[Dixielandjazz] Youth Jazz in Seattle Part 2
Stephen G Barbone
barbonestreet at earthlink.net
Fri Aug 27 10:47:12 PDT 2010
Jazz in Seattle PART TWO
That self-renewal comes from boomerang musicians like the trumpeter
Thomas Marriott and the drummer Matt Jorgensen, who headed East but
eventually returned. Along with peers like the saxophonist Mark
Taylor, they are now stalwarts of the jazz mainstream here, working at
places like the New Orleans Creole Restaurant and Tula’s Jazz Club.
And their music has a strong outlet in Origin Records, a Seattle label
with worldwide distribution, and an impressive track record on
national jazz radio. Mr. Jorgensen runs Origin with its founder, the
drummer John Bishop; together they also started the Ballard Jazz
Festival, featuring area artists almost exclusively.
Jazz also has a presence at Benaroya Hall, home of the Seattle
Symphony. The Seattle Repertory Jazz Orchestra performs there, to a
loyal patronage. “They’re folks who would otherwise have subscribed to
the chamber orchestra or the symphony,” said the saxophonist Michael
Brockman, one of the orchestra’s artistic directors and a longtime
University of Washington faculty member. “That’s 80 percent of our
audience, and they rarely if ever go to a jazz club.”
What galvanizes Seattle jazz audiences more than anything is the
diligent effort of its teenage musicians. “The big-band programs here
are kind of like high school football in Texas,” Mr. Jorgensen said.
The chief catalyst is the Essentially Ellington contest, which began
in 1995. Over the last decade Garfield and Roosevelt have won first
place a combined seven times. “The bands have different philosophies,”
said Wynton Marsalis, Jazz at Lincoln Center’s artistic director and
the avuncular soul of the competition. “In general Garfield’s band has
strong soloists, and Roosevelt has really good ensembles.”
A glimpse into rehearsals by both bands in April, a month before the
contest, illuminated the difference. Clarence Acox, who came to
Garfield from New Orleans in 1971, led the Garfield band with an
offhand but booming authority. “Stay right there,” he growled at his
drummer, indicating a rhythmic pocket, during“Launching Pad,” a 12-bar
blues.
At Roosevelt, Scott Brown exuded a warmer and more technical air,
often tinkering with the mechanics of a phrase. (Interschool rivalry
aside, Mr. Brown, a trombonist, plays alongside Mr. Acox in the
Seattle Repertory Jazz Orchestra.) Between takes his students were a
fount of wisecracks, but at each downbeat they snapped into gear. For
“After All” Mr. Clausen took the lead against a purr of saxophones.
The band directors aren’t the only reason for the schools’ track
record. “Both Garfield and Roosevelt are public schools, but the
support is akin to a private institution, in terms of what the parents
do,” said the trumpeter Tatum Greenblatt, a graduate of Garfield and
Juilliard, who lives in New York. Parent groups raise money to send
the bands to competitions and on tour in Europe; the first Garfield
jazz fund-raiser, in 1990, organized by Mr. Marriott’s parents, earned
about $80,000.
The other secret weapon has been the jazz program at Washington Middle
School that until two years ago was led by Robert Knatt, who is now
retired. “People would come into ninth grade already knowing how to
read music and play in a section and improvise,” Mr. Greenblatt said.
Ask young Seattle jazz musicians what’s new about the scene, and they
are likely to point to Mr. Vu. By all accounts he has galvanized his
students, charging them with a radical sense of purpose and advocating
on their behalf. He invited some — like the bassist Luke Bergman and
the drummer Chris Icasiano, both now alumni and key figures in the
Racer Sessions — to be in his new band, Speak, which recently released
its self-titled debut on Origin. Mr. Vu also advises the Improvised
Music Project, a coalition of students and alumni, which held its
second annual festival this spring.
“This really is a marker of a new phase,” Richard Karpen, the new
director of the University of Washington’s School of Music, said in
April at a 20th-anniversary celebration for its Jazz Studies program.
Mr. Karpen, a composer, said jazz is now a greater priority for the
program.
As part of the festivities Mr. Vu played three concerts with his Vu
Tet. On the first night the crowd was full of students, including
Carmen Rothwell, a bassist in the Garfield band. “A few days ago I
decided that I’m coming to U.W. to major in Jazz Studies,” she said.
“I really, really like the direction that it’s going in.”
The University of Washington isn’t the only Seattle educational
institution in the process of rejuvenation. The Cornish College of the
Arts, which has a history of avant-gardism stretching to John Cage in
the ’30s, recently hired a new department chairman, Kent Devereaux. He
said his decision to take the job had been influenced by the five
teaching positions that will be turning over in the next five years,
enabling him to put his stamp on the faculty.
Cornish has also stepped up its recruiting, begun a capital campaign
for a larger new building and, for the first time, acquired dormitory
space. As a result, Mr. Devereaux said, “I went from a program where
last year it was 83 percent Washingtonians to one where my incoming
class is only 46 percent.”
Applications have risen by roughly a third in each of the last two
years, and the college has started a high school summer jazz program.
“We weren’t connecting to the community,” he said.
These changes at the college level should benefit Seatle’s jazz scene
at large. But such abstractions were far from anyone’s mind in May, as
the Garfield and Roosevelt bands, and 13 others from across the
country, descended on Frederick P. Rose Hall in Manhattan for
Essentially Ellington. Each band performed and then waited for the
announcement of the three finalists.
Mr. Mulherkar almost missed that moment, because he had to slip away
for his Juilliard audition. But he returned in time, with news that he
had been accepted. Then came word that Garfield was one of the final
three and would perform that night with Mr. Marsalis. Roosevelt just
missed the cut, earning an honorable mention nod.
A few hours later Mr. Mulherkar went toe to toe with Mr. Marsalis at
Avery Fisher Hall, trading soulful barbs and plunger-muted whinnies on
“The Shepherd.” In essence he was sparring with the world’s most
celebrated jazz trumpeter, and he held his own, earning stagy glares
from Mr. Marsalis, vicarious hollers from the hall and ultimately a
standing ovation.
There were more cheers for the results: Garfield had won the
Essentially Ellington competition, for the second year in a row. And
Mr. Mulherkar received theElla Fitzgerald Outstanding Soloist Award,
its highest individual honor. “We even heard some things we’d never
heard done before on our instrument,” Mr. Marsalis said of Mr.
Mulherkar. (Mr. Clausen won the award for outstanding trombone.)
Speaking by phone recently, Mr. Mulherkar focused squarely on the
transition ahead. But he did say he’d miss Seattle and its nascent
scene. “I was actually just talking to my brother, who’s at the New
England Conservatory now,” he said. “He was saying how lucky my peer
group was because he didn’t have anything like that when he was in
high school.”
As for Mr. Clausen, he played a farewell show at Cafe Racer last
weekend, with Speak and four of his other bands. “Summer has been
really productive,” he wrote in an e-mail. “Completed a two-week
European tour with the Roosevelt Jazz Band, finished recording two new
bands of my own, and a group of us from the Racer Sessions are forming
a new record label/music foundation to present, share and promote our
music. Leaving is bittersweet.”
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