Category Archives: Madison Music Collective

Carmen Lundy Vocal and Instrumental Workshops

I heard Carmen Lundy in Madison a few years ago during the Mary Lou Williams Centennial. She impressed me as a fantastic vocalist with many expressive vocal techniques at her command. She is also known to be an accomplished multi-instrumentalist, composer and arranger. Here is an announcement from Madison Music Collective with details about two workshops she’ll conduct when she returns to Madison in June to headline the Isthmus Jazz Festival. 

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Madison Music Collective is teaming with Wisconsin Union Theater to co-produce the headline concert at the Isthmus Jazz Festival, and this year’s headliner is world-class vocalist Carmen Lundy.  In addition to her free evening concert at Old Music Hall on 6/22/13, Carmen will be conducting two outstanding workshops for vocal and instrumental musicians in our community (both amateur and professional).

To register for one or both workshops, complete the form (which appears at the end of each program announcement) and send it, with your fee (check payable to “Madison Music Collective”), to Laurie Lang, 3014 Dianne Drive, Middleton, WI 53562 or pay by PayPal by donating $25 at  http://madisonmusiccollective.org/support.shtml and attaching your registration form to an email directed to laurielang@tds.netScholarships are available.  For info about them, contact Ms. Lang at 833-2200 or laurielang@tds.net.

MMC seeking Treasurer

Hey MMC Friends and Former members!

WE REALLY NEED A TREASURER ON THE MADISON MUSIC COLLECTIVE BOARD OF DIRECTORS AS OUR LONG-TIME TREASURER NEEDS TO STEP DOWN ASAP !!!

There are SOOOO many COOL things we are doing now and our finances are in good shape, but we need some help to keep our financial house in good order.

Who has experience in this area and/or who might be willing to learn?

PLEASE consider serving the jazz community in this way… it really could be done in your free time. We are willing to work with someone who desires to help the cause in a very practical way.

Free concert admission and other great benefits!

Thanks,

Laurie Lang, (serving you as Vice President this year, 2013)

Synchopathic Expression: Spoken Word Poet Rob Dz Evolves into a Jazz Artist

The following article about spoken word poet Rob Dz is written by Jonathan Gramling, Editor and Publisher of the Capital City Hues newspaper.  It will appear in this week’s issue as a preview to Rob’s “Jazz on a Sunday” performance on 12/2 at The Brink Lounge with the New Breed.  The Hues is one of the media supporters of the new Greater Madison Jazz Consortium.

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One of the most memorable performances that ever occurred at Madison’s Juneteenth festival happened about eight years ago. On the stage were local hip hop spoken word artist Rob Dz and Hanah Jon Taylor, an internationally renowned saxophonist and flutist. As Taylor improvised on his saxophone, Dz kept saying and singing the word freedom. While the word was simple, Dz and Taylor performed a call and response that seemed to spiritually take us all back to that time in 1863 when the last slaves learned they were free and back to the present again with that same zest for freedom. It was simply powerful.

Since 1998, when he arrived in Madison, Dz has been honing and evolving his art as he has taken a bartending gig here and a job working with kids there to support himself. While he was initially known as a hip hop artist and formed his own group The Rob Dz Experience, as he matured chronologically, his performance art matured as well.

“It almost seemed like a subliminal necessity,” Dz said about his evolution into a jazz artist. “This strain of what has become of the Madison hip hop scene with all of the negativity going on and things of that nature led me into jazz along with my maturing process.  I kind of grew up as an artist. It was a good thing that allowed me to open up into a broader spectrum of an audience. There are people who probably wouldn’t listen to hip hop, but are fascinated by a spoken word vocalist doing jazz. It’s crazy because it is still music. It’s all music, but it’s just presented in a different way. It just kind of happened. And it expanded the portfolio to what it is now.”

