Chris.Morris@newsandtribune.com
NEW ALBANY — Rauch Inc.’s annual Imagine Awards is much more than a fundraiser. It’s an eye-opening experience for many who attend the event.
The event helps put a face with Rauch. While most know about Rauch, few know about all of the things the organization does to help those with disabilities.
“We’ve been really successful with it ... it’s our main fundraiser,” said Rauch CEO Bettye Dunham. “It also helps us get out the word of who we are and what we do. The big thing is it allows us to recognize people in the community who are doing things to help people with disabilities.”
The 12th annual Imagine Awards begins at 5:30 p.m. Saturday at Horseshoe Southern Indiana in Elizabeth. Tickets are $75 and are still available by calling 812-945-4063. The event kicks off Disability Awareness Month by presenting three awards to an individual with a disability, a community leader who has advocated for people with disabilities and an organization assisting people with disabilities.
Also, as in year’s past, an entertainer with a disability will perform. This year, 19-year-old jazz pianist Matt Savage, who was diagnosed with a high-functioning type of autism at age 3, will entertain the crowd. He taught himself to read and play piano music and is currently studying at Berklee College of Music in Boston.
Savage was inspired by New Albany jazz legend and educator Jamey Aebersold who publishes play along books. Aebersold, and his quartet, will join Savage on stage during the event.
“It’s ironic because I called up Jamey to tell him about Matt and he knew him. Matt says he learned how to play Jazz through Jamey. The two of them will be brought together for the first time,” Dunham said. “It should be really special.”
Teressa Jackson, director of development for Rauch, said a talent agency helps find entertainers with disabilities each year for the event.
“They are a big help,” she said.
Another big part of the event is the silent auction. Jackson said there are more than 80 packages available to be bid on prior to and during the event. The items should be listed on Rauch’s website — www.rauchinc.org — this week.
“We try to focus on things that people can’t go out and buy,” Jackson said of the auction items.
The Imagine Awards benefit the Rauch Foundation while the golf scramble in August benefits Rauch Inc., Jackson said.
Besides the entertainment, auction and dinner, which includes filet mignon, crab cakes and a trio of desserts, awards will be given out in three categories. The honorees include:
• Individual: Gregory Thomas Court, who has Duchenne muscular dystrophy and has relied on the full-time use of a wheelchair since age 8. His movement is limited to his hands and he is on a ventilator full-time. He completed his associate of science degree in computer graphics from the Purdue School of Technology. Following graduation, he established his own company, Designs-by-GTC, through which he fulfills graphic and Web design contracts. He also works to support other individuals with disabilities.
• Community Leader: Geradine Schultze began her career as a speech language pathologist specializing in those that are deaf or hard of hearing. Working for the Department of Defense schools in Germany in the 1990s, she focused on preschool special education programs. Later, she pursued certification in early childhood special education and became involved in horseback riding therapy. She advocates for early diagnosis, intervention and education of children with special needs. Now the early intervention coordinator for New Albany-Floyd County Schools and building supervisor for the Children’s Academy Early Learning Center, she and the early intervention team have built a program providing a wide spectrum of services to all Floyd County preschool children and their families. The Early Learning Center provides evaluations and programs including speech, occupational and physical therapies and services for children with developmental delays, vision, hearing, orthopedic and multiple disabilities.
• Organization: Tunnel Hill Christian Church has held bi-monthly dances for adults with disabilities since 2005. Some of the dances draw 150 or more individuals. Church member families and a Boy Scout troop support the volunteer outreach. The impact of the events has rippled throughout the church community, resulting in involvement of members in Special Olympics, Sunrise Horse therapy, DADS [Dads Appreciating Down Syndrome] and gestures such as knitting hats and scarves as gifts for participants. Also important has been the connection among people with disabilities and between their parents, providing a vital opportunity for them to build a support network and friendships.
“I certainly feel like this event brings people of the community together who may not cross paths on a day to day basis,” Dunham said. “We always hear people say they had no idea what all we did, or some may know our name but have no idea what we do. It really does help us reach out to that group.”
While some corporate sponsorships are down this year, individual ticket sales are up, Jackson said.
Tuesday, February 28, 2012
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Jenny Scheinman: Some Serious Mischief
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Labels: Jenny Scheinman
Music Review: Various Artists - A Year of BFM Jazz 2011
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Students get lessons from jazz Greats
By Bill Robinson
RICHMOND — “Music is another way of telling a story,” a jazz great told a group of about 350 high school and college musicians Saturday at the EKU Center for the Arts.
It was not the band leader who spoke, but the point seemed well taken by students who were expecting Wynton Marsalis to offer some instruction on the final day of Eastern Kentucky University’s 23rd High School Honors Band Clinic.
Walter Blanding, a saxophonist, and trumpeter Kenny Rampton, members of Jazz at Lincoln Center, spent about an hour giving pointers to a few individuals brave enough to get on stage in front of their peers as two world-class musicians evaluated their work.
Stephen Waun, who plays saxophone in Lexington’s Bryan Station High School band, said he was a bit disappointed Marsalis was not present, but getting to interact with a saxophonist such as Blanding was exciting.
