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Wynton Marsalis, Artistic Director
Jazz musician, trumpeter, composer, bandleader, advocate for the arts, and educator, Wynton Marsalis has helped propel jazz to the forefront of American culture. His prominent position in American culture was solidified in April 1997, when he became the first jazz artist to be awarded the Pulitzer Prize in music for his work Blood on the Fields, which was commissioned by Jazz at Lincoln Center. He has served as the world-renowned arts organization’s artistic director as well as music director of the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra (formerly known as the Lincoln Center Jazz Orchestra) since its inception.
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Musical Ingénue At an early age, Mr. Marsalis exhibited seriousness about study, an aptitude for music, and a desire to contribute to American culture. On October 18, 1961, in New Orleans, Louisiana, he was born the second of six sons to Ellis and Dolores Marsalis. At age 8, he performed traditional New Orleans music in the Fairview Baptist Church band, led by legendary banjoist Danny Barker. Marsalis began studying the trumpet seriously at age 12, and gained experience as a young musician in local marching bands, jazz and funk bands, and classical youth orchestras. At 14, he was invited to perform the Haydn Trumpet Concerto with the New Orleans Philharmonic. In 1979, Marsalis entered The Juilliard School in New York City to study classical trumpet but in the fall of 1979 he had the opportunity to sit in with Art Blakey and the Jazz Messengers and pursue his true love, jazz music. In the summer of 1980, he joined the band of acclaimed master drummer Art Blakey, which inspired generations of emerging jazz artists to hone their craft. In the years to follow, Marsalis was invited to perform with Sarah Vaughan, Dizzy Gillespie, Gerry Mulligan, John Lewis, Sweets Edison, Clark Terry, Sonny Rollins and countless other jazz legends.
Acclaimed Musician, Composer, BandleaderIn 1982, Mr. Marsalis made his recording debut as a leader, and over the last two decades, he has produced a catalogue of more than 40 jazz and classical recordings for Columbia Jazz and Sony Classical, which have won him nine GRAMMY® awards. In 1983, he became the first and only artist to win both classical and jazz GRAMMY® awards in one year, and repeated this feat in 1984. In 1999, he released eight new recordings in his unprecedented Swinging into the 21st series, which includes a 7-CD boxed set of live performances from the Village Vanguard. Not content to focus solely on his musicianship, Mr. Marsalis has devoted equal time to developing his compositional skills. Embraced by the dance community for his penmanship, he has received commissions to create major compositions for Garth Fagan Dance, Peter Martins at the New York City Ballet, Twyla Tharp for the American Ballet Theatre, and Judith Jamison at the Alvin Ailey American Dance Theatre. In 1995, Marsalis with Jazz at Lincoln Center, collaborated with the Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center to compose the string quartet At the Octoroon Balls, and again in 1998 to create a response to Stravinsky's A Soldier's Tale with his composition A Fiddler's Tale. In 1999, Mr. Marsalis presented his most ambitious work to date, All Rise, an epic composition for big band, gospel choir, and symphony orchestra, performed by the New York Philharmonic under the baton of Kurt Masur along with the Morgan State University Choir and the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra. Mr. Marsalis’s rich body of work includes Them Twos, his first symphonic work and the second collaboration between Jazz at Lincoln Center and the New York City Ballet in 1999; Big Train, commissioned and premiered in 1998 by Jazz at Lincoln Center; Sweet Release, a score for ballet written in 1996 for the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra and choreographed by Judith Jamison for the Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater; Jazz: Six Syncopated Movements, from the 1993 Jazz at Lincoln Center collaboration with the New York City Ballet; Jump Start, a score written for dancer and choreographer Twyla Tharp; Citi Movement/Griot New York, a three-movement composition created in collaboration with choreographer Garth Fagan; and In This House, On This Morning, an extended piece based on the form of a traditional gospel service, commissioned and premiered by Jazz at Lincoln Center in 1992. Mr. Marsalis signed to Blue Note Records and his debut CD on the label, a quartet recording entitled The Magic Hour, was released on March 9, 2004. To date, his Blue Note CD recordings include Willie Nelson and Wynton Marsalis -Two Men with the Blues (2008), From the Plantation to the Penitentiary (2007), Wynton Marsalis: Live at The House Of Tribes (2005), The Magic Hour (2004) and Unforgivable Blackness: The Rise and Fall of Jack Johnson (2004), the companion soundtrack recording to Ken Burns’ PBS documentary of the great African-American boxer. Wynton Marsalis is published by arrangement with Skayne’s Music Boosey & Hawkes Inc., Sole Agent. Mr. Marsalis co-wrote a composition called Congo Square with Ghanaian drummer Yacub Addy and dedicated the piece to Mr. Marsalis’ native New Orleans following Hurricane Katrina. The Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra, in collaboration with Yacub Addy’s group Odadaa!, premiered Congo Square on April 23, 2006 in New Orleans then performed the piece on tour from Florida to New York.
