Bernie Williams / Kareem Abdul-Jabbar |
The New Jersey Performing Arts Center is proud to present
Jazz Meets Sports, a special event connecting jazz artistry and athletic
performance created by Artistic Advisor and GRAMMY® Award-winning bassist Christian
McBride. This special one night only program will take place on Sunday, March 2
at 7:00PM in NJPAC's Victoria Theater.
McBride is set to perform with his trio, featuring pianist
Christian Sands and drummer Ulysses Owens, Jr., with baseball legend and Latin
GRAMMY® nominated guitarist Bernie Williams. McBride will also moderate a
conversation featuring Williams and NBA icon and ultimate jazz connoisseur,
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar. Joining the bassist as a co-host of this Jazz Meets Sports
conversation is CBS sportscaster Lesley Visser, the first and only woman
enshrined in the Pro Football Hall of Fame.
"I wanted to find a way to combine my two passions in
life. A lot of people aren't quite sure how the two relate, but the fact is
when you have a group coming together trying to make something happen, it's all
about teamwork. It's all about trusting one another. It's all about
telepathy," explains McBride, who has also written for The Bleacher
Report. "In that sense, sports and music are the exact same thing.
Obviously, music doesn't rely on points to decide a victor, but the process is
very much the same." McBride has served as artistic director to NJPAC's TD
James Moody Democracy of Jazz Festival for the last two years, and joined the
arts center as a Jazz Advisor for the entire 2013-14 concert season and as
curator for his own series of concerts.
The bassist isn't alone in recognizing the similarities
between jazz and sports. Bernie Williams, co-author of Rhythms of the Game: The
Link Between Music and Athletic Performance, had a celebrated 16-year career
with the New York Yankees as a four-time World Series Champion and five-time
All Star.
The MLB center fielder continued to pursue his passion for
music with his debut album in 2003, The Journey Within, featuring fusions of
jazz, rock, and tropical rhythms. His follow up album, Moving Forward, includes
guest appearances by heavyweights including Bruce Springsteen, Jon Secada, Dave
Koz, Wayman Tisdale, and more.
Six-time NBA Champion and 19-time NBA All-Star Kareem
Abdul-Jabbar was a "no-brainer," says McBride. "I met Kareem
back in 1991, everyone knows what a jazz connoisseur he is and how much he's
really gone out on a limb to listen to jazz and promote jazz and champion
jazz."
The New York Times best-selling author has written six
books, including his autobiography, Giant Steps, where the title pays homage to
the legendary John Coltrane. Abdul-Jabbar is also a pop-culture columnist for
Esquire.com and just launched his own sports memorabilia company, StarGuardCollectibles.com.
Abdul-Jabbar also did a piece for JazzTimes.com on the connection between jazz
and basketball.
Joining McBride as co-host is CBS Sports broadcaster Lesley
Visser. "I met Lesley about 12 years ago at the Super Bowl. I was
performing there with Sting and her dressing room was next to ours,"
recalls McBride. "She just has the greatest personality in the whole
world. I'm very proud to know the only woman in the Pro Football Hall of Fame,
for her broadcasting legend."
In addition to his virtuosity as a bass player, Christian
McBride is an educator, curator and composer-arranger. The Philadelphia-born
musician has performed alongside a diverse set of luminaries including Chick
Corea, Herbie Hancock, Natalie Cole, Pat Metheny, James Brown, Sting, Bruce
Hornsby and Queen Latifah, among others.
"I have been the New Jersey Performing Arts Center's
artistic advisor for their Jazz Series now for the last year, and as part of
it's first season you want to do something unusual because at some point when
your putting on concerts your going to start to get into the same routine, the
same people are going to come up, the same process is going to come up, the
same ideas are going to come up," explains McBride. "This is why it
was important to me to think outside of the box and to see if I can do
something with my two passions, jazz and sports."
Tickets may be purchased by telephone at 1-888-GO-NJPAC
(1-888-466-5722), at the NJPAC Box Office at One Center Street in downtown
Newark (open Tuesday-Saturday, noon to 6:00pm; and Sunday, noon to 5:00pm), or
online at www.njpac.org.
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