Jazz Power Initiative kicks off 24/25 season

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Last week we kicked off 24/25 season with a party at Alianza Dominicana Center, joined by our closest supporters and friends! The evening was filled with dancing, fun, and incredible music from Eli Yamin and the Jazz Power All-Stars introducing our theme for the season, IMPROVISATION AND WOMEN IN JAZZ, and our 2025 Community Artist-In-Residence, CHARENEE WADE.

 

New York City, September 24, 2024 – Jazz Power Initiative (JPI), an Inwood-based non-profit organization, and leading music education and concert producer in uptown NYC kicks off its 21st season with free community concerts and music education. The season opens with the award-winning female-led Latin jazz band Cocomama presenting From Ipanema Beach to El Malecon Latin Jazz Meets Tap” led by percussionist Mayra Casales, pianist Nicki Denner, bassist Jennifer Vincent as part of the acclaimed Intergenerational Jazz Power Jam, to be held Wednesday, October 16th at Alianza Dominicana Cultural Center in Washington Heights and Saturday, October 19 at The National Jazz Museum in Harlem. And raising the next generation of jazz artists and audiences, Jazz Power Youth in-school and after-school workshops begin in October introducing nearly 1000 youth to jazz and Latin Jazz and providing high quality immersive, multi-disciplinary music education to over 250 youth ages 6-19.  

 

Since 2017, the Intergenerational Jazz Power Jam at National Jazz Museum in Harlem and Alianza Dominicana Cultural Center has been bringing together singers, musicians, dancers, spoken word artists and audiences of all ages to experience the power of jazz, community, and swing. Intergenerational Jazz Power Jam features a veteran artist performance followed by an invitation to special guests from younger generations to join the jam. Intergenerational Jazz Power Jam takes place on the third Wednesday of each month from 7-9 p.m. at Alianza Dominicana Cultural Center at 530 West 166th Street, and the third Saturday of each month from 2-4 PM at the National Jazz Museum in Harlem located at 58 West 129th Street in Manhattan.  

 

Jazz Power Initiative’s music education program centers African American vocal traditions supported by healthy functional voice training and piano keyboard musicianship combined with theatre and movement for an immersive and transformational learning experience. JPI’s holistic, cross-cultural, and multidisciplinary approach to jazz music and arts education activates an inclusive atmosphere that fosters teamwork, self-discipline and creative expression. African American and Latino cultural foundations of jazz arts guide their process, including the models of excellence they provide the children, the background of their faculty, the repertoire they select, the communities they serve, and the “Jazz Power Tools” they teach such as improvisation, making a soulful sound, call and response, syncopation, and swing. Students are given ongoing opportunities to perform with professional artists and present their talents in a wide variety of venues including presentations of Jazz Power musicals for youth performers. 

 

Eli Yamin, JPI’s Co-founder, Managing and Artistic Director notes: “Women have had a huge impact on jazz and Latin jazz. Founding sheroes like Billie Holiday, Ella Fitzgerald, Mary Williams, and Celia Cruz form the backbone of our youth music programs and we have been fortunate to present and collaborate with many of today’s female stars including Lakecia Benjamin, Catherine Russell, Camille Thurman, LaFrae Sci, Annette A. Aguilar and this October, the wonderfully dynamic and diverse, Cocomama. Through their ongoing contact and mentorship from professional artists, our students become lifelong lovers of jazz and several have pursued careers in the arts. We are excited to both provide opportunities for youth to learn from veteran jazz artists and perform with them, and professional artists to perform on stages uptown that bring their rich artistry into close contact with our beloved community.”  

  

Please join us and come celebrate our 21st (2024-25) season, highlighting emerging and veteran jazz artists. The schedule for our Intergenerational Jazz Power Jam upcoming concerts is: 

 

Season Opening Concert, Intergenerational Jazz Power Jam with Cocomama 

OCTOBER 16th 6:30-8:30 p.m. at Alianza Dominicana Cultural Center 

OCTOBER 19st 2-4 p.m. at the National Jazz Museum in Harlem 

 

2024-2025 Intergenerational Jazz Power Jam Season Dates are: 

