crawford's warm timbre and inventive, emotional phrasing has won her countless fans around the globe. At the age of 20, Crawford released her first single, 'If You Say the Word,' and by the following year she had shared stages with legendary jazz artists Cannonball Adderly, George Benson, and Quincy Jones.

Crawford's first album Everything Must Change was released in 1976 and in 1978 she made her debut on the international charts serving as guest vocalist on the Crusaders' hit 'Street Life' which is heard on the soundtrack to the Quentin Tarantino film, Jackie Brown. Smooth ballads such as 'One Day I'll Fly Away' became Crawford's trademark, though albums like 1981's Secret Combination and 1983's Nightline saw the singer delve into funkier, more up-tempo terrain. Her 1990 collection, Rich and Poor, included a hit cover of Bob Dylan's 'Knockin' On Heaven's Door,' that also appeared on the soundtrack to the film Lethal Weapon 2.

Jazz pianist Joe Sample was born and raised in Houston, Texas. He formed the seminal group the Jazz Crusaders, later known as the Crusaders, as a teenager in the early 1950s with neighborhood buddies, Wilton Felder, Stix Hooper, and Wayne Henderson. The group became one of the all-time leading jazz ensembles and pioneered the way for the sound of contemporary jazz. Joe's first solo record in 1973, Carmel, became a classic pop jazz album before anyone knew what 'pop jazz' was. He continues today as one of the legendary figures in contemporary jazz.

Randy Crawford and Joe Sample first collaborated during the recording of her debut album, Everything Must Change, on which Joe played. Shortly after, while writing songs for his band, the Crusaders, Joe invited Randy to appear as a guest on their record and wrote 'Street Life' especially for her. 'Street Life' became an international hit for the Crusaders and launched Randy on her own successful career. Their new CD, Feeling Good, on Emarcy Records, is produced by legendary producer, Tommy LiPuma, and is Randy's first recording in seven years. Randy's performances underscore her position as one of the premier vocalists in contemporary music and Joe's piano playing and arrangements envelop Randy's voice and capture the essence of each song.

The Sunday, September 2, 2 p.m. concert will be announced at a later date.

Closing out the festival on Sunday, September 2, at 8 p.m., will be Hank Jones and Roberta Gambarini followed by Ahmad Jamal and Jimmy Heath.

Hank Jones is one of the most versatile and durable of modern jazz pianists. An outstanding accompanist of vocalists, he played with Ella Fitzgerald from 1948-53 and recorded as a leader with Coleman Hawkins, Wes Montgomery, Charlie Parker and Ben Webster.

Roberta Gambarini was born in Torino, Italy, into a family that loved jazz. By 17, she was singing and performing in jazz clubs around Northern Italy and moved to Milan to pursue a career as a jazz singer. Soon after her move to Milan, Roberta took third place in a national jazz radio competition on TV leading to performance opportunities at jazz festivals throughout Italy for several years. In 1998 she moved to the United States with a scholarship from the New England Conservatory in Boston. Two weeks later, Roberta stunned many in the jazz world with a third place finish in the Thelonious Monk International Jazz Vocal Competition. Since then, she has performed with Michael Brecker, Ron Carter, Herbie Hancock, Slide Hampton, Roy Hargrove, Jimmy Heath, Hank Jones, Christian McBride and Toots Thielemans, among many others, and has performed at Kennedy Center, Lincoln Center, Town Hall, and Walt Disney Concert Hall and jazz festivals around the world. Her first American release, Easy to Love, on Groovin High Records features special guest, James Moody.

Ahmad Jamal is one of the most distinctive and influential jazz pianists of the past half century. Leader of his own trio since 1951, Jamal makes extensive use of silence, space, and dynamics. A profound influence on the music of Miles Davis, Keith Jarrett, and scores of others, he has been called 'an American original.' Jamal received an American Jazz Masters Fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts in 1994 and was inducted into the New Jersey Jazz Hall of Fame in 2003.

Jimmy Heath has long been recognized as a brilliant instrumentalist and a magnificent composer and arranger. Jimmy is the middle brother of the legendary Heath Brothers (Percy Heath/bass and Tootie Heath/drums) and is the father of Mtume. He has performed with nearly all the jazz greats of the last 50 years, from Howard McGhee, Dizzy Gillespie, and Miles Davis to Wynton Marsalis. In 1948 at the age of 21, he performed in the First International Jazz Festival in Paris with McGhee, sharing the stage with Coleman Hawkins, Slam Stewart, and Erroll Garner. One of Heath's earliest big bands (1947-1948) in Philadelphia included John Coltrane, Benny Golson, Specs Wright, Cal Massey, Johnny Coles, Ray Bryant, and Nelson Boyd. Charlie Parker and Max Roach sat in on one occasion.

During his career, Jimmy Heath has performed on more than 100 record albums including seven with The Heath Brothers and twelve as a leader. Jimmy has also written more than 125 compositions, many of which have become jazz standards and have been recorded by other artists including Art Farmer, Cannonball Adderley, Clark Terry, Chet Baker, Miles Davis, James Moody, Milt Jackson, Ahmad Jamal, Ray Charles, Dizzy Gillespie, J.J. Johnson, and Dexter Gordon. Jimmy has also composed extended works'seven suites and two string quartets'and he premiered his first symphonic work, Three Ears, in 1988 at Queens College (CUNY) with Maurice Peress conducting.

After concluding eleven years as Professor of Music at the Aaron Copland School of Music at Queens College,Heath maintains an extensive performance schedule and continues to conduct workshops and clinics throughout the United States, Europe, and Canada. He has also taught jazz studies at Jazzmobile, Housatonic College, City College of New York, and The New School for Social Research. In October 1997, two of his former students, trumpeters Darren Barrett and Diego Urcola, placed first and second in the Thelonious Monk Competition.

Cunard Line, whose fleet comprises The Most Famous Ocean Liners in the World (SM), Queen Mary 2 and QE2, and our newest royal, Queen Victoria, comes aboard for the first time as the official cruise line and sponsor of the 2007 Tanglewood Jazz Festival. During its storied 167-year history, Cunard's renowned ships have transported society's luminaries, notables, and famed artists around the world in unrivaled style. Sumptuous surroundings and the line's legendary White Star Service (SM) have made Cunard the preferred choice of luxury travel for generations.

Tickets for the 2007 Tanglewood Jazz Festival are available by calling SymphonyCharge at 888-266-1200 or online at www.tanglewood.org. and in person at the Tanglewood Box Office in Lenox. All ticket prices include a $1 Tanglewood Grounds Maintenance Fee. For further information, please call the Boston Symphony Orchestra at 617-266-1492. The Tanglewood Jazz Festival is sponsored by JazzTimes Magazine and Borders Books.

