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ACO
& Jazz at Lincoln Center
in
First Collaboration
Nov.
16 - 18
features
Gershwin & Derek Bermel Premiere
American Composers
Orchestra teams-up with the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra
with Wynton Marsalis in a program that
explores the intersection of jazz and the symphony from Gershwin,
through the "Third Stream" movement, and into the present
day. The program features George Gershwin's Rhapsody in Blue, in
its seldom-heard original instrumentation, with a new interpretation
by virtuoso pianist Marcus Roberts. ACO's Music
Alive Composer in Residence, Derek Bermel,
has been commissioned to write The Migration Series,
a major new work for the combined forces of ACO and the Jazz at
Lincoln Center Orchestra to be premiered as the occasion's
centerpiece. ACO principal guest conductor Steven
Sloane conducts. Three performances are scheduled for 8pm,
Thursday, November 16; Friday, November 17; and Saturday, November
18, at the Rose Theater, Frederick P. Rose Hall, Jazz at Lincoln
Center's fabulous new home.
The collaboration
extends ACO's interest in breaking-down barriers between the world of
improvisation and the orchestra-an interest that led ACO to undertake
the Improvise! festival two seasons ago, and to previous
commissions by composers such as Alvin Singleton, Anthony Davis and
George Lewis.

Derek
Bermel: The Migration Series
(World
Premiere; ACO/Music Alive Commission)
Derek
Bermel is a unique figure in American music today-a masterfully
eclectic composer, clarinetist, jazz and rock musician-who boasts a
decade-long relationship with ACO. As ACO's Music Alive Composer
in Residence, Bermel composes, performs, and plays a lead role in
ACO's innovative programming and educational activities.
Bermel's The
Migration Series was inspired by the stunning series of paintings
by Jacob Lawrence. Scored for the combined forces of ACO and the Jazz
at Lincoln Center Orchestra, Bermel says, "I have long admired
Lawrence's series and have wanted to write my own 'Pictures at an
Exhibition' based on these great American works. With this
commission, I found what seems like the right medium to express some
of the musical moods and gestures that came to mind when-as a child-I
first came into contact with Lawrence's paintings. They capture
moments in the story of African-American migration, but they signify
and embody the pain, the loneliness, the transformation, and the hope
present in the migratory stories of so many peoples."
Bermel continues,
"Lawrence's work transcends culture and epoch, so I can only
hope I can write a tribute which does it justice. It is a humbling
task, because the paintings continue to be relevant today, as we have
watched the mass exodus from New Orleans. With the passing of the
one-year anniversary of Katrina's devastation, Lawrence's work is a
signpost which reminds us of those common themes characteristic of
displacement and migration: poverty, despair, hard work, community,
and hope."
Still in his 30's,
Derek Bermel has received many of today's most important awards,
including the Rome Prize, Guggenheim and Fulbright Fellowships, an
award from the American Academy of Arts and Letters, the Millennium
Prize from Faber Music, and residencies at the Lincoln Center
Directors Lab, Tanglewood, Aspen, Bowdoin, Banff, Yaddo, Sacatar, and
Civitella Ranieri. His music is published by Peermusic Classical and
Faber Music. Soul Garden, the first disc of his chamber music,
was released in 2002 on CRI records to much acclaim. An orchestral
disc is forthcoming by the Boston Modern Orchestra Project. His music
has been featured at festivals including De Suite Muziekweek
(Amsterdam), Composers Inc. (San Francisco), Imagine (Memphis),
Cactus Pear (San Antonio), Gaudeamus (Amsterdam), Society of
Composers, Inc. National Conference (Iowa), Society for New Music
(NY), Bowling Green (Ohio), Focus! (NY), Interlochen (Michigan),
Huddersfield (UK), and Banff (Alberta). Recent commissions include
the National, St. Louis, and New Jersey Symphonies, Chamber Music
Society of Lincoln Center, WNYC Radio, Westchester Philharmonic,
Aspen Music Festival, Gilmore Festival, Eighth Blackbird/Greenwall
Foundation, Fromm Foundation, Tanglewood Music Center, Aspen Music
Festival, Albany Symphony/Meet the Composer, Birmingham Royal Ballet
(UK), Pittsburgh New Music Ensemble, New York International Fringe
Festival, New York Youth Symphony, and ACO.
Bermel's hands-on
experience with music of cultures around the world has become part of
the fabric and force of Bermel's compositional language. He studied
ethnomusicology and orchestration in Jerusalem, and later traveled to
Bulgaria to study the Thracian folk style, Dublin to study uillean
pipes, and Ghana to study the Lobi xylophone. He trained at Yale
University and the University of Michigan, and later in Amsterdam,
studying composition with William Albright, Louis Andriessen, William
Bolcom, Michael Tenzer, and Henri Dutilleux.