November 16, 2024 at National Jazz Museum in Harlem 

November 20, 2024 at Alianza Dominicana Cultural Center 

December 18, 2024 at Alianza Dominicana Cultural Center 

December 21, 2024 at National Jazz Museum in Harlem 

February 15, 2025 at National Jazz Museum in Harlem 

February 19, 2025 at Alianza Dominicana Cultural Center 

March 15, 2025 at National Jazz Museum in Harlem 

March 19, 2025 at Alianza Dominicana Cultural Center 

April 16, 2025 at Alianza Dominicana Cultural Center 

April 19, 2025 at National Jazz Museum in Harlem 

 

Admissions:  

National Jazz Museum in Harlem, 58 W 129th St, New York, NY 10027 – Suggested Donation: General $10, Students/Seniors $5 

Alianza Dominicana Cultural Center, 530 W 166th St, New York, NY 10032 – No charge for admission 

 

Intergenerational Jazz Power Jam is produced by Jazz Power Initiative, a non-profit, 501 (c) (3) organization founded in 2003, is made possible in part by the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs in partnership with the City Council; the New York State Council on the Arts with the support of the Office of the Governor and the New York State Legislature; the Howard Gilman Foundation; the Hispanic Federation; the National Jazz Museum in Harlem; Alianza Dominicana Cultural Center with Catholic Charities Archdiocese of New York and the New York City Department of Youth & Community Development; the Upper Manhattan Empowerment Zone, and our individual donors. Thank you for your support! 

 

About the artists: 

 

A virtual United Nations of women, members of Cocomama hail from around the globe gathering their musical influences from far and wide; Salsa, Soul, Afro-Cuban and Latin jazz are among the items on the menu whenever they hit the stage! Led by Mayra Casales, Nicki Denner and Jennifer Vincent, the band has performed at the United Nations, the Brooklyn Academy of Music, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, Central Park, the New York City Marathon, Joe’s Pub, Birdland, Studio 54, the Cape May Jazz Festival, the Montclair Jazz Festival, the Northampton Jazz Festival, the New Jersey Performing Arts Center, the Spoleto Music Festival, the Michigan’s Women’s Festival and as musical ambassadors to Latin American for the US Department of State. Their critically acclaimed albums, Quiero (2016) and Women’s World (2023) cover a wide range of styles from salsa to soul and thanks to a grant from Chamber Music of America, they are currently recording their third album, Evolución, for release in 2025. For these performances, bandleaders Mayra Casales, Nicki Denner, and Jennifer Vincent will be joined by pianist/vocalist/dancer Ariacne Trujillo, percussionist Rafael Monteagudo, saxophonist/flutist Anton Denner w/ tappers Max Pollak and Leonardo Sandoval. 

 

 

The mission of Jazz Power Initiative (JPI, d/b/a of The Jazz Drama Program) is to transform lives through jazz music performance and education. Founded in 2003 by jazz musician Eli Yamin and teacher/writer Clifford Carlson, JPI’s music performance and education programs place jazz, with its African American roots, at the center of American culture and history.  Jazz Power community concerts engage, inspire and empower diverse communities through intergenerational performances of jazz music, dance and theatre. We bring together veteran artists with young professionals and youth to support the continuum of jazz music and its oral traditions. Through performance and education, Jazz Power Initiative engages thousands of New Yorkers and visitors annually in Upper Manhattan serving general audiences, ages 6-80+, elevating historically marginalized voices, and building more creative and inclusive communities through jazz. 

 

 

Alianza Dominicana Cultural Center is a multi-disciplinary arts center in Washington Heights that showcases contemporary and classical Dominican and Latin American art, dance and music. Intergenerational learning, transnational and cross-cultural activities are the philosophical guidepost of the Center. Lessons and workshops in computer, arts making, popular and traditional dances and Afro-Latin percussion, as well as literary conferences, music and theatrical performances are provided free of charge. In addition, the Cultural Center is home to a state-of-the-art computer lab funded by Charter Communications. 

 

 

The National Jazz Museum in Harlem is a museum dedicated to preservation and celebration of the jazz history of Harlem, Manhattan, New York City. Their vision is to make jazz accessible to everyone on the planet. They are a living, evolving museum for the people, center for jazz and a place in Harlem where visitors gather to enjoy history and music, and where artists come to play, rehearse, create or drop-in, even when no one else is there, just to be in the space that so many others have passed through.  

 

Press Contact 

Sam Mattingly 

SMC Solutions 

(917) 331-9375 

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