2007 Tanglewood Jazz Festival Ticket Prices:

Friday, August 31, 8 p.m. Poncho Sanchez Latin Jazz Band Second Act TBA $40-57/lawn $17

Saturday, September 1, 3 p.m. Marian McPartland Live taping for NPR's 'Piano Jazz' with special guest TBA $30-47/lawn $18

Saturday, September 1, 8 p.m. Kurt Elling with Very Special Friends Randy Crawford & Joe Sample $43-68/lawn $20

Sunday, September 2, 2 p.m. TBA

Sunday, September 2, 8 p.m. Hank Jones & Roberta Gambarini Ahmad Jamal & Jimmy Heath $40-57/lawn $17

For additional information, bios and photos on the performing artists, please review the electronic press kit at www.tanglewoodjazzfestival.org/presskit or www.tanglewoodjazzfestival.com/presskit or to request a first-class mailing contact:

Dawn Singh Dawn Singh Publicity 505-771-0417 (office) 857-544-0739 (cell) dawn@dawnsinghpublicity.com

Kathleen Drohan Boston Symphony Orchestra Press Office 617-638-9280 kdrohan@bso.org

Tuesday, August 1, 2006

Boston Symphony Orchestra Presents 2006 Tanglewood Jazz Festival September 1-3

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE August 1, 2006

Boston Symphony Orchestra Presents 2006 Tanglewood Jazz Festival September 1-3, 2006 Lenox, Massachusetts

Featured Performers include Dr. John, Wynton Marsalis, Elvis Costello, Dave Brubeck, Ann Hampton Callaway, Irma Thomas, Dizzy Gillespie All-Star Big Band, The Big Three Palladium Orchestra, The Spanish Harlem Orchestra, Marian McPartland

The John Stetch Trio, Rachael Price, Taylor Eigsti, Julian Lage, the Warren Wolf Quartet, Syncopation

Dave Brubeck and Dr. John Performances Exclusive to Tanglewood

Tanglewood Jazz Festival is sponsored by JazzTimes Magazine and Borders Books

The Boston Symphony Orchestra will present its annual Labor Day Weekend Tanglewood Jazz Festival September 1-3 at the Orchestra's summer home in the Berkshire Mountains in Lenox, Massachusetts. Jazz greats highlighting this year's festival include Dr. John, Wynton Marsalis, Elvis Costello, Dave Brubeck, Ann Hampton Callaway, Irma Thomas, the Dizzy Gillespie All-Star Big Band, The Big Three Palladium Orchestra, The Spanish Harlem Orchestra, and Marian McPartland.

In its second year, the popular Jazz Cafe is an informal venue for new artists who perform before each concert. Rising stars appearing this year include the John Stetch Trio, Rachael Price, the Warren Wolf Quartet, Taylor Eigsti and Julian Lage, and Syncopation. Food and beverages will be available in both the Hawthorne Tent and the Party Tent and admission is free to the Jazz Cafe shows.

Opening the festival Friday, September 1, at 8 pm at Ozawa Hall will be two leading Latin orchestras in the supreme "battle of the Latin big bands" starting with the Spanish Harlem Orchestra led by Oscar Hernandez. Hernandez, in addition to being pianist, arranger and musical director for the globally renowned Ruben Blades, has enjoyed a prolific musical career recording and performing with such world famous artists as Latin music king, Tito Puente, Queen of Salsa Music, Celia Cruze, Latin pop star, Julio Iglesias, Juan Luis Guerra, Ray Barretto, Dave Valentin, Johnny Pacheco, Ismail Miranda and dozens of others. Hernandez was also the Musical Director for Paul Simon's Broadway show, "The Capeman," working closely with Simon in the studio constructing the musical arc of the controversial show. The thirteen-piece Spanish Harlem Orchestra, including three vocalists, recently released their CD, "Across 110th Street" on Libertad Records.

The red hot Latin big band music of Machito and Tito Rodriguez is faithfully recreated by the maestros' sons, Machito, Jr. and Tito Rodriguez, Jr. and The Big Three Palladium Orchestra. Americans have always loved the mambo and in the 1950's the best place to hear this electrifying music was at the Palladium Ballroom in New York City. Huge crowds came to see the now legendary musical battles that took place between the giants of the Latin music world--Machito, Tito Rodriguez and Tito Puente, otherwise known as "the big three."

The new Big Three Palladium Orchestra--more than 20 musicians and two vocalists--debuted at the Verizon Festival in New York in 2001 and immediately received high praise from reviewers and audiences. The Chicago Tribune said, "The Big Three Palladium Orchestra may rank as the most brilliant large Latin jazz ensemble this side of Havana." Their CD, "Live at the Blue Note, NYC," was released in 2004 on Rumba Jams Records.

Prior to the Friday night headline show, the John Stetch Trio will perform in the Jazz Cafe at 6:30 pm. John Stetch has performed in some of the world's most prestigious venues including the Monterey, Montreal and Paris JVC jazz festivals. In recognition of his enormous talent, the Canadian government has awarded Stetch with numerous grants for touring, development and composition. Although he still loves to perform solo, after three highly acclaimed CD's, Stetch's current focus and priority is the trio. One of today's most riveting jazz pianists and composers, he is consistently praised for his inventiveness, exquisite sound and technical brilliance. Noted jazz critic, Neil Tesser, calls Stetch's new CD, "Bruxin," "a vibrant album showcasing a well-oiled machine of a trio."

Saturday's lineup will kickoff at 3 pm at Ozawa Hall with a live taping of NPR's "Piano Jazz" with host Marian McPartland in her fifth anniversary at Tanglewood. Her guest for this year's taping is vocalist and composer, Elvis Costello. Ms. McPartland has interviewed over 500 musicians and performers including Norah Jones (recorded live at Tanglewood), Diana Krall, Dave Brubeck, Dizzy Gillespie, Rosemary Clooney, Herbie Hancock, Bill Evans, Brad Mehldau, Ray Charles, Carmen McRae and even William F. Buckley. Her easy, comfortable style, charm and quick wit engage her guests in fascinating and sometimes revealing conversations while seated at the piano.

