Description:Jonathan Russell is an exciting fifteen-year-old jazz violinist who bridges generational and cultural gaps with improvised jazz. His performances in Europe and throughout the United States at clubs and jazz festivals such as the New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival and the Bohém Ragtime & Jazz Festival in Hungary have earned the respect and praise of seasoned jazz musicians such as Wynton Marsalis, Bucky Pizzarelli and the late Les Paul.
Bio:Bronx resident, Jonathan Russell has become an integral link to the future of jazz, connecting younger generations of listeners with great musicians and band leaders such as Wynton Marsalis, the late Les Paul, Bucky Pizzarelli and Ed Polcer. His youth presentations have helped connect students with jazz by identifying aspects of jazz in every day modern life. His performances seamlessly integrate modern and popular melodies into the fabric of jazz standards while respecting and acknowledging the golden age of jazz in America and the performers who have come before.
Photo: Jonathan and his fiddle, © 2002 by Chris Ramirez
In 2005, at the age of nine, Jonathan was awarded an Alternative Styles Award by the American String Teachers Association. In 2006, Jonathan had the honor of being the youngest jazz musician ever invited to play in a master class at Jazz at Lincoln Center taught by today's foremost name in jazz violin, Regina Carter.
In addition to numerous other awards and distinctions, Jonathan is most proud to have received the U.S. Ambassador's Award in Hungary for his performances promoting mutual understanding and strengthening the friendship between the two countries. In November of 2008 Jonathan appeared as one of the youngest ever feature performers with Wynton Marsalis and the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra at Rose Hall in New York. Those performances at Rose Hall were also featured in a live broadcast on XM Satellite Radio and re-broadcast on NPR stations around the world.
Jonathan has been a feature performer at major jazz festivals including the New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival, the Sacramento Jazz Jubilee, the Suncoast Dixieland Jazz Festival, the New Jersey and North Carolina jazz festivals. In 2008 he made his European debut at the Boh�m Ragtime & Jazz Festival with performances in eight cities throughout Hungary. He has been featured at The Blue Note in New York City and has performed at other venues such as Iridium and Birdland. In the past he has performed with Wynton Marsalis, Bucky Pizzarelli, the late Les Paul, John Lamb, John Bunch, Svend Asmussen and more than 40 jazz bands from the United States and Europe.
A ninth grade student at Professional Children's School in Manhattan, Jonathan studies violin at the School for Strings with Allen Lieb while his jazz studies have been with Grammy Award winner Andy Stein of Prairie Home Companion's Shoe Band and jazz arranger Ron Drotos. Jonathan also pursues supplemental studies during the summer at Grammy Award winner Mark O'Connor's Fiddle Camp and master classes with the legendary jazz be-bop pianist and educator Barry Harris. In addition to violin studies, Jonathan is studying film scoring with two members of the faculty of NYU- Ron Sadoff and Ira Newborn.
Photo: Jonathan with Wynton Marsalis backstage
His first CD entitled "The Sheik of Araby" features eleven standards from the jazz age. Jonathan's next CD, "Puttin' On The Ritz", features many of the performers he has been working with including Bucky Pizzarelli, Joel Forbes, Joe Ascione, Nicki Parrott, Mark Shane and Ed Polcer. His latest CD entitled simply "Duets" is a collection of modern interpretations that according to jazz promoter Jack Kleinsinger, "demonstrates that the time has come to stop appraising Jonathan as a 'gifted prodigy' and start acknowledging him as the 'veteran' jazz master he has become."
For an updated calendar, check his web site at http://www.jonathanjazz.com/ or contact him via e-mail.
Wednesday, December 8, 2010
Jonathan Russell is an exciting fifteen-year-old jazz violinist....
Posted by jazzofilo at Wednesday, December 08, 2010
Labels: Jonathan Russell
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