Community Corner

30th Annual Jazz Festival At West Chester University

Events Wednesday through Friday are free and open to the public

February 28, 2020

30th ANNUAL JAZZ FESTIVAL RETURNS to WCU March 18 – 21, 2020

The Wells School of Music at West Chester University gears-up to once again bring
world-class entertainment and free live jazz to the surrounding community at the 30th
Annual Jazz Festival. From March 18 – 21, students and audiences of all ages are
invited to events staged in the Madeleine Wing Adler Theatre, Swope Music Building
and Performing Arts Center, 817 S. High Street, West Chester. Events Wednesday through
Friday are FREE and open to the public, and FREE parking is offered outside of the
Swope Music Building. Saturday’s high school showcase in the Emilie K. Asplundh Concert
Hall requires a $12 ticket available for purchase at www.wcupatix.com/schoolofmusic.

Find out what's happening in West Chesterfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

For full listings and details visit www.wcupa.edu/jazzfest.

Marc Jacoby is the Director of Jazz Studies at West Chester University and the curator
for the 2019 Jazz Festival. Jacoby says, “West Chester University has enjoyed a long
history and commitment to great jazz programming. Our own faculty jazz group, as well
as our beloved student jazz ensemble, the Criterions, are among the many points of
pride for the Wells School of Music. As well, our annual Jazz Festival, now in its
30th year, invites members of the community onto our campus to enjoy some of the finest
jazz artists from our region and beyond, programmed in our top-notch facilities, for
FREE. We want the community to take full advantage of these offerings, and to share
in our excitement for this fantastic programming.”

Find out what's happening in West Chesterfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

Events include:

Wednesday, March 18 at 12 p.m. – Dave Allen Group - Guitarist and Composer Dave Allen was first recognized by Guitar Player Magazine as
a talent to watch at 16 years old. He has been praised by critics as "An exciting
and unique player in the mold of Pat Metheny, Ben Monder and Adam Rogers. Monster
chops, harmonic resourcefulness, strong melodic sense, considerable compositional
talent ". (Lyle Robinson of Jazz Guitar Life) Born in Philadelphia, Allen began performing
and composing at the age of 15. He moved to New York City to attend the Manhattan
School of Music. Over the next twenty years Allen performed with many of the most
respected musicians in jazz today. He has released three critically acclaimed recordings
and has been written about in the New York Times, Downbeat Magazine and Jazz Times
Magazine. He has toured with his own projects and as a sideman throughout the U.S.,
Europe and Asia. Allen has two critically acclaimed CDs featuring his original compositions;
"Untold Stories" and "Real and Imagined"

Wednesday, March 18 at 8 p.m.WCU Faculty Jazz Group: Featuring Dan Cherry (trombone), David Cullen (guitar), Christopher Hanning (drumset),
Marc Jacoby (vibraphone), Terry Klinefelter (piano), Peter Paulsen (bass), Jonathan
Ragonese (Saxophone), John Swana (Valve Trombone/EWI), Paul Jost (vocalist).

Thursday, March 19 at 12 p.m. – Steve Rudolph Quartet performs at West Chester with Tom Strohman (woodwinds), Hassan Shakur (bass), and
Larry Marshall (drums.) Rudolph studied trumpet and composition at Butler University,
turning to the piano at age 22. He moved to Harrisburg, PA in 1978, and is largely
responsible for the growth of the jazz scene in Central PA. Steve Rudolph has served
as producer, arranger and performer on many recordings, with eleven acclaimed CDs
to his name. He has toured extensively in the U.S. and abroad. Currently a Yamaha
Keyboard Artist, he is in demand as a clinician and performer. More details at www.steverudolph.com.
Thursday, March 19 at 8 p.m. – Rudresh Mahanthappa’s Hero Trio has been hailed by Pitchfork as "jaw-dropping, one of the finest saxophonists going.”
Alto saxophonist, composer and educator Rudresh Mahanthappa is widely known as one
of the premier voices in jazz of the 21st century. He has over a dozen albums to his
credit, including the acclaimed Bird Calls, which topped many critics' best-of-year
lists for 2015. Rudresh has been named alto saxophonist of the year for six of seven
years running in Downbeat Magazine’s International Critics’ Polls (2011-2013, 2015-2017),
and for five consecutive years by the Jazz Journalists' Association (2009-2013) and
again in 2016. He won alto saxophonist of the year in the 2016 JazzTimes Magazine
Critics' Poll and was named the Village Voice's "Best Jazz Artist" in 2015. He has
also received the Guggenheim Fellowship and the Doris Duke Performing Artist Award,
among other honors, and is currently the Anthony H. P. Lee '79 Director of Jazz at
Princeton University.