The
Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra
The
Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra (JLCO) (formerly known as the
Lincoln Center Jazz Orchestra), composed of many of the finest jazz
soloists and ensemble players today, has been the Jazz at Lincoln
Center resident orchestra since 1988. Jazz at Lincoln Center features
the versatile JLCO in nearly all aspects of its programming: the JLCO
performs and leads educational events in New York, across the U.S.,
and around the world; in concert halls, dance venues, jazz clubs,
public parks, river boats, and churches; and with symphony
orchestras, ballet troupes, students, and an ever-expanding roster of
guest artists. Under the leadership of Music Director Wynton
Marsalis, the JLCO performs a vast repertory spanning the history of
jazz, from masterpieces by composers such as Duke Ellington, Count
Basie, Fletcher Henderson, Thelonious Monk, and Charles Mingus, to
commissioned works by Benny Carter, Joe Henderson, Jimmy Heath, Chico
O'Farrill, current and former members of the JLCO and others. Over
the last few years, the JLCO has collaborated with many of the
world's leading symphony orchestras, including the New York
Philharmonic, the Russian National Orchestra, the Berlin
Philharmonie, the Czech Philharmonic, the Boston, Chicago, and London
Symphony Orchestras and others. In 2006, the JLCO collaborated with
Ghanaian drum collective Odadaa!, led by Yacub Addy, to perform
"Congo Square," a composition Mr. Marsalis and Mr. Addy
co-wrote and dedicated to Mr. Marsalis' native New Orleans. The
members of the JLCO frequently conduct educational events produced by
Jazz at Lincoln Center, including lectures, master classes, and Jazz
for Young PeopleSM
concerts while on tour, and serve as mentors in the annual Essentially
Ellington High School Jazz Band Competition & Festival. In
1999, the JLCO was designated a Cultural Ambassador of the United
States of America under the White House Millennium Council Program.
In March 2001, Mr. Marsalis was designated a United Nations Messenger
of Peace by UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan. The JLCO has appeared on
television and radio broadcasts around the world including "The
Tonight Show," "Live From Lincoln Center" and a
Thirteen/WNET "Great Performances" broadcast. The JLCO has
recorded ten albums, the most recent recordings are Don't Be
Afraid&ldots; The Music of Charles Mingus (2005) and A Love
Supreme (2005), Mr. Marsalis' big band rendition of the original
by John Coltrane, on Palmetto Records. For more information visit www.jalc.org.

Marcus
Roberts, pianist
Marcus
Roberts is renowned for his ability to address the entire history of
jazz piano while performing in his own distinctive style. Mr.
Roberts, who lost his sight at the age of five, began teaching
himself to play piano at age eight. He studied classical piano at
Florida State University with Leonidus Lipovetsky, during which time
he won many awards and competitions, including a young artist's
competition at the National Association of Jazz Educators' 1982
Chicago Conference. After four years at Florida State, Roberts left
to tour with the Wynton Marsalis Quartet for six years. He signed his
first recording contract in 1988 and subsequently enjoyed the
distinction of being the first jazz musician to have his first three
recordings reach number one on Billboard's traditional jazz
chart. Mr. Roberts has released over a dozen acclaimed recordings,
including Deep in the Shed, Blues for the New Millennium, Gershwin
for Lovers, Portraits in Blue, In Honor of Duke and more. Mr.
Roberts has toured the U.S. and Europe both as a soloist as well as
with his septet and trio, which includes drummer Jason Marsalis and
bassist Roland Guerin. Mr. Roberts and his trio are active in jazz
education and regularly teach master classes and workshops for
students from the elementary school level to college jazz ensembles.
He was Artist-in-Residence for the 2002 Winter Olympics. His latest
album is entitled New Orleans Meets Harlem.

Wynton
Marsalis, JLCO music director/trumpet
Wynton
Marsalis is the Artistic Director of Jazz at Lincoln Center. Born in
New Orleans, Louisiana in 1961, Mr. Marsalis began his classical
training on trumpet at age 12 and soon began playing in local bands
of diverse genres. He entered The Juilliard School at age 17 and
joined Art Blakey and the Jazz Messengers. Mr. Marsalis made his
recording debut as a leader in 1982, and since he has recorded more
than 30 jazz and classical recordings, which have won him nine
GRAMMY® Awards. In 1983, he became the first and only artist to
win both classical and jazz GRAMMYs® in the same year and
repeated this feat in 1984. Mr. Marsalis's rich body of compositions
include Sweet Release, Jazz: Six Syncopated Movements, Jump Start,
Citi Movement/Griot New York, At the Octoroon Balls, and In
This House, On This Morning and Big Train. In 1997, Mr.
Marsalis became the first jazz artist to be awarded the prestigious
Pulitzer Prize in music, for his oratorio Blood on the Fields, which
was commissioned by Jazz at Lincoln Center. In 1999, he released
eight new recordings in his unprecedented "Swinging into the
21st" series, and premiered several new compositions. Recent
recordings include All Rise on Sony Classical, The Magic
Hour, Unforgivable Blackness: The Rise and Fall of Jack Johnson and
Wynton Marsalis: Live at The House Of Tribes on Blue Note
records. Mr. Marsalis is also an internationally respected teacher
and spokesman for music education, and has received honorary
doctorates from dozens of universities and colleges throughout the
U.S. He has also written three books: Sweet Swing Blues on the
Road in collaboration with photographer Frank Stewart; Jazz in
the Bittersweet Blues of Life with Carl Vigeland; To a Young
Musician: Letters from the Road with Selwyn Seyfu Hinds and Jazz
ABZ, an A to Z collection of 26 poems celebrating jazz greats.
In 2001, Mr. Marsalis was appointed Messenger of Peace by Mr. Kofi
Annan, Secretary-General of the United Nations, and he has also been
designated cultural ambassador to the United States of America by the
U.S. State Department through their CultureConnect program. Mr.
Marsalis serves on Lieutenant Governor Landrieu's National Advisory
Board for Culture, Recreation and Tourism, a national advisory board
to guide the Lieutenant Governor's administration's plans to rebuild
Louisiana's tourism and cultural economies. He has also been named to
the Bring New Orleans Back Commission, New Orleans Mayor C. Ray
Nagin's initiative to help rebuild New Orleans culturally, socially,
economically, and uniquely for every citizen. He helped lead the
effort to construct Jazz at Lincoln Center's new home - Frederick P.
Rose Hall - the first education, performance, and broadcast facility
devoted to jazz, which opened in October 2004.