Madison’s spoken word master poet and jazz artist Rob Dz performs at The Brink this Sunday

Madison’s spoken word master poet and jazz artist Rob Dz performs at The Brink this Sunday

While hip hop is a freestyle art form, Dz felt that the expectations around it were too confining.  “I got to the point where I didn’t want to dumb it down,” Dz explained. “Sometimes for commercial success, you may have to dumb it down, just so you won’t speak over the crowd. I’m not saying that as a knock or a slight to hip hop listeners. It was just that I didn’t want to compromise what it was that I was speaking about. And I think in the jazz realm, I could say exactly what was on my mind. And I think the respect and the internalization level for that audience, they could respect and also be able to appreciate it in its entirety.”

Due to how the recording industry has evolved, Dz has been taking his creative impulse in a number of directions. He currently performs with the 13-piece jazz band Chicago Yestet. He is a collaborator on the hip hop-oriented magazine MAD and has performed in several locally-produced movies.

And on December 2, Dz will be performing with the jazz band The New Breed at The Brink Lounge. For the past 7-8 years, Dz would sit in with The New Breed and jam with them.

“I would go into their sessions when they played at The Concourse, places like that,” Dz said. “They would welcome me because I would play with musicians and their band and whatever band I was playing with. I played with the Experience or Universal Soul and stuff like that. They would allow me to come in. And then it kind of became that they really had a respect for what I did and would let me come up even more. This is nothing that is brand new. It’s been in development for a while. And like I said, I’ve kind of matured as a musician, I would like to think. I’ve already had a jazzy kind of feel with hip hop and I figure that it is just more of a kind of a natural progression to go into it.”

While many people may feel that hip hop and jazz are two entirely different alien art forms, Dz feels there are many similarities including the free flow of musical and creative ideas. In their own ways, they both are improvisation. And on some levels, Dz feels that his voice is just another piece of the jazz orchestra.

Madison’s spoken word master poet and jazz artist Rob Dz performs at The Brink this Sunday

Madison’s spoken word master poet and jazz artist Rob Dz performs at The Brink this Sunday

“Jazz allows more room for composition and I’m just an instrument within a composition,” Dz said. “And that is just what it is. It’s just like a soloist taking a solo. If the keyboardist or sax player takes their solo, I have a solo as a vocalist. That’s just it. Some of the material is all improv. There are certain pieces that have been written where I have a specific measure count. And there is stuff that we might just totally do on the spot and throw it against the wall and see what happens. It’s how the spirit moves us.”

And if Dz is feeling the freedom, the spirit should flow just fine.

Rob Dz and the New Breed: Hip Hop Meets Jazz This Sunday at The Brink

Rob Dz jamming with the New Breed at the 2012 Isthmus Jazz Festival

Experience a unique creative surge this coming Sunday at The Brink Lounge when Madison’s pre-eminent spoken word poet and hip-hop artist, Rob Dz, joins forces with the New Breed jazz quartet’s Paul Hastil, Louka Patenaude, Nick Moran and Michael Brenneis.  Co-produced by Madison Music Collective, Mad Toast Live, and the Improvisational Music Workshop, their concert starts at 3:30 PM and will be followed by an interactive workshop with the audience and performers at 6:00 PM.  Discounted advance sale tickets are available online at http://thebrinklounge.com/December_K3BW.html, with full price tickets available at the door.

Madison’s pre-eminent spoken word poet Rob Dz

Exploring common ground in their respective artistic genres, Rob Dz has been jamming lately with the New Breed on occasional Tuesday nights at The Cardinal and at the Isthmus Jazz Festival, while New Breed pianist Paul Hastil and bassist Nick Moran recently teamed with UW First Wave Hip Hop Ensemble performers at the 2012 Wisconsin Book Festival’s “Passing the Mic” showcase at the Overture Center.Rob combines elements of jazz, R&B, funk and gospel to make a sound unlike any other in music.  He has performed with major national touring and recording artists like Common, The Black Eyed Peas, Nas, Talib Kweli, The Dave Matthews Band, Zion I, Naughty By Nature, and Bone Thugs N Harmony, and many others.  His 2005 release, “Soul Anthems” was named one of the top 25 Madison albums of all time by Isthmus.

