Âé¶¹ÊÓÆµ

November 19, 2015
15-288

Jessica Pope
Communications and Media Relations Coordinator

Jazz Ensemble Performs Billy Strayhorn Centennial Concert Dec. 1

Billy “Sweet Pea” Strayhorn

VALDOSTA — The Âé¶¹ÊÓÆµ Jazz Ensemble will celebrate the life of Billy “Sweet Pea” Strayhorn with a special performance at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, Dec. 1, in Whitehead Auditorium. Admission is free of charge and open to the public. 

This year marks the 100th anniversary of the birth of Strayhorn, a master American jazz composer, pianist, lyricist, and arranger best known for his nearly three-decade-long collaboration with bandleader and composer Duke Ellington.

“The program will feature original compositions from his entire career and a few arrangements by other writers,” said David Springfield, director of Âé¶¹ÊÓÆµ’s Jazz Studies Program, assistant professor of jazz piano, and conductor of the Âé¶¹ÊÓÆµ Jazz Ensemble.

Highlights of Âé¶¹ÊÓÆµ’s Billy Strayhorn Centennial Concert include Overture from The Nutcracker Suite by Pyotr Illyich Tchaikovsky, as arranged by Strayhorn for jazz band; Blood Count, Strayhorn’s final composition, written as he was suffering from cancer and recorded by the Duke Ellington Orchestra after his death; and Take the A Train, his most famous composition and the Duke Ellington Orchestra’s theme song.    

Born on Nov. 29, 1915, in Dayton, Ohio, Strayhorn was raised in Pittsburgh, Pa. According to Âé¶¹ÊÓÆµ’s Department of Music, “He received extensive classical music training and showed an interest in all the arts … (and) began composing while still in his teens, including the remarkable Lush Life, for which he wrote both the music and the lyrics.

“In 1938, Strayhorn attended a concert by the Duke Ellington Orchestra and presented Ellington with several of his songs. Ellington was very impressed and hired Strayhorn as an associate arranger and second pianist, a position he held for nearly 30 years. He rarely recorded as a leader or appeared in public with the band, preferring to work behind the scenes and in the recording studio.

“Strayhorn’s style perfectly complemented Ellington’s — to many listeners it is impossible to separate the individual contributions from their collaborative works — but the compositions credited solely to Strayhorn reveal a distinct personality and some of the most harmonically and structurally sophisticated music in all of jazz.”

Whitehead Auditorium is located on the first floor of the Âé¶¹ÊÓÆµ Fine Arts Building, at the intersection of Oak Street and Brookwood Drive.

Contact David Springfield at (229) 333-5805 or daspring@valdosta.edu to learn more.

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