Steven
Sloane, conductor
Steven
Sloane, Principal Guest Conductor of ACO, is one of the most
adventurous conductors to have emerged in recent years. His passion
for unusual repertoire, interest in eclectic juxtapositions of music
of divergent eras and styles, commitment to contemporary works, and
willingness to challenge convention has established him as a bold
champion of the future of concert music. Mr. Sloane made his Carnegie
Hall debut with American Composers Orchestra in March 2002, serving
as Music Director of ACO until last season. He is currently General
Music Director of the City of Bochum Symphony (Germany), where he
just celebrated his tenth anniversary season. He has also served as
Opera and Orchestra Music Director of the Spoleto Festival (United
States). With the Bochum Symphony, he has offered such eclectic
programming as Monteverdi Meets Maderna and Jean Cocteau
and his Paris, earning the prestigious German Publishers Award
for Best Programming of the Year. Among the many composers whose
works he has performed are Steve Reich, John Adams, Christopher
Rouse, Wynton Marsalis, Frank Zappa, Danny Elfman and Wolfgang Rihm,
along with many others. Some of Maestro Sloane's many orchestral
engagements include the Orchestre National de Lyon, Berlin, Munich,
and Bavarian Radio orchestras, the Berlin Philharmonic, City of
Birmingham Symphony, Israel Philharmonic, London Philharmonia and the
Tokyo Metropolitan Orchestra. Mr. Sloane's previous collaborations
with Wynton Marsalis, include multiple performances of All Rise.

Tickets
& Info
Performances are
November 16 - 18, 2006 at 8pm at the Rose Theater. Remaining tickets
for each performance are $37.50 - $127.50 and are available online at www.jalc.org,
by calling CenterCharge at 212-721-6500, or at the Jazz at Lincoln
Center Box Office at Broadway and 60th Street.
Major support of
American Composers Orchestra is provided by ACO Inner Circle,
American Symphony Orchestra League, Amphion Foundation, Arlington
Associates, ASCAP, ASCAP Foundation, The Bagby Foundation for the
Musical Arts, Bay and Paul Foundations, Bodman Foundation, BMI, BMI
Foundation, Mary Flagler Cary Charitable Trust, Citigroup Foundation,
Edward T. Cone Foundation, Consolidated Edison, The Aaron Copland
Fund for Music, The Alice M. Ditson Fund of Columbia University,
Fidelity Foundation, Fromm Music Foundation, Ann and Gordon Getty
Foundation, Horace W. Goldsmith Foundation, The Irving Harris
Foundation, Henfield Foundation, Victor Herbert Foundation, Jephson
Educational Trust, Jerome Foundation, John and Evelyn Kossak
Foundation, Neil Family Fund, The New York Community Trust, The New
York State Music Fund established by the New York State Attorney
General at Rockefeller Philanthropy Advisors, PricewaterhouseCoopers,
The Rodgers Family Foundation, Fan Fox & Leslie R. Samuels
Foundation, The Susan and Ford Schumann Foundation, Emma A. Sheafer
Charitable Trust, the Virgil Thomson Foundation, Paul Underwood
Charitable Trust, The Watchdog and Sonata Charitable Trust, The Isak
and Rose Weinman Foundation and The Helen F. Whitaker Fund. ACO
programs are also made possible with public funds from the National
Endowment for the Arts, New York State Council on the Arts and the
New York City Department of Cultural Affairs.
The residency of
Derek Bermel is made possible through Music Alive, a program
of the American Symphony Orchestra League and Meet the Composer. This
national program is designed to provide orchestras with resources and
tools to support their presentation of new music to the public and
build support for new music within their institutions. Funding for
Music Alive is provided by The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation and The
Aaron Copland Fund for Music.
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