A past winner of Madison Area Music Awards as Best Hip Hop Artist, People’s Choice Award and Best Hip Hop Song and Album, Rob Dz has become a leader in the soulful Midwest hip-hop movement.   Like a jazz artist, Rob composes spontaneously using words instead of music, and his latest collaboration with the New Breed will create original material that draws on contemporary characteristics of each genre while allowing generous space for improvisation.

For a taste of what these artists have in store, check out Rob with Madison expatriate Joel Adams’ band at Chicago’s legendary Green Mill. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bhk3DAaXvXo&feature=youtu.be

Guitarist Luke Polipnick’s New Jazz Quartet at The Brink This Sunday

Celebrated Chicago guitarist Fareed Haque says “Luke Polipnick is one the finest new generation jazz musicians on the scene today. Hip and carrying the torch of tradition, Polipnick blends Americana, jazz and contemporary improvisation into a seamless whole.”

Before moving to Omaha NE last summer, guitarist-composer-producer Luke Polipnick had established himself as a leader in Madison’s “free jazz” scene.  Luke returns to Madison this Sunday, November 4th, for the second of Madison Music Collective’s Fall Series of “Jazz on a Sunday” programs at The Brink Lounge.  He’ll be performing with a special group of top players from New York City (drummer Mike Pride) and the Twin Cities (saxophonist Brandon Wozniak and bassist Adam Linz) to kick off a Fall Midwestern tour.  This is the same band that will be heading into the studio soon to record Luke’s first jazz CD.

Guitarist Luke Polipnick and his new jazz quartet play The Brink this Sunday

Luke and his band-mates exemplify the eclectic approach that many of our younger creative musicians are taking today, moving with great skill and confidence as they cross and integrate musical genres, while infusing their music with the improvisational spirit and masterful technique so central to good jazz.  For “Jazz on a Sunday,” Luke’s group will premiere new music that he composed for the group’s Fall tour.  He describes it as featuring “thematic material from folksy to rocking but rooted in jazz, appealing to fans of “post rock,” folk, reggae, free improvisation and mainstream jazz.”

As with all of the Collective’s “Jazz on a Sunday” programs, this concert will be followed by a free interactive workshop with Luke and his band-mates, led by Improvisational Music Workshop Director Laurie Lang. The workshop will include a brief interview, a Q&A session, and a segment in which musicians in the audience (amateur and professional) come to the stage to make music with Luke and his band.Sunday’s two-set concert begins at 3:30 PM, with the workshop following at 6:00 PM.  Discounted tickets are now on sale at www.thebrinklounge.com/November.html.  Buy your tickets before the day-of-show and they’re only $8.00 for Collective members (vs. $10 at the door) and $12.00 (vs. $15 at the door) for non-members.  Students and Madison Jazz Society members also qualify for the Collective member price.

Not a Collective member yet? Why not consider signing up now to get discounts for a whole year’s worth of MMC programs. You can sign up online at www.madisonmusiccollective.org.

Last day to buy tickets for Tia Fuller’s “Women in Jazz” brunch

From MMC President, Sue Peterson

With the Monday (10/8) midnight ticket purchase deadline looming, we have 45 confirmed attendees for this coming Saturday’s “Women in Jazz” brunch with the dynamic young saxophonist, Tia Fuller. That’s a decent number, but we’re hoping for more so we can show this world-class artist that Madison knows how to turn out for such a special program.

Word-of-mouth about community/audience response travels well around the music world. So, besides an enjoyable time for yourself, your attendance at Saturday’s brunch program will help create more buzz about Madison as a place where top jazz artists should want to perform.

Tickets are $25 for adults, and $15 for kids 14 & under, with the ticket price including your brunch meal. Tickets can be purchased on the Music Collective’s website at http://madisonmusiccollective.org/Events/TiaFuller.shtml. If you’re considering attending, please act now.