Arts & Entertainment

Livingston Jazz Teacher To Lead Student Band At Tribute Show

A student band led by Newark Academy's Julius Tolentino will perform at a concert in honor of clarinetist Pee Wee Russell.

Student bands led by Newark Academy's Julius Tolentino will perform at a concert in honor of clarinetist Pee Wee Russell
Student bands led by Newark Academy's Julius Tolentino will perform at a concert in honor of clarinetist Pee Wee Russell (Photo: New Jersey Jazz Society)

LIVINGSTON, NJ — UPDATE: Saxophonist Mike Lee will be directing the Jazz House Kids at the Pee Wee Russell Stomp. Lee, a resident of Montclair, is professor of jazz saxophone at The John J. Cali School of Music at Montclair State University and helped found the JHK in-house jazz education program.

The following article comes courtesy of the New Jersey Jazz Society. Learn more about posting announcements or events to your local Patch site here.

Fifty years ago, Pluckemin, NJ, resident Jack Stine had an idea. One of his favorite musical performers, jazz clarinetist Pee Wee Russell, had died, and Stine wanted to honor him with a memorial concert. The first Pee Wee Russell Memorial Stomp was created, and two years later, Stine founded the New Jersey Jazz Society.

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On Sunday, April 7, the 50th annual Pee Wee Russell Memorial Stomp will be held at the Hyatt Regency in Morristown by the Jazz Society. Stine, who died last June at the age of 96, combined the first concert with a fundraiser and raised more than $3,000 for a scholarship in Russell’s name at Rutgers University. Now, the event raises money for scholarships at Montclair State University, New Jersey City University, Rowan University, and William Paterson University, in addition to Rutgers.

Best known for playing in Dixieland bands, Russell was also considered the first post-swing era modern performer on clarinet. An example of his modernist playing was a 1960s Impulse album called Ask Me Now, recorded in a pianoless quartet with valve trombonist Marshall Brown. Reviewing the album for AllMusic, Scott Yanow pointed out that, “Russell, late in life, broke out of the [Dixieland] stereotype and played in more modern settings.”

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His legacy will be celebrated at this year’s Stomp with music by Andy Farber and his Orchestra featuring special guests, vocalist Catherine Russell, multi-reedist Adrian Cunningham, and trumpeter Warren Vache. Vocalist Roseanna Vitro, a resident of Warren, NJ, will be presented with this year’s Distinguished Musician Award, and jazz radio station WBGO 88.3FM will be honored as this year’s Jazz Advocate. And, as is the tradition, dancing is welcome and encouraged, spurred by a group of vintage-clad dancers who annually grace the Pee Wee stage.

A new feature of this year’s Stomp will be performances by the New Jersey Youth Symphony’s Jazz Orchestra conducted by Roselle Park alto saxophonist Julius Tolentino, who is director of the jazz program at Newark Academy in Livingston; and by players from the Montclair-based Jazz House Kids.

Among the Essex County student musicians performing are: Livingston High School trumpeter Alan Wu; Columbia High School tenor saxophonist Andre Weinberger (a Maplewood resident); Millburn High School trumpeter Rahul Prakash, tenor saxophonist Siddith Chattopadhyay and guitarist Brandon Qiao (Chattopadhyay and Qiao are Short Hills residents); Montclair High School drummer Matthew Lee; Newark Arts High School trombonist Rayner Perez; Golda Ochs Academy drummer Rafi Colton-Max (a South Orange resident); and West Orange High School bassist Destiny Diggs-Pinto.

Saxophonist Andy Farber studied jazz composition at the Manhattan School of Music, played and wrote arrangements for legendary vocalist Jon Hendricks in the ‘90s, led the orchestra for the Broadway musical revue, After Midnight, and directed the band that backed Tony Bennett and Lady Gaga for the PBS special Cheek to Cheek Live.He has appeared at such venues as Dizzy’s Club Coca-Cola and the Jazz Standard in New York as well as the New Jersey Performing Arts Center in Newark.