Elvis Costello is best known for his performances with The Attractions, The Imposters and for concert appearances with pianist, Steve Nieve, and acclaimed collaborations with Burt Bacharach, The Brodsky Quartet, Paul McCartney, Anne Sofie von Otter, Bill Frisell, The Charles Mingus Orchestra and T Bone Burnett. Costello's songs have been recorded by a great number of artists reflecting his interest in a wide range of musical styles: George Jones, Chet Baker, Johnny Cash, Roy Orbison, Dusty Springfield, Charles Brown, No Doubt, Solomon Burke, June Tabor, Howard Tate, the gospel vocal group, The Fairfield Four, and the viol consort, Fretwork, with the counter tenor, Michael Chance. In 2003 he began a songwriting partnership with his wife, the jazz pianist and singer, Diana Krall, resulting in six songs included in her highly successful album, "The Girl in the Other Room." Elvis Costello and The Attractions were inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame in 2003. During the same year he was awarded ASCAP's prestigious Founder's Award. He received a Grammy for "I Still Have That Other Girl" from his 1998 collaboration with Burt Bacharach, "Painted From Memory." Costello's newest recording "The River in Reverse" with New Orleans musician and composer, Allen Toussaint, was released in June on Verve Records.

Prior to the taping of "Piano Jazz," pianist Taylor Eigsti and guitarist, Julian Lage, will perform in the Jazz Cafe at 1 pm. California natives, Taylor Eigsti and Julian Lage have already performed at some of the most prestigious jazz festivals in the world at the ages of 21 and 18, respectively. While making his Tanglewood debut with Marian McPartland in 2004, Taylor has since performed with Julian at the Newport Jazz Festival, the San Francisco Jazz Festival and the Berks County Jazz Festival as well as delivering a memorable performance in October, 2005, at Symphony Hall in Boston. They have also toured extensively in Brazil. Taylor and Julian are longtime friends and Julian's voice on guitar is an integral part of the pianist's first CD release on a major label (Concord Records), which is entitled, "Lucky To Be Me." This will mark their Tanglewood debut as a duo.

Headlining the festival on Saturday, September 2 at the 5,100 seat Koussevitsky Music Shed will be Wynton Marsalis at 8 pm followed by Dr. John and Special Friends. Wynton Marsalis has been described as the most famous jazz musician of his time and one of he world's top classical trumpeters, big band leaders, composers and devoted advocate for the arts. As Artistic Director of Jazz at Lincoln Center, Marsalis was instrumental in the creation of Dizzy's Club Coca Cola, New York's most prestigious jazz club in Columbus Circle. A member of the highly talented Marsalis family in New Orleans, Wynton, his father, Ellis, and brothers Branford, Jason, and Delfeayo are known as "the first family of jazz." At age 17, Wynton became the youngest musician ever to be admitted to Tanglewood's Berkshire Music Center. Despite his youth, he was awarded the school's prestigious Harvey Shapiro Award for outstanding brass student. Wynton Marsalis has won nine Grammy Awards and the distinction of being the only artist ever to win Grammy Awards for both jazz and classical records and the only artist ever to have won Grammys in five consecutive years. His latest CD, "Live at the House of Tribes," was released on Blue Note Records in August, 2005.

Following Wynton Marsalis, Dr. John and Special Friends will take the stage in an exclusive Tanglewood concert. Vocalists Ann Hampton Callaway, Irma Thomas and John Pizzarelli will join Dr. John in a tribute to composer Johnny Mercer. A very special horn section for this show will include Jeremy Pelt on trumpet, Howard Johnson on baritone saxophone, and Craig Handy on tenor saxophone. Dr. John, or Mac Rebennack as known to family and friends, is the embodiment of the rich musical heritage exclusive to New Orleans. His colorful musical career began in the 1950's when he wrote and played guitar on some of the greatest records to come out of the Crescent City, including recordings by Professor Longhair, Art Neville, Joe Tex and Frankie Ford. In the 1960's he headed west where he continued to be in demand as a session musician playing on recordings by Sonny and Cher, Van Morrison, Aretha Franklin and many others. It was then that he launched his solo career as Dr. John The Night Tripper. Adorned with voodoo charms and regalia, a legend was born with his breakthrough 1968 album, "Gris-gris," which established his unique blend of voodoo mysticism, funk, rhythm and blues, psychedelic rock and Creole roots. Dr. John's most recent CD, "Mercenary: The Songs of Johnny Mercer," was released in May on Blue Note Records.

Ann Hampton Callaway is a singer, pianist, composer, lyricist, arranger, actress and educator. Her talents have made her equally at home in jazz and pop as well as on stage, in the recording studio, on tv and in film. She is best known for starring in the hit Broadway musical, "Swing!" and for writing and singing the theme to the internationally successful tv series, "The Nanny." Ann is a devoted keeper-of-the-flame of the great American songbook and is the only composer recognized by the Cole Porter Estate to have collaborated with Cole Porter having set her music to his posthumously discovered lyric, "I Gaze in Your Eyes." Ms. Callaway has appeared on The Today Show, Larry King Live, the Charlie Rose Show, the Oprah Winfrey Show, the Rosie O'Donnell Show and ABC News. She starred in "Midnight Swing" for the PBS television special, "Live From Lincoln Center," and was featured in a PBS special with Keith Lockhart and the Boston Pops. She has done extensive broadcasting for Serius Satellite Radio as a performer, DJ and interviewer. Ms. Callaway's honors include receiving a Tony Award nomination for "Best Featured Actress in a Musical" for her work in "Swing!" and winning the Theatre World Award for "Outstanding Broadway Debut." She has received an unsurpassed 14 awards from the Manhattan Association of Cabarets and Clubs, two Backstage Bistro Awards, the 2005 Nightlife Award, the Johnny Mercer Songwriter Award and the Norman Vincent Peale Award for Positive Thinking.

Irma Thomas is the unrivaled "Soul Queen of New Orleans" and ranks among the Crescent City's greatest and most enduring musical ambassadors. A Louisiana native, Ms. Thomas's career began in her teens as a singing waitress at New Orleans' Pimlico Club. When the club's owner dismissed her for spending more time singing than waiting tables, bandleader Tommy Ridgley agreed to help her land a recording deal. Ronn Records issued her single, "You Can Have My Husband (But Don't Mess With My Man)," in the spring of 1960 and the record quickly reached number 22 on the Billboard R & B Chart. Ms. Thomas's collaboration with songwriter and producer, Allen Toussaint, began with her first Minit Records release, "Girl Needs Boy," and continued throughout her tenure with the label. Numerous singles throughout the 1960's were highly acclaimed but were never huge national hit songs except for "Wish Someone Would Care" which vaulted into Billboard's Top 20. Subsequent recording contracts over the years with Chess, Canyon and Roker kept Thomas in the studios but failed to place her on the charts again. In the aftermath of the devastating Hurricane Camille, she relocated her family to Los Angeles and supported her children by working at retailer Montgomery Ward. Thomas returned to New Orleans in 1976 and, with husband/manager Emile Jackson, she opened the Lion's Den, a New Orleans club where she regularly headlined. She also toured Europe where her records still merited regular airplay and in 1985 she was approached by Rounder Records to make a comeback record. By 1991 Thomas had received her first Grammy nomination. Following Hurricane Katrina, Fox News began circulating the story that Irma Thomas, along with other New Orleans music notables such as Fats Domino, had gone missing in the ensuing flood. The story spread through the media and the phones at Rounder Records began to ring as concerned fans, friends and musical associates called to ask about her safety. As it turned out, the news report was false. She'd been performing in Austin, Texas, and hadn't even been in New Orleans when the storm hit. What was clear was that the press was acknowledging Thomas as a treasured cultural icon who embodies the very soul of New Orleans.