Advocate, Educator, Cultural LeaderMr. Marsalis’ commitment to improving people’s lives through music and his contributions to the arts paint a portrait of his character and humanity. He is internationally respected as a teacher and a spokesman for music education, having received honorary degrees from 29 of the nation's leading academic institutions, including Columbia, Brown, Princeton, and Yale universities.In 1987, Mr. Marsalis co-founded a jazz program at Lincoln Center. In December 1996, the Lincoln Center Board rewarded the jazz department's significant success by voting it a full constituent, equal in stature with the ten other organizations on campus including the New York Philharmonic, Metropolitan Opera and New York City Ballet—a historic moment for jazz as an art form and for Lincoln Center as a cultural institution. Jazz at Lincoln Center has developed an international agenda with up to 500 events annually around the world. Under Mr. Marsalis’s direction, Jazz at Lincoln Center programming offers performances, lectures, film forums, dances, television and Peabody Award winning radio broadcasts as part of the Jazz at Lincoln Center Radio national radio program, recordings, and jazz education including programs for people of all ages and music publishing. Mr. Marsalis regularly conducts master classes, lectures and concerts for students, including the popular Jazz at Lincoln Center Jazz for Young PeopleSM concerts that spawned the first-ever comprehensive jazz appreciation curriculum of the same name for 4-9th grades. Educational activities also include the annual Essentially Ellington High School Jazz Band Competition and Festival that has reached more than 3,500 bands in North American and Australia, and the Band Director Academy. Mr. Marsalis donates his time and talent to non-profit organizations throughout the country to help raise money to meet the many needs within our society. From My Sister's Place (a shelter for battered women) to Graham Windham (a shelter for homeless children), the Children's Defense Fund, Amnesty International, Sloan-Kettering Cancer Institute, Food For All Seasons (a food bank for the elderly and disadvantaged), Very Special Arts (an organization that provides experiences in dance, drama, literature, and music for individuals with physical and mental disabilities) to the Newark Boys Chorus School (a full-time academic music school for disadvantaged youths). He also has brought the spirit of jazz into the homes of millions of people through television programs such as Marsalis on Music, Ken Burns’ Jazz and Unforgivable Blackness: The Rise and Fall of Jack Johnson (PBS), the BET Jazz series Journey with Jazz at Lincoln Center, and with the radio series Making the Music for National Public Radio (NPR), which won a Peabody Award in 1996. Mr. Marsalis released To a Young Musician: Letters from the Road, published by Random House in 2004, as well as Sweet Swing Blues on the Road, a collaboration with Jazz at Lincoln Center photographer Frank Stewart. In October 2005, Candlewick Press released Mr. Marsalis’ Jazz ABZ, an A to Z collection of 26 poems celebrating jazz greats, illustrated by poster artist Paul Rogers. In 2008, Random House released Moving to Higher Ground: How Jazz Can Change Your Life which he co-wrote with Geoffrey C. Ward.
Worldwide Recognition For his many achievements, Time magazine selected Mr. Marsalis as one of America's most promising leaders under age 40 in 1995, and in 1996 Time celebrated Marsalis as one of “America's 25 Most Influential People.” He also was named one of "The 50 Most Influential Boomers" by Life magazine.
In the spring of 2001, United Nations Secretary General Kofi Annan proclaimed Mr. Marsalis an international ambassador of goodwill by appointing him a United Nations Messenger of Peace. He also has been awarded the Congressional Horizon Award, the French Grand Prix du Disque, the Louis Armstrong Memorial Medal, the Netherlands' Edison Award, and the Algur H. Meadows Award for Excellence in the Arts, and has received countless plaques as well as keys to more than 50 cities. He has been inducted into the American Academy of Achievement, and was dubbed an “Honorary Dreamer” by the I Have a Dream Foundation. He also has received a citation from the United States House of Representatives for his outstanding contributions to the arts. Mr. Marsalis was instrumental in the Higher Ground Hurricane Relief concert, produced by Jazz at Lincoln Center, which has raised over $3 million for the Higher Ground Relief Fund to benefit the musicians, music industry related enterprises and other individuals and entities from the areas in Greater New Orleans who were impacted by Hurricane Katrina.