Friday, March 20 at 12 p.m. – Master Class with Michael Mossman - Mossman is Director of Jazz Studies at the Aaron Copland School of Music at Queens
College/CUNY and is also on the faculty of the Juilliard School in New York City.
His early career included a tour of Europe with Anthony Braxton in 1978 and tours
with Roscoe Mitchell in the early 1980s. He also did session work in the 1980s for
Styx among others. He played with Lionel Hampton, Art Blakey's Jazz Messengers, and
Machito before joining the Blue Note Records ensemble Out of the Blue in 1985. Mossman
received a Grammy nomination in 2013 for Best Instrumental Arrangement for his "Afro-Cuban
Jazz Suite for Ellington.” His work with Academy Award-winning director Fernando Trueba
includes scoring music for the Academy Award nominated (2012) film Chico and Rita.
Mossman has been a guest performer, arranger, and conductor with radio orchestras
in Germany. He has conducted the Bilbao Orkesta Sinfonica in Spain in a program of
his own works. He arranged and conducted "Mambo Nights" with Arturo Sandoval and "Missa
Afro-Cubana" with the WDR Bigband of Cologne and Spirits Dancing with David Sanborn
with the HR Bigband of Frankfurt (2009). "Latin Jazz Latino" with Joe Gallardo was
recorded by the NDR Bigband of Hamburg and released by Skip Records (2006). His ballet
Beneath the Mask was performed at Harris Theater in Chicago by Jon Faddis and the
Chicago Jazz Ensemble and the Deeply Rooted Dance Company in 2006. His arrangement
of Faddis' "Teranga" was performed by the Philadelphia Orchestra at Kimmel Center
in 2006. His arrangement of Paquito D'Rivera's "I Remember Diz" was performed by the
Louisiana Philharmonic in 2010. He has arranged for the Tri-City Symphony of Davenport,
Iowa (2011). His "Latin Tinge" was performed at Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C
with Paquito D'Rivera and the Quartet Indigo string quartet in 2010.

Friday, March 20 at 7:30 p.m. –WCU’s Acclaimed Criterions Jazz Ensemble with Michael
Mossman -
The Criterions is the longest running University jazz band in the country. Originating
in the 1920s, they were a student-led ballroom dance band, and provided entertainment
for University dances, proms and post-Friday night games. As times changed, the “Crites”
became a faculty-led Jazz Ensemble by the early 1980s when the School of Music began
Jazz curricula. They are known for their mastery of American popular songs and jazz
standards from the early 20th century. They will perform in concert with trumpeter
Michael Mossman.

Saturday, March 21 from 10 a.m. – 6 p.m. – High School Jazz Ensemble Showcase (Tickets
Required) -
Some of the finest jazz ensembles from high schools around the region will perform
in half-hour sets, receiving feedback and working with WCU faculty. Tickets are $12/$7
students at www.wcupatix.com/schoolofmusic.

West Chester University’s Wells School of Music offers students an outstanding opportunity
in concentrated performance and musicianship through its educational centerpiece —
the Applied Music Department. The School’s superior performance and practice venues
include 22 new Steinways, Skinner organ, tech lab, Roland piano lab, and more. Students
study with renowned faculty who have dual careers as dedicated educators and professional
musicians. Faculty provide private lessons for all music students and are the directors
for numerous student ensembles. The School supports a wide variety of performance
degrees, including a Bachelor of Music in Performance, as well as a Master of Music
in Performance. Graduates pursue successful careers at major institutions and teach
music education at home and abroad.


This press release was produced by West Chester University. The views expressed here are the author’s own.