Jazz guitarist and vocalist, John Pizzarelli, is known for his urbane interpretations of the Great American Songbook. His light swinging style has been compared to guitarists Les Paul and Django Reinhardt. Son of guitarist, Bucky Pizzarelli, John began performing with his father at age 20 and made his recorded debut with his 1983 release, "I'm Hip--Please Don't Tell My Father." Subsequent recordings included "P.S. Mr. Cole " (a tribute to Nat King Cole), "Kisses in the Rain, " and "Let There Be Love." He has recorded an album with George Shearing and celebrated ten years of performing with his trio by releasing the concert album, "Live at Birdland," in 2003 and "Bossa Nova" in 2004. Pizzarelli is probably best known to millions of Americans for his theme song for Foxwoods Casino, "The Wonder of It All....." His latest CD, "Dear Mr. Sinatra" is on Telarc Records. (NOTE: Due to a scheduling conflict, vocalist Steve Tyrell will not be available to perform with Dr. John as previously announced.)

Prior to Wynton Marsalis and Dr. John on Saturday, Syncopation will perform at 6 pm in the Jazz Cafe. Called "the Manhattan Transfer of the 21st Century" by the Boston Globe, Syncopation is a vocal jazz quartet that was formed in 2002 at Berklee College of Music and mentored by Cheryl Bentyne of the Manhattan Transfer. Syncopation performs catchy swing, Latin and pop tunes along with a capella jazz and improvisation pieces. Syncopation has performed across the US for festivals such as the Tri-C Vocal Jazz Festival, the Boston Globe Jazz Festival, the Meihon Jazz Festival and at the IAJE Conference in New York. The group frequently tours Japan holding clinics and singing for sold-out audiences. Syncopation's latest CD, "Of Blue," is on Geneon Entertainment Records and features Satoru "Salt" Shonoya, Japan's hottest jazz pianist.

On Sunday, September 3, at 2 pm, the legendary Dizzy Gillespie All-Star Big Band, under the direction of Slide Hampton, will open the festival at Ozawa Hall. Master saxophonist Jimmy Heath, drummer extraordinaire Dennis Mackrel, and trumpeter Roy Hargrove are just some of the "all-stars" represented in what has been called Dizzy Gillespie's "dream band." Other personnel in the band are Claudio Roditti, Diego Urcola and John Lee on trumpet, Frank Wess on flute and tenor saxophone, Antonio Hart on alto saxophone, Gary Smulyan on baritone sax, Andres Boiarsky on tenor saxophone and Steve Davis and Douglas Purviance on trombone. Joining these masterful musicians will be Italian jazz vocalist, Roberta Gambarini. Ms. Gambarini has worked with Hank Jones, James Moody, Michael Brecker, Mark O'Connor and many other jazz greats. Her latest CD, "Easy to Love" was released in June on Groovin High Records. Prior to the Dizzy Gillespie All-Star Big Band, the Warren Wolf Quartet will perform at 12 noon in the Jazz Cafe. Warren Wolf began playing drums at the age of three, took up the vibraphone and toured with the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra when he was nine, wrote his first composition at age ten and was performing professionally by the time he was 12. Yet he readily admits that when he arrived at Berklee at age 17 he still had a lot to learn. During his student years, Wolf developed confidence as a player and band leader when he landed a date at Boston's landmark jazz club, Wally's Cafe. "When I started playing Wally's here were tons of musicians there," says Wolf. "It was like New York--a lot of musicians in the corner with their horns out ready to play and I just kept meeting people through the years." Wolf has performed with jazz greats Roy Haynes, Lewis Nash and Milt Jackson and through such opportunities is developing a sense of what it takes to be a master.

Closing out the festival on Sunday, September 3, at 8 pm, will be the Dave Brubeck Quartet and a rare U.S. appearance of Mr. Brubeck's Chamber Program with a 22 piece string symphonette. This program is performed in Europe when the group is on tour, but is not often seen in the United States. They were asked to perform this material in June at Carnegie Hall and declined in favor of an exclusive performance at Tanglewood Jazz Festival. The program is presented as a true concerto grosso and features Brubeck compositions, "Blue Rondo a la Turk," "Take Five," and "Brandenburg Gate Revisited."

Prior to the Dave Brubeck Quartet, vocalist Rachael Price and the Warren Wolf Quartet will perform at 6 pm in the Jazz Cafe. Vocalist Rachael Price's rise to fame began in 2003 as a semifinalist at the Montreaux International Jazz Vocal Competition in France and came to the attention of multi Grammy nominated jazz vocalist, Nnenna Freelon. In 2004, Price wowed the audience at the Thelonious Monk International Jazz Competition and by August, 2005, opened for saxophonist, Joshua Redman. Born in Nashville, Tennessee, the 19-year old vocalist grew up listening to jazz and is currently a jazz studies major at the New England Conservatory of Music. She has performed at the Kennedy Center, Newport Jazz Festival and with T. S. Monk, Jr. at Scullers Jazz Club in Boston. She received a standing ovation when she performed at the Society of Singer's Gala to honor Elton John along with kd lang, Michael McDonald, Joss Stone, LeeAnn Rimes, Barry Manilow and others.

Tickets for the 2006 Tanglewood Jazz Festival are available by calling SymphonyCharge at 888-266-1200 or online at www.tanglewood.org. and in person at the Tanglewood Box Office in Lenox. All ticket prices include a $1 Tanglewood Grounds Maintenance Fee. For further information, please call the Boston Symphony Orchestra at 617-266-1492. The Tanglewood Jazz Festival is sponsored by JazzTimes Magazine and Borders Books.