As Jazz at Lincoln Center’s artistic director and as music director of the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra, Wynton Marsalis continues to spread the spirit of swing and raise awareness of jazz in the consciousness of the American public and the world. |
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Adrian Ellis, Executive Director
Adrian Ellis became Executive Director of Jazz at Lincoln Center on October 1 2007. Adrian comes to the not-for-profit arts organization at a pivotal time in its 21-year history, after being appointed to the post by the Board of Directors in June 2007. Adrian had recently completed a major project with Jazz at Lincoln Center’s Board and senior management, creating a new strategic plan for Jazz at Lincoln Center with his company, AEA Consulting.
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Prior to this he was the President of AEA Consulting, a company of that specializes in strategic, operational and facilities planning for the cultural sector, which he founded in 1990. Clients include the National Gallery (London), the National Gallery of Victoria (Melbourne), the Victoria and Albert Museum (London), the British Museum (London), the J Paul Getty Trust (Los Angeles), The Drawing Center (New York), The Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum (Boston), the Museum of Fine Arts (Budapest), El Museo del Barrio (New York), New York City Opera, San Francisco Opera, the Academy of American Poets (New York), PEN American Center (New York), the Frick Collection, Poets House (New York), the Ford Foundation (New York), the Pew Charitable Trusts (Philadelphia) , The Cleveland Foundation, the National Museums Directors Conference (London), SFJazz (San Francisco), the Royal Shakespeare Company (Stratford, England), Conaculta (Mexico City), the Cyprus Cultural Foundation and the Arts Council, England.
Between 1986 and 1990, Adrian was Executive Director of The Conran Foundation, where he was responsible for planning and managing the establishment of the Design Museum, London, which opened on Butlers Wharf in 1989. Between 1981 and 1986, he was a civil servant in the UK Treasury and the Cabinet Office, where he worked on service-wide efficiency reviews and privatisation, and for two years ran the office of the Economic Secretary to the Treasury (the Minister responsible for monetary policy and regulation of the banking sector). From 1980 to 1982, he was a College Lecturer in Politics at University College, Oxford.
Adrian has been a member of the Governing Council of the National Museums and Galleries of Wales (1996 - 2000) and a member of the Royal Institute of British Architects' Architecture Centre Committee (1997 - 2001), the Kaufman Center, New York, (2002-2007) and Pathé Pictures, a film production company in London. He is a member of the Getty Leadership Institute's Advisory Board. He is an advisor to and National Arts Strategies, the Non Profit Finance Fund and the Clore Duffield Foundation.
Adrian Ellis has written and lectured extensively on issues affecting the cultural sector and writes a column for The Art Newspaper. He received a B.A. Hons (First Class) and M. A. in Politics Philosophy and Economics from University College, Oxford and has lived in New York since 1998. |
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Lisa Schiff, Chairman of the Board
Lisa Schiff became the Chairman of the Board of Directors for Jazz at Lincoln Center – a not-for-profit
arts institution devoted to jazz – on December 11, 2001.
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Mrs. Schiff is the Managing Director and owner of After Nine Music, a label specializing in jazz and easy
listening. She has been a member of the Board of Directors for Jazz at Lincoln Center since 1995 and has
served on the Executive Committee and other committees. Her numerous board affiliations include The
Animal Medical Center, The Jewish Board of Family and Children’s Services, and President of the Youth
Counseling League.
In addition, she has been both the Chairman and Honorary Chairman of The Art Show presented by The
Art Dealers Association of America for the benefit of The Henry Street Settlement and has served on the
boards of the Visiting Nurse Service of New York and Georgetown University. She is also a voting
member of NARAS (The National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences).
Mrs. Schiff received her education from The Masters School and Briarcliff College. She is married to
investment banker and Wildlife Conservation Society Chairman David T. Schiff, with whom she has three
children, Andrew, David, and Ashley (also a member of the Jazz at Lincoln Center board).
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