Showing posts with label MacArthur Foundation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label MacArthur Foundation. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 29, 2010

Newly minted MacArthur Fellow Jason Moran comes to the Dakota on Thursday

Originally published at MinnPost.com on Wednesday, Sept. 29, 2010

By now, we all know that being named a MacArthur Fellow is a very big deal. Established in 1981, the award carries enormous prestige; its nickname, the “Genius Grant,” says it all. And for anyone involved in the arts, it’s a godsend: $500,000, paid out in equal quarterly installments over five years, no strings attached.

Over the years, the MacArthur Foundation has recognized and rewarded several jazz musiciansm including Regina Carter, Ornette Coleman, Steve Lacy, George Lewis, Max Roach, Cecil Taylor, Miguel Zenon and John Zorn. On Tuesday, a new name was added to this short but stellar list: Jason Moran.

Just 35, jazz pianist and composer Moran is one of the most interesting and inventive musicians working today. His compositions, recordings, and performances cross genres and incorporate unusual elements — the human voice, archival recordings by Thelonious Monk and Jimi Hendrix, visual images — to create jazz both forward-looking and respectful of tradition.

Moran is no stranger to the Twin Cities. In 2005, the Walker commissioned him to create a music-theater work, “Milestone.” In 2009, he returned with a multimedia performance built around Monk’s famous 1959 Town Hall concert. If you blinked, you missed this, but Augsburg College brought him in for its annual Convocation Series in October, 2009.

Moran has his own estimable trio, called the Bandwagon, with drummer Nasheet Waits and bassist Tarus Mateen; their latest CD, “Ten” (Blue Note), released this summer, has earned raves. At the Dakota, Moran most often performs as part of Charles Lloyd’s New Quartet, which will play two sets on Thursday night.

Lloyd and his quartet are on tour with their new CD, “Mirror” (ECM), an exquisite collection of standards, originals, gospel songs, and the Beach Boys’ “Caroline, No.” With Lloyd, the jazz shaman, on saxophone, Moran on piano, Reuben Rogers on bass and Eric Harland on drums, this was a not-to-be-missed show before Moran won his MacArthur. Based on my own past experience hearing this quartet, I can promise you a rare experience: uplifting, thought-provoking, richly musical and deeply satisfying. The CD is beautiful but live music is better.

Charles Lloyd New Quartet, 7 and 9:30 p.m. Thursday, Sept. 30, Dakota, 1010 Nicollet Mall ($50/$35). Tickets online or call 612-333-5299.



Wednesday, September 23, 2009

Music gets no love from the MacArthur Foundation this year

Ah, the MacArthur genius grant. Your phone rings and someone tells you (speaking very slowly and clearly, I presume) that you have just won $500,000 to do with as you please, no strings attached.

Last year, saxophonist Miguel Zenon was a winner, as were violinist Leila Josefowicz and instrument maker/composer Walter Kitundu. (Heads up: Zenon comes to the Dakota, one night only, Wednesday, Oct. 14.) In 2007, blues musician Corey Harris won, as did vocalist Dawn Upshaw. In 2006, jazz violinist Regina Carter (who just performed at the Monterey Jazz Festival as one of the All-Stars) and musician/composer John Zorn. In 2005, conductor Marin Alsop, violinmaker Joseph Curtin, and music educator Aaron Dworkin. 2004, ragtime pianist and composer Reginald Robinson. 2003, composer Osvaldo Golijov. 2002, bassist and composer Edgar Meyer. 2001, pianist Stephan Hough and composer Bright Sheng.

The 2009 fellows include a novelist, a short story writer, and a poet, a filmmaker and a photojournalist, a painter, a papermaker, and a digital artist, but no one involved with music. That hasn't happened since 2000.

Tonight jazz drummer/bandleader/genius Matt Wilson handed out his own MacArthur Grants at the Jazz Standard.


Source: twitter.com/mattwilsonjazz

Wednesday, September 24, 2008

Miguel Zenon



HH and I were reading the Strib over breakfast yesterday when we noticed a brief piece on this year's MacArthur Foundation "genius grants." Among the 25 recipients are a violin virtuoso, an architectural historian who studies ancient bridges, and...a saxophonist?

We went to www.macfound.org (not www.macfund.org, as the Strib misprinted) and learned that the saxophonist is Miguel Zenon, whom we just saw twice at Monterey, with Maraca "Cuban Lullabies" and again with Antonio Sanchez's Migration. Before then, at the Dakota in 2005 and IAJE in 2004.



The MacArthur is the best of all possible awards. A description from the Web site: "Recipients learn in a single phone call from the Foundation that they will each receive $500,000 in 'no strings attached' support over the next five years."

Congratulations to this fine young musician.

Read more about Zenon here.
Visit his Web site.

Visit
his music channel on YouTube, with podcasts.
Hear him on
his MySpace page.

Photos by John Whiting from the 51st Annual Monterey Jazz Festival.
Top: Miguel Zenon. Bottom: Miguel Zenon and David Sanchez.