2006 Tanglewood Jazz Festival Ticket Prices

Friday, September 1, 8 p.m., Seiji Ozawa Hall The Spanish Harlem Orchestra The Big Three Palladium Orchestra $45, $37, $30, lawn tickets $17

Saturday, September 2, 3 p.m., Seiji Ozawa Hall Marian McPartland Live taping for NPR's "Piano Jazz" with special guest Elvis Costello $45, $37, $30, lawn tickets $17

Saturday, September 2, 8 p.m., Koussevitzky Music Shed Wynton Marsalis Dr. John and Special Friends with John Pizzarelli, Irma Thomas and Ann Hampton Callaway $75, $60, $40, lawn tickets $22

Sunday, September 3, 2 p.m., Seiji Ozawa Hall Dizzy Gillespie All-Star Big Band $45, $37, $30, lawn tickets $17

Sunday, September 3, 8 p.m., Seiji Ozawa Hall Dave Brubeck Quartet & Symphonette $67, $56, $43, lawn tickets $20

2006 Tanglewood Jazz Cafe Schedule

Friday, September 1, 6:30 p.m. John Stetch Trio

Saturday, September 2, 1:00 p.m. Taylor Eigsti and Julian Lage

Saturday, September 2, 6:00 p.m. Syncopation

Sunday, September 3, 12:00 noon Warren Wolf Quartet

Sunday, September 3, 6:00 p.m. Rachael Price

For additional information, bios and photos on the performing artists, please review the electronic press kit at www.tanglewoodjazzfestival.org/presskit or www.tanglewoodjazzfestival.com/presskit or to request a first-class mailing contact:

Dawn Singh Dawn Singh Publicity 617-395-7743 (office) 857-544-0739 (cell) dawn@dawnsinghpublicity.com

Kathleen Drohan Boston Symphony Orchestra Press Office 413-637-5286 kdrohan@bso.org

Friday, July 21, 2006

This Dr. John Lineup Is Only at Tanglewood

July 21, 2006

While it seems Dr. John has performed at almost every jazz festival on the planet this year, no performance has been like his upcoming show at the Tanglewood Jazz Festival. In celebration of his new CD, "Mercernary," the music of Johnny Mercer, Dr. John will perform material from the CD with Irma Thomas, Ann Hampton Callaway and John Pizzarelli.

A special horn section for this show will include Jeremy Pelt, trumpet, Howard Johnson, baritone saxophone, and Craig Handy, tenor saxophone.

Fred Taylor, Artistic Director of the Tanglewood Jazz Festival, explains how the show came together:

"I ran into Ed Girard and Danny Kapilian at the APAP conference in New York last January and they were talking about the new Dr. John album of Johnny Mercer material. We thought it would be interesting to put something together for Tanglewood. That"s how it all got started," says Taylor.

"We wanted to have special guests who could deliver the material appropriately with Dr. John"s version, and create an all-star event with a special horn section. We ended up with the young, brilliant Jeremy Pelt on trumpet, Craig Handy, a wonderful standards player on tenor sax, and the legendary Howard Johnson on baritone sax. We kept gathering the pieces together, added Dr. John"s band and the interaction with different singers and came up with a truly unique show."

Dr. John and Special Guests will be at the Tanglewood Jazz Festival Saturday, September 2, at 8:00 pm following Wynton Marsalis. Tickets are $22-75 and may be purchased by calling SymphonyCharge at 888-266-1200 or online at www.tanglewoodjazzfestival.org.

For a complete lineup and ticket prices, visit the website at www.tanglewoodjazzfestival.org. Other headliners include Elvis Costello, Marian McPartland, a rare U.S. performance by Dave Brubeck and a 22-piece string symphonette for his Chamber Program, the Dizzy Gillespie All Star Big Band led by Slyde Hampton, the Big Three Palladium Orchestra, the Spanish Harlem Orchestra, the John Stetch Trio, Rachael Price, the Warren Wolf Quartet, Taylor Eigsti and Julian Lage, and Syncopation.

For more information, contact Dawn Singh at 617-395-7743 or 857-544-0739 or dawn@dawnsinghpublicity.com

Friday, July 7, 2006

Boston Symphony Orchestra announces the line-up for the JAZZ CAFE at the 2006 Tanglewood Jazz Festival

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE July 7, 2006

Kathleen Drohan Boston Symphony Press Office 413-637-5286

BOSTON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA ANNOUNCES LINE-UP FOR THE JAZZ CAFE AT THE 2006 TANGLEWOOD JAZZ FESTIVAL

The Boston Symphony Orchestra has announced the lineup for performers at the Jazz Cafe at the Tanglewood Jazz Festival September 1-3. In its second year as part of the festival, the popular Jazz Cafe is an informal venue that presents up-and-coming jazz artists in free concerts held before each main stage event (admission is free with ticket to the main stage event). Food and beverages are available in the Jazz Cafe.

ARTIST SCHEDULE

Friday, September 1, 6:30 p.m. John Stetch Trio

Saturday, September 2, 1:00 p.m. Taylor Eigsti and Julian Lage

Saturday, September 2, 6:00 p.m. Syncopation

Sunday, September 3, 12:00 noon Warren Wolf Quartet

Sunday, September 3, 6:00 p.m. Rachael Price

JOHN STETCH TRIO John Stetch, piano Sean Smith, bass Rodney Green, drums

John Stetch has performed in some of the world most prestigious venues including the Monterey, Montreal and Paris JVC jazz festivals. In recognition of his enormous talent, the Canadian government has awarded Stetch with numerous grants for touring, development and composition. Although he still loves to perform solo, after three highly acclaimed CD"s, Stetch"s current focus and priority is the trio. One of today"s most riveting jazz pianists and composers, he is consistently praised for his inventiveness, exquisite sound and technical brilliance. Noted jazz critic Neil Tesser calls Stetch"s new CD, "Bruxin," "a vibrant album showcasing a well-oiled machine of a trio."

TAYLOR EIGSTI AND JULIAN LAGE Taylor Eigsti, piano Julian Lage, guitar

California natives, Taylor Eigsti and Julian Lage have already performed at some of the most prestigious jazz festivals in the world at the ages of 21 and 18, respectively. Since making his Tanglewood debut with Marian McPartland in 2004, Taylor has performed with Julian at the Newport Jazz Festival, the San Francisco Jazz Festival and the Berks County Jazz Festival, as well as delivering a memorable performance in October, 2005, at Symphony Hall in Boston. They have also toured extensively in Brazil.

Taylor and Julian are long-time friends and Julian"s voice on guitar is an integral part of the pianist"s first CD release on a major label (Concord Records), which is entitled, "Lucky To Be Me." This will mark their Tanglewood debut as a duo.

