The Jazz
Connect Conference is pleased to announce that Randall Kline, founder and
executive artistic director of SFJAZZ, is the first recipient of the Bruce
Lundvall Visionary Award, presented by Jazz Connect. He will receive the award
on Thursday, January 8, 2015 at the Jazz Connect Conference in New York City.
Held at Saint Peter's Church, the two-day conference brings together members of
the international jazz community for a series of panels, workshops and events,
all dedicated to expanding the audience for jazz.
The
formation of the award was announced at the 2014 Jazz Connect Conference at the
culmination of a panel (sponsored by NARAS) saluting Lundvall's legacy and
featuring Michael Cuscuna, Robert Glasper and Jason Moran. The Bruce Lundvall
Visionary Award, presented by Jazz Connect, was created in honor of the
longtime jazz record executive who was a champion and advocate for so many jazz
artists over the last four decades. The annual award recognizes someone who has
demonstrated extraordinary leadership and vision in expanding the audience for
jazz and who has made a real difference for the artists, the music and the
audience.
Commenting
on the Visionary Award being named for him, Lundvall said, "I am truly
humbled and honored by this award and was amazed to first learn of it. I have
always approached my job with passion and honesty. I love jazz so much. It's
provided me with my life's work, filled with rich experiences through
relationships with many special artists and talented executives."
Peter
Gordon, of the Jazz Forward Coalition and one of the organizers of the
conference, said that, "Empowered by Bruce's gracious grandeur, we wanted
his legacy memorialized with a new standard of excellence, to drive us to
places we never thought achievable." He added, "Though we are all
soldiers on the battlefield, this award is Jazz Connect's recognition of an
against-all-odds effort that an individual has had to shoulder to make the
impossible possible and challenge the rest of us to do the same."
Dr. George
Butler, McCoy Tyner, Bruce Lundvall
The
organizers of the Jazz Connect Conference chose Kline as the first recipient,
based on not only a long career as a jazz presenter and champion, but also
based on the herculean task of establishing the SFJAZZ Center in 2013. The
Center comprises 35,000 square feet in a transparent and open structure
features the state-of-the-art Robert N. Miner Auditorium with seating
adjustable from 350 to 700, the 100-seat multi-purpose Joe Henderson Lab,
rehearsal spaces, digital learning lab, South at SFJAZZ (bar/café from renowned
chef Charles Phan), ground floor lobby, retail shop/box office, and SFJAZZ
administrative offices. The SFJAZZ Center is the result of a $64 million
capital campaign that was completed in September of 2014.
Lundvall
reinforced Kline's unique contributions to the jazz community. "Randall is
a true visionary, working in the most important jazz city in America after New
York City," said Lundvall. "The new SFJAZZ Center has attracted great
artists and he's put the city on the map which has reinforced his venue and the
city as the west coast center for jazz."
SFJAZZ
-- originally titled Jazz in the City -- was founded in 1983 with a seed grant
from Grants for the Arts of the San Francisco Hotel Tax Fund. Seventeen years
later in December of 1999 Kline announced the establishment of SFJAZZ, the San
Francisco Jazz Organization, a much-expanded organization with year-round
concert and educational programs. The SFJAZZ Collective -- now the resident
ensemble of the SFJAZZ Center -- was established in 2004 and its eight members
are commissioned to write a new composition and new arrangement of jazz' modern
masters. The Collective has produced over 71 original compositions and 75 new
arrangements in its 10 years - all recorded and produced by SFJAZZ.
Kline
currently serves on the board of directors of Chamber Music America, the
Western Jazz Presenters Network, and is member of the Board of Governors of the
University of California Humanities Research Institute. This is such an
honor," said Kline. "Bruce is one of the true beacons of the jazz and
music business and it is humbling to be considered for an award that is named
in his honor."
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