January Jersey Jazz LIVE!
WHEN: Sunday afternoon, January 7, 3 p.m.
WHERE: Madison, NJ, Community Arts Center, 10 Kings Road in Madison, NJ.
TICKETS: $10 for NJJS members and $15 for non-members. Student admission is $5 with valid ID. There will be light refreshments for purchase.
To order tickets in advance, log onto https://MadisonArts.ticketleap.com/jersey-jazz-live-01-07-2024.
In the 1970s and '80s, pianist/vocalist/composer Bob Dorough was
Music Director of Schoolhouse
Rock!, a three-minute vignette aired by ABC Television as part of its
Saturday morning cartoons. Dorough wrote songs about mathematics, grammar,
history, and civics with titles such as "My Hero Zero", "Three
is a Magic Number", "Conjunction Junction", and "Sufferin'
Til Suffrage".
Through his connections in the music business, he was able to
recruit other well-known musicians to get involved with some of the songs.
Vocalist Blossom Dearie sang "Figure Eight" and "Unpack Your
Adjectives", and pianist/vocalist/composer Dave Frishberg wrote "I'm
Just a Bill" about the legislative process.
On Sunday afternoon, January 7, pianist/vocalist Daryl Sherman and
bassist/vocalist Jay Leonhart will pay tribute to Dorough, Dearie, and
Frishberg at the New Jersey Jazz Society's Jersey Jazz LIVE! concert. They will reprise a similar tribute
performed last August at Birdland in New York City.
Author, historian, and Jersey
Jazz Magazine columnist Dan
Morgenstern, writing about the Birdland appearance, said, "No duo could be
better suited to salute those three diversely talented legends. Both Daryl and
Jay, being singers, instrumentalists, and songwriters, also share their
subjects' artistry, humor, plus individual mastery of interpretation. Jay
Leonhart appears on many Blossom Dearie recordings, and Daryl has recorded with
Dave Frishberg and Bob Dorough."
Daryl Sherman has been part of the New York City jazz scene since the mid-1970s. She is perhaps best known for her 15 years of playing on the Cole Porter piano at the Waldorf-Astoria. In 2012, Sherman released an album called Mississippi Belle: Cole Porter in the Quarter on the Audiophile label. Reviewing it for Jersey Jazz, Joe Lang wrote that, "Sherman's intimate vocal style, fabulous phrasing, and inventive self-accompaniment on piano produced an album that would surely have pleased Mr. Porter and will have a similar effect on his legions of admirers."
Dave Leonhart has played with a who's who of the jazz and pop world.
Among the vocalists he accompanied were Judy Garland, Peggy Lee, and Mel Torme,
and he has shared the bandstand with jazz legends such as Duke Ellington, Thad
Jones, and Marian McPartland.
DownBeat's Robert Ham, reviewing Leonhart's 2020
Sunnyside album, Joy, (with pianist Tomoko Ohno and
drummer Vito Lesczak) wrote, "at age 79, Leonhart's still playing the bass
with the nimble hands of a youngster . . . His music is pure comfort food,
uplifted by his plainspoken delivery and his dry, dad joke-heavy sense of
humor." The New
York Times has called
him, "one of the most sought-after standup bass players on the New
York pop-jazz scene."
Sherman
and Leonhart will be preceded by a Rising Stars opening act featuring a duo led
by violinist/vocalist Jacquie Lee, a Montclair resident and a freshman at the
Manhattan School of Music. She will be accompanied by guitarist Derick Campos,
who grew up in Fort Lee, NJ. He was a 2022 New Jersey Jazz Society scholarship
recipient.
Jacquie Lee was the Rising Star in the April 2023 issue of Jersey Jazz. At the Charles Mingus Festival & High School Competition, held last February at The New School, Lee received an Outstanding Soloist Award. One of the songs she performed was Mingus' "The Dry Cleaner From Des Moines" with lyrics by Joni Mitchell, who sang it on her1979 Asylum album, Mingus. Asked about her favorite jazz violinist of the past, Lee said, "Stuff Smith, one of the most swinging cats of all time."
Funding for Jersey Jazz Live! has been made possible, in part, by funds from Morris Arts through the New Jersey State Council on the Arts/Department of State, a partner agency of The National Endowment for the Arts.