SYNCOPATION Christy Bluhm David Scott Christine Fawson Tsunenori "Lee" Abe Mark Shilansky, piano

Called "the Manhattan Transfer of the 21st Century" by the Boston Globe, Syncopation is a vocal jazz quartet that was formed in 2002 at Berklee College of Music and mentored by Cheryl Bentyne of the Manhattan Transfer. Syncopation performs catchy swing, Latin and pop tunes, as well as a capella jazz and improvisation pieces. Syncopation has performed across the US for festivals such as the Tri-C Vocal Jazz Festival, the Boston Globe Jazz Festival, the Meihon Jazz Festival and at the International Association of Jazz Educators conference in New York. The group frequently tours Japan holding clinics and singing for sold-out audiences.

Syncopation"s latest CD, "Of Blue," is on Geneon Entertainment Records and features Satoru "Salt" Shonoya, Japan"s hottest jazz pianist.

WARREN WOLF QUARTET Warren Wolf, vibes Kendrick Scott, drums Vincente Archer, bass Danny Grissett, piano

Warren Wolf began playing drums at the age of three; took up the vibraphone and toured with the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra when he was nine; wrote his first composition at age ten; and was performing professionally by the time he was 12. Yet he readily admits that when he arrived at Berklee at age 17 he still had a lot to learn. During his student years, Wolf developed confidence as a player and band leader when he landed a date at Boston"s landmark jazz club, Wally"s Cafe. "When I started playing Wally"s here were tons of musicians there," says Wolf. "It was like New York--a lot of musicians in the corner with their horns out ready to play and I just kept meeting people through the years." Wolf has performed with jazz greats Roy Haynes, Lewis Nash and Milt Jackson, and through such opportunities is developing a sense of what it takes to be a master.

RACHAEL PRICE with the Warren Wolf Quartet

Vocalist Rachael Price"s rise to fame began in 2003 as a semifinalist at the Montreaux International Jazz Vocal Competition in France and came to the attention of multi Grammy nominated jazz vocalist, Nnenna Freelon. In 2004, Price wowed the audience at the Thelonious Monk International Jazz Competition, and in August, 2005, she opened for saxophonist, Joshua Redman. Born in Nashville, Tennessee, the 19-year old vocalist grew up listening to jazz and is currently a jazz studies major at the New England Conservatory of Music. She has performed at the Kennedy Center, Newport Jazz Festival and with T. S. Monk, Jr. at Scullers Jazz Club in Boston. She received a standing ovation when she performed at the Society of Singer"s Gala to honor Elton John alongside kd lang, Michael McDonald, Joss Stone, LeeAnn Rimes, Barry Manilow and others.

Tickets for the 2006 Tanglewood Jazz Festival are available by calling SymphonyCharge at 888-266-1200 or online at www.tanglewood.org. and in person at the Tanglewood Box Office in Lenox. All ticket prices include a $1 Tanglewood Grounds Maintenance Fee. For further information, please call the Boston Symphony Orchestra at 617-266-1492. The Tanglewood Jazz Festival is sponsored by JazzTimes Magazine and Borders Books.

2006 Tanglewood Jazz Festival Ticket Prices

Friday, September 1, 8 p.m., Seiji Ozawa Hall The Spanish Harlem Orchestra The Big Three Palladium Orchestra $45, $37, $30, lawn tickets $17

Saturday, September 2, 3 p.m., Seiji Ozawa Hall Marian McPartland Live taping for NPR"s "Piano Jazz" with special guest Elvis Costello $45, $37, $30, lawn tickets $17

Saturday, September 2, 8 p.m., Koussevitzky Music Shed Wynton Marsalis Dr. John with special guests John Pizzarelli, Irma Thomas and Ann Hampton Callaway $75, $60, $40, lawn tickets $22

Sunday, September 3, 2 p.m., Seiji Ozawa Hall Dizzy Gillespie" All Star Big Band $45, $37, $30, lawn tickets $17

Sunday, September 3, 8 p.m., Seiji Ozawa Hall Dave Brubeck Quartet & Symphonette $67, $56, $43, lawn tickets $20

For additional information, bios and photos on the performing artists, please review the electronic press kit at www.tanglewoodjazzfestival.com/presskit or to request a first-class mailing contact:

Dawn Singh Dawn Singh Publicity 617-395-7743 (office) 857-544-0739 (cell) dawn@dawnsinghpublicity.com

Kathleen Drohan Boston Symphony Orchestra Press Office 413-637-5280 kdrohan@bso.org

Monday, June 19, 2006

ANN HAMPTON CALLAWAY AND IRMA THOMAS ADDED TO 2006 TANGLEWOOD JAZZ FESTIVAL LINE-UP

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE JUNE 19, 2006

ANN HAMPTON CALLAWAY AND IRMA THOMAS ADDED TO 2006 TANGLEWOOD JAZZ FESTIVAL LINE-UP

Featured Performers include Elvis Costello, Dr. John, Wynton Marsalis, Dave Brubeck Quartet & Symphonette, John Pizzarelli, Dizzy Gillespie All Star Big Band, Marian McPartland, The Big Three Palladium Orchestra, Spanish Harlem Orchestra.

The Boston Symphony Orchestra has announced the addition of Ann Hampton Callaway and Irma Thomas as special guests of Dr. John at the 2006 Tanglewood Jazz Festival September 1-3.

Ann Hampton Callaway is a singer, pianist, composer, lyricist, arranger, actress and educator. Her talents have made her equally at home in jazz and pop as well as on stage, in the recording studio, on tv and in film. She is best known for starring in the hit Broadway musical, "Swing!" and for writing and singing the theme to the internationally successful tv series, "The Nanny." Ann is a devoted keeper-of-the-flame of the great American songbook and is the only composer recognized by the Cole Porter Estate to have collaborated with Cole Porter having set her music to his posthumously discovered lyric, "I Gaze in Your Eyes." Ms. Callaway has appeared on The Today Show, Larry King Live, the Charlie Rose Show, the Oprah Winfrey Show, the Rosie O'Donnell Show and ABC News. She starred in "Midnight Swing" for the PBS television special, "Live From Lincoln Center," and was featured in a PBS special with Keith Lockhart and the Boston Pops. She has done extensive broadcasting for Serius Satellite Radio as a performer, DJ and interviewer. Ms. Callaway's honors include receiving a Tony Award nomination for "Best Featured Actress in a Musical" for her work in "Swing!" and winning the Theatre World Award for "Outstanding Broadway Debut." She has received an unsurpassed 14 awards from the Manhattan Association of Cabarets and Clubs, two Backstage Bistro Awards, the 2005 Nightlife Award, the Johnny Mercer Songwriter Award and the Norman Vincent Peale Award for Positive Thinking.

Irma Thomas is the unrivaled Soul Queen of New Orleans and ranks among the Crescent City's greatest and most enduring musical ambassadors. A Louisiana native, Ms. Thomas's career began in her teens as a singing waitress at New Orleans' Pimlico Club. When the club's owner dismissed her for spending more time singing than waiting tables, bandleader Tommy Ridgley agreed to help her land a recording deal. Ronn Records issued her single, "You Can Have My Husband (But Don't Mess With My Man)," in the spring of 1960 and the record quickly reached number 22 on the Billboard R & B Chart.

