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-News for Mon. 01 April & Mon. 02
April 2002 US Celebrates Jazz Appreciation Month Doug Levine Washington 1 Apr 2002
It was the unmistakable voice of the late Billie Holiday that helped inspire the birth of Jazz Appreciation Month. Holiday was born in April, along with Dizzy Gillespie, Duke Ellington, Ella Fitzgerald and other jazz greats.
Jazz has stood
the test of time, through the Great Depression, war, the struggle for civil
rights and the changing trends in popular culture. Curator of American Music
John Hasse hopes Jazz Appreciation Month will help preserve jazz's living
legacy by reaching out to new audiences. "Back in the 1930s and 1940s jazz was
right in the center of the mainstream of American music. As music developed -
rock and roll, soul, R&B, hip-hop, rap, etc. - they've [other genres]
grabbed the ears of many younger listeners and jazz is not on everybody's
[minds] as it used to be," he says. "And yet, it's a music that has so much to
offer. It is so rich with creativity, invention, innovation, expression,
emotional depth and power, that those of us who pay attention to it think that
it deserves a wider hearing."
There will also be a
Duke Ellington Youth Project Poetry Slam and Art Exhibition; concerts by the
Smithsonian Jazz Masterworks Orchestra, the U.S. State Department's Jazz
Ambassadors Trio and the Brooklyn Repertory Orchestra in concert at the
Smithsonian; a performance by the Mingus Dynasty Band at VOA; a new documentary
film on stride piano pioneer Willie "The Lion" Smith; an exhibition of selected
items from the Smithsonian's extensive jazz archives; and a special display of
Louis Armstrong's first horn.
For more information about Jazz Appreciation Month visit smithsonianjazz.org
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