Harlem Stage, the legendary uptown venue that for over 35 years has
promoted the creative legacy of Harlem and artists of color from around the
corner and across the globe, is proud to present its Spring 2019 season of
performances. The 2019 spring season is curated by Monique Martin, Director of
Programming for Harlem Stage and features artists who #Disrupt and take
creative risk. The performances feature a range of artistic genres, offering
audiences the chance to experience legendary performers, as well as rising
stars.
Harlem Stage
is thrilled to continue its partnership with Edison Award-winning and
Grammy-nominated trumpeter Christian Scott aTunde Adjuah to re-establish jazz
as a social music through the Stretch Music Residency. This third and final
year of Adjuah’s residency will feature the 3rd and final installment of the
Stretch Music Festival. Featuring artists including Saul Williams, the Logan
Richardson band, Freelance and more. The festival also includes a FREE Stretch
Music Intensive, in addition to a performance from the Steve Turre Quintet as
part of the Jazz Then and Now conversation series.
The series
kicks off on April 9th as Christian Scott aTunde Adjuah returns to Manhattan
School of Music to lead a FREE masterclass on his genre blind Stretch Music. All
music students, musicians and lovers of the jazz idiom and all its
variabilities are welcomed to join this immersive workshop centered on
improvisation, technique and thriving as a working artist today. Also on April
9th, is a free pop-up performance at Silvana’s Restaurant featuring drummer,
producer and composer King Klavé.
On April
11th, as part of the Jazz Then and Now series, Christian Scott aTunde Adjuah
will be in conversation with composer and trombonist Steve Turre on
improvisation, technology, collaboration, the importance of the historical
lineage and more. The conversation will be preceded with a live performance by
the Steve Turre Quintet. Jazz Then and Now is a conversation series, presented
as part of the Stretch Music Residency that brings together innovative thought
leaders in the field in dialogue on the history, the present and the future of
jazz.
Closing out
the series on April 12th, Christian Scott aTunde Adjuah curates and performs at
his final Stretch Music Festival under his three-year residency with Harlem
Stage. The generosity, leadership and innovation Christian has brought to the
Harlem Stage Gatehouse and broader New York community is extraordinary. The
audience can anticipate another powerful festival that will once again advance
and stretch the landscape of jazz. The evening will feature stellar guests
including Saul Williams, the Logan Richardson band, Freelance and more, as
Christian connects West African rhythms with his Afro New Orleanian cultural
traditions to the sonic freedoms of creative improvised music. Come ready to be
Stretched!
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