Catherine Russell (no relation to Pee Wee) is a jazz superstar. In 2012, she won a Grammy Award for her appearance as a featured artist on the soundtrack album for the HBO TV series Boardwalk Empire. Her 2014 Jazz Village album, Bring It Back, received a five-star review from Down Beat Magazine, and her 2016 JV album, Harlem on My Mind, was nominated for a Grammy for Best Jazz Vocal Album. When Russell released her debut album, Caton the World Village label in 2006, the late jazz critic Nat Hentoff wrote: "After listening to a continuous stream of singers who couldn't have lasted through a chorus with Ella Fitzgerald or Betty Carter, it's a delight to hear the real thing in Catherine Russell." Her newest album, Alone Together, was released this month on the Dot Records label. New York Music Daily, pointing out that, "Russell has made a bunch of good records over the years," added that, "This might be the best of them all."

Trumpeter Warren Vache, a resident of Rahway, played with Benny Goodman in the mid-‘70s and was part of the house band at Eddie Condon’s jazz club in the ‘70s and ‘80s, teaming up with the veteran trombonist Vic Dickenson. Condon’s, on West 54th Street, was down the block from another club, Jimmy Ryan’s, where legendary trumpeter Roy Eldridge performed. During their breaks, Eldridge and the young Vache would listen to each other. That, says Vache, was, “the best teaching experience I ever had.” In a review of Vache’s recent appearance at the Green Mill Jazz Club in Chicago, the Chicago Tribune’s Howard Reich wrote of “the gracefulness of his lines and the profoundly melodic character of his solos.”

Since relocating to New York City from his native Australia in 2008, multi-reedist Adrian Cunningham has performed at some of the city’s leading jazz clubs including Birdland, the Blue Note, and Dizzy’s Club Coca-Cola. And, he has played with some of New York’s leading jazz musicians: trumpeter Wynton Marsalis, trombonist Wycliffe Gordon, and pianist Ted Rosenthal, to name a few. Hot House Magazine has called him “indispensable to New York’s jazz scene,” and All About Jazz described him as “a young artist who plays as if he has been playing for over a century.” Both Cunningham and Vache record on Arbors Records.

Vitro’s 2011 album, The Music of Randy Newman,on the Motema label, was nominated for a Grammy. Her most recent album, Tell Me the Truth (CD Baby: 2018), was described by JazzTimes’ Christopher Loudon as “a return to her southern roots, the blues, country, soul, gospel, jazz and rock that shaped her musical upbringing in Hot Springs, Arkansas.” She is “honored and blown away to receive the NJJS Distinguished Musician Award. I’ve lived in New Jersey for 34 of my 47 years as a performer and teacher, but I’ll always be grateful to Arnett Cobb, master tenor player in Houston, Texas, for introducing me to jazz.”

WBGO 88.3FM played its first jazz record in April 1979. Forty years later, it is stronger than ever, reaching more than 400,000 on the radio in the New York/New Jersey metro area and thousands more across the country and around the world on wbgo.org. The station began as the brainchild of Robert G. Ottenhoff, who, in the 1970s, worked in the Office of Newark Studies, an organization committed to reviving Newark in the wake of the 1967 riots. He and other members of an urban think tank persuaded the Newark Public School System board to transfer its underutilized broadcast license to them.

Ottenhoff was WBGO's first general manager. Amy Niles, appointed in 2014, is the station's fourth GM. She plans to be at the Hyatt Regency on April 7 to accept the Jazz Advocate award, In an email to NJJS president Cydney Halpin, Niles said, "I know how much it means to our entire staff to be recognized by your organization. I look forward to this great occasion." Last year's Jazz Advocate award-winner, jazz author and critic Will Friedwald, will be the Stomp's m.c. this year.

The Pee Wee Russell Memorial Stomp will be held from noon to 5 p.m. on Sunday, April 7, at the Hyatt Regency, which is located at 3 Speedwell Ave. in Morristown. NJ Jazz Society president Cydney Halpin, a resident of Mount Arlington, predicts “an afternoon filled with fabulous music, artistry, and nostalgia worthy of a golden anniversary.” Advance tickets are $40 for NJJS members, $45 for non-members; tickets at the door are $45 for members, $50 for non-members. There will be a cash bar and buffet and CDs for sale.

There are three ways to order tickets: online at www.njjs.org; by phone at 800 838-3006/Opt. 1; or by sending a check payable to NJJS including a $3 per order handling fee along with a stamped self-addressed envelope to NJJS, c/o Mike Katz, 383 Springfield Ave., Suite 217, Summit, NJ 07901. Mail orders must be sent no later than March 20.

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