Ms. Thomas's collaboration with songwriter and producer, Allen Toussaint, began with her first Minit Records release, "Girl Needs Boy," and continued throughout her tenure with the label. Numerous singles throughout the 1960's were highly acclaimed but were never huge national hit songs except for "Wish Someone Would Care" which vaulted into Billboard's Top 20. Subsequent recording contracts over the years with Chess, Canyon and Roker kept Thomas in the studios but failed to place her on the charts again. In the aftermath of the devastating Hurricane Camille, she relocated her family to Los Angeles and supported her children by working at retailer Montgomery Ward. Thomas returned to New Orleans in 1976 and, with husband/manager Emile Jackson, she opened the Lion's Den, a New Orleans club where she regularly headlined. She also toured Europe where her records still merited regular airplay and in 1985 she was approached by Rounder Records to make a comeback record. By 1991 Thomas had received her first Grammy nomination.

Following Hurricane Katrina, Fox News began circulating the story that Irma Thomas, along with other New Orleans music notables such as Fats Domino, had gone missing in the ensuing flood. The story spread through the media and the phones at Rounder Records began to ring as concerned fans, friends and musical associates called to ask about her safety. As it turned out, the news report was false. She'd been performing in Austin, Texas, and hadn't even been in New Orleans when the storm hit. What was clear was that the press was acknowledging Thomas as a treasured cultural icon who embodies the very soul of New Orleans.

Tickets for the 2006 Tanglewood Jazz Festival are available by calling SymphonyCharge at 888-266-1200 or online at www.tanglewood.org. and in person at the Tanglewood Box Office in Lenox. All ticket prices include a $1 Tanglewood Grounds Maintenance Fee. For further information, please call the Boston Symphony Orchestra at 617-266-1492.

The Tanglewood Jazz Festival is sponsored by JazzTimes Magazine and Borders Books.

2006 Tanglewood Jazz Festival Ticket Prices

Friday, September 1, 8 p.m., Seiji Ozawa Hall The Spanish Harlem Orchestra The Big Three Palladium Orchestra $45, $37, $30, lawn tickets $17

Saturday, September 2, 3 p.m., Seiji Ozawa Hall Marian McPartland Live taping for NPR's "Piano Jazz" with special guest Elvis Costello $45, $37, $30, lawn tickets $17

Saturday, September 2, 8 p.m., Koussevitzky Music Shed Wynton Marsalis Dr. John with special guests John Pizzarelli, Irma Thomas and Ann Hampton Callaway $75, $60, $40, lawn tickets $22

Sunday, September 3, 2 p.m., Seiji Ozawa Hall Dizzy Gillespie' All Star Big Band $45, $37, $30, lawn tickets $17

Sunday, September 3, 8 p.m., Seiji Ozawa Hall Dave Brubeck Quartet & Symphonette $67, $56, $43, lawn tickets $20

For additional information, bios and photos on the performing artists, please review the electronic press kit at www.tanglewoodjazzfestival.org/presskit or www.tanglewoodjazzfestival.com/presskit or to request a first-class mailing contact:

Dawn Singh Dawn Singh Publicity 617-395-7743 (office) 857-544-0739 (cell) dawn@dawnsinghpublicity.com

Kathleen Drohan Boston Symphony Orchestra Press Office 617-638-9280 kdrohan@bso.org

Wednesday, April 26, 2006

ELVIS COSTELLO AND DR. JOHN ADDED TO 2006 TANGLEWOOD JAZZ FESTIVAL LINE-UP

ELVIS COSTELLO AND DR. JOHN ADDED TO 2006 TANGLEWOOD JAZZ FESTIVAL LINE-UP

The Boston Symphony Orchestra has announced the addition of Elvis Costello and Dr. John to the 2006 Tanglewood Jazz Festival line-up. Costello will be the special guest of Marian McPartland for a live taping of her NPR program, "Piano Jazz," and Dr. John will perform as the Saturday night headline act with several very special guests to be announced in the near future.

Elvis Costello is best known for his performances with The Attractions, The Imposters and for concert appearances with pianist, Steve Nieve, and acclaimed collaborations with Burt Bacharach, The Brodsky Quartet, Paul McCartney, Anne Sofie von Otter, Bill Frisell, The Charles Mingus Orchestra and T Bone Burnett.

Costello's songs have been recorded by a great number of artists reflecting his interest in a wide range of musical styles: George Jones, Chet Baker, Johnny Cash, Roy Orbison, Dusty Springfield, Charles Brown, No Doubt, Solomon Burke, June Tabor, Howard Tate, the gospel vocal group, The Fairfield Four, and the viol consort, Fretwork, with the counter tenor, Michael Chance. In 2003 he began a songwriting partnership with his wife, the jazz pianist and singer, Diana Krall, resulting in six songs included in her highly successful album, "The Girl in the Other Room."

Elvis Costello and The Attractions were inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame in 2003. During the same year he was awarded ASCAP's prestigious Founder's Award. He received a Grammy for "I Still Have That Other Girl" from his 1998 collaboration with Burt Bacharach, "Painted From Memory."

Costello's newest recording "The River in Reverse" with New Orleans musician and composer, Allen Toussaint, will be released June 6 on Verve Records.

McPartland and Costello will perform Saturday, September 2, at 3:00 pm at Ozawa Hall.

Dr. John, or Mac Rebennack as known to family and friends, is the embodiment of the rich musical heritage exclusive to New Orleans. His colorful musical career began in the 1950's when he wrote and played guitar on some of the greatest records to come out of the Crescent City, including recordings by Professor Longhair, Art Neville, Joe Tex and Frankie Ford. In the 1960‚s he headed west where he continued to be in demand as a session musician playing on recordings by Sonny and Cher, Van Morrison, Aretha Franklin and many others. It was then that he launched his solo career as Dr. John The Night Tripper. Adorned with voodoo charms and regalia, a legend was born with his breakthrough 1968 albun, "Gris-gris," which established his unique blend of voodo mysticism, funk, rhythm and blues, psychedelic rock and Creole roots.

Dr. John's most recent CD, "Mercenary: The Songs of Johnny Mercer," will be released May 23 on Blue Note Records.

Dr. John will follow Wynton Marsalis who opens at 8:00 pm, Saturday, September 2, at the Koussevitzky Music Shed.