Barren County High trombonist Lucas McCoy and Williamstown High trumpeter Ciarra Krist also got on stage with the Lincoln Center musicians.
Each student played a few lines of music, which they repeated after getting brief input from Blanding and Rampton.
All three noticeably improved when they then repeated what they had played.
“Playing music is not just playing the notes, just as reading a book is more than just reading the words,” said Blanding, who like Rampton took care to be gentle with the teenagers.
Blanding recited a story line in steady monotone fashion and then switched to a more emotive narration. Then, he sounded a musical line twice, using a similar contrast.
“Put emotion into it, and be more lyrical,” Blanding said. “Play the composition as if you wrote it. That is how you should read a story, and that is how you should play music.”
In the narration of music, just as in a verbal narration, “Every note dynamically leads to the next note,” Rampton told McCoy. “Put a little crescendo into your 16th notes.”
He also encouraged the students to express their personalities by exaggerating the dynamics.
Both professions emphasized the importance of breathing.
“Take your time, and take a breath as you prepare” to play a phrase of music, Blanding said. “When you prepare to jump, you think about where you’re going to land.”
“Practice slower and sing the music’s first phrase into your head before you begin,” Rampton said, “because each note has meaning.”
Players also should not let up on their breathing when playing softly or when the music goes into the lower register.
Blanding crossed his arms and wrinkled his brow as he studied the music Krist was playing.
Tyler Wilkins, a 2011 EKU graduate now studying at the Cincinnati Conservatory of Music, drew praise from both Blanding and Rampton.
“Being a rocket scientist is easier than playing the oboe,” Blanding said, as he spoke of the difficulty of playing the instrument well.
Ten EKU trumpet players also came on stage and played a piece they were working only.
Playing as part of an ensemble does not lend itself to as much individual expression because the players must follow their section leaders, Rampton, a fellow trumpeter said. But, both he and Blanding advised the section leaders to put more of their individuality into exaggerating the dynamics and encouraged the other to follow their lead.
Although jazz music is famed for its improvisation, “Improvisation is not a a free for all,” Blanding said.
Read more on: http://richmondregister.com/localnews/x843245031/Students-get-lessons-from-jazz-greats
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African roots
Written by
Carroll DeWeese
Correspondent
February is Black History Month. To inform and inspire its students, Birmingham Berkshire Middle School held an African Music Assembly. Many students do not realize it, but gospel, jazz, soul, rock ‘n' roll and many other forms of “modern” music are deeply rooted in Africa.
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Sunday, February 26, 2012
Pianist Scott Martin Remembers Clare Fischer
Clare took the building blocks and traditions of jazz, salsa, bossa nova and classical music and combined them in ways that were absolutely original and personal. In short, he developed his own harmonic language, which puts him in the company of the very greatest innovators of the jazz world.
I’ve always admired the incredible range all of these various projects demonstrated. More recently, I even watched a scratchy YouTube link of him performing his own deeply moving arrangement of “America the Beautiful” on the huge pipe organ at the National Cathedral. Not many “jazz pianists” could stretch that far.
It was clear Clare had reached that great place in his life that musicians get to where they’re content with what they’ve accomplished and spread good nature everywhere they go, without judgment or discrimination. He totally opened his door to me, basically a perfect stranger, and reinforced for me the idea that the very best musicians are often the most humble and unassuming.
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Labels: Clare Fischer, Scott Martin
Adam Kromelow Trio: Youngblood
Adam Kromelow is a sensational young jazz pianist who will be coming to
Buffalo with fellow pianist Angelo DiLoreto at 7:30 p.m. March 7 to do
two-piano improvisations on the music of Genesis at Denton, Cottier &
Daniels in Amherst.
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John Brown: Music for Shakespeare
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Labels: John Brown
Saturday, February 25, 2012
Take 5 with Tim: Ron McCurdy
http://www.jconline.com/article/20120224/ENT15/202240307?nclick_check=1
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Labels: Ron McCurdy
Out in Berkeley: Jazz quintet, Irish music and more
But let’s start with the most exotic combo, Canada Day, a capaciously inventive jazz quintet led by Toronto-born drummer Harris Eisenstadt that makes its Bay Area debut Wednesday at the Subterranean Art House.
The Brooklyn-based bandleader and composer is associated with jazz’s exploratory left field. Over the past decade he’s collaborated with some of music’s most insistently creative artists, including Bobby Bradford, Butch Morris, Yusef Lateef, Wadada Leo Smith, and the recently departed Sam Rivers. He’s also soaked up far-flung rhythmic traditions through work with ensembles exploring the music of Bali, Gambia, Ghana, Morocco, Iran and Senegal. But it’s as the leader of Canada Day that Eisenstadt has truly found his voice as a composer.
Martin Hayes and Dennis Cahill: distilling the essence of traditional tunes
Other recommended gigs
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Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra comes to the Ferguson Center
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African and African-American arts festival concert plays at the HUB
By Mike Hricik, Collegian Staff Writer
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