Tickets for the 2006 Tanglewood Jazz Festival are available by calling SymphonyCharge at 888-266-1200 or online at www.tanglewood.org. Tickets will be available in person at the Tanglewood Box Office in Lenox beginning June 9. All ticket prices include a $1 Tanglewood Grounds Maintenance Fee. For further information, please call the Boston Symphony Orchestra at 617-266-1492.

The Tanglewood Jazz Festival is sponsored by JazzTimes Magazine and Borders Books.

2006 Tanglewood Jazz Festival Ticket Prices

Friday, September 1, 8 pm, Seiji Ozawa Hall The Spanish Harlem Orchestra The Big Three Palladium Orchestra $45, $37, $30, lawn tickets $17

Saturday, September 2, 3 pm, Seiji Ozawa Hall Marian McPartland Live taping for NPR's "Piano Jazz" with special guest Elvis Costello $45, $37, $30, lawn tickets $17

Saturday, September 2, 8 pm, Koussevitzky Music Shed Wynton Marsalis Dr. John with special guests to be announced $75, $60, $40, lawn tickets $22

Sunday, September 3, 2 pm, Seiji Ozawa Hall Dizzy Gillespie' All Star Big Band $45, $37, $30, lawn tickets $17

Sunday, September 3, 8 pm, Seiji Ozawa Hall Dave Brubeck Quartet & Symphonette $67, $56, $43, lawn tickets $20

For additional information, bios and photos on the performing artists, please review the electronic press kit at www.tanglewood.org/presskits/jazzfestival or to request a first-class mailing contact:

Dawn Singh Dawn Singh Publicity 617-395-7743 (office) 857-544-0739 (cell) dawn@dawnsinghpublicity.com

Sean Kerrigan Boston Symphony Orchestra Press Office 617-638-9286 skerrigan@bso.org

Monday, April 24, 2006

John Pizzarelli & Steve Tyrell Added to Dr. John Show at 2006 Tanglewood Jazz Festival

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE APRIL 24, 2006

JOHN PIZZARELLI AND STEVE TYRELL ADDED TO 2006 TANGLEWOOD JAZZ FESTIVAL LINE-UP

Featured Performers include Elvis Costello, Dr. John, Wynton Marsalis, Dave Brubeck Quartet & Symphonette, Dizzy Gillespie All Star Big Band, Marian McPartland, The Big Three Palladium Orchestra, Spanish Harlem Orchestra

The Boston Symphony Orchestra has announced the addition of John Pizzarelli and Steve Tyrell as special guests of Dr. John at the 2006 Tanglewood Jazz Festival. Dr. John and guests will perform a tribute to composer Johnny Mercer on Saturday, September 2, at the Koussevitzky Music Shed following an 8 p.m. performance by Wynton Marsalis.

Jazz guitarist and vocalist, John Pizzarelli, is known for his urbane interpretations of the Great American Songbook. His light swinging style has been compared to guitarists Les Paul and Django Reinhardt. Son of guitarist, Bucky Pizzarelli, John began performing with his father at age 20 and made his recorded debut with his 1983 release, Im Hip--Please Dont Tell My Father. Subsequent recordings included P.S. Mr. Cole (a tribute to Nat King Cole), Kisses in the Rain, and Let There Be Love. He has recorded an album with George Shearing and celebrated ten years of performing with his trio by releasing the concert album, Live at Birdland, in 2003 and Bossa Nova in 2004. Pizzarelli is probably best known to millions of Americans for his theme song for Foxwoods Casino, The Wonder of It All.....

Pizzarelli will perform several Mercer tunes with Dr. John in this tribute to Mercerss music. Pizzarellis history with the music of Johnny Mercer culminated in 1997 in a lead spot in the Broadway production of Dream, A Tribute to Composer Johnny Mercer.

Vocalist Steve Tyrell whose sizable voice filters Louis Armstrong through Ray Charles and Dr. John (New York Times), has achieved great success over the past four decades as songwriter, producer, performer and jazz standards vocalist. Audiences find his down-to-earth, affable charm the perfect conduit for romantic ballads and lighthearted standards. As the head of A & R and promotion at Scepter Records, Tyrell heralded the classic Burt Bacharach/Hal David composed recordings of Dionne Warwick which led to a lifelong partnership with Bacharach through both of their illustrious careers.

Tyrells extensive movie career includes the 1991 Steve Martin hit Father of the Bride, in which he performed The Way You Look Tonight, and the 1995 sequel Father of the Bride Part II, which contained his soundtrack recordings of Give Me the Simple Life, and On the Sunny Side of the Street, His recording of Santa Claus is Coming to Town, was featured in the Disney hit, Santa Claus 2, and he worked with Jack Nicholson on Somethings Gotta Give, in which Nicholson wanted Tyrell to produce a track of him singing. Tyrell also produced the entire soundtrack for John Grishams film, Mickey. starring Harry Connick, Jr.

Tickets for the 2006 Tanglewood Jazz Festival are available by calling SymphonyCharge at 888-266-1200 or online at www.tanglewood.org. Tickets will be available in person at the Tanglewood Box Office in Lenox beginning June 9. All ticket prices include a $1 Tanglewood Grounds Maintenance Fee. For further information, please call the Boston Symphony Orchestra at 617-266-1492.

The Tanglewood Jazz Festival is sponsored by JazzTimes Magazine and Borders Books.

2006 Tanglewood Jazz Festival Ticket Prices

Friday, September 1, 8 pm, Seiji Ozawa Hall The Spanish Harlem Orchestra The Big Three Palladium Orchestra $45, $37, $30, lawn tickets $17

Saturday, September 2, 3 pm, Seiji Ozawa Hall Marian McPartland Live taping for NPRs Piano Jazz with special guest Elvis Costello $45, $37, $30, lawn tickets $17

Saturday, September 2, 8 pm, Koussevitzky Music Shed Wynton Marsalis Dr. John with John Pizzarelli, Steve Tyrell (and other special guests to be announced) in a Tribute to Johnny Mercer $75, $60, $40, lawn tickets $22

Sunday, September 3, 2 pm, Seiji Ozawa Hall Dizzy Gillespie All Star Big Band $45, $37, $30, lawn tickets $17

Sunday, September 3, 8 pm, Seiji Ozawa Hall Dave Brubeck Quartet & Symphonette $67, $56, $43, lawn tickets $20

For additional information, bios and photos on the performing artists, please review the electronic press kit at www.tanglewood.org/presskits/jazzfestival or to request a first-class mailing contact:

Dawn Singh Dawn Singh Publicity 617-395-7743 (office) 857-544-0739 (cell) dawn@dawnsinghpublicity.com

Sean Kerrigan Boston Symphony Orchestra Press Office 617-638-9286 skerrigan@bso.org