CURTIS LUNDY PRESENTS ERIC LEWIS

Curtis Lundy an American double bass player, composer, producer, choir director and arranger. Lundy is best known for his work as part of jazz vocalist Betty Carter band.  Over the years, he has brought some of the most legendary jazz legacies to The Velvet Note, including Bobby Watson and, most recently, Cyrus Chestnut.  This month, he travels in with pianist Eric Lewis and Terreon Gully.

Popularly known as ELEW, jazz pianist Eric Lewis has found cross-over success playing rock and pop music. He is known for his unconventional and physical playing style, which eschews a piano bench and includes reaching inside the piano lid to pull at the strings directly, as well as the creation that he calls “Rockjazz”, a genre that takes the improvisational aspect of jazz and threads it through the eye of the needle of rock.

His distinctive style has helped him to amass a large following of celebrity fans, including Barack and Michelle Obama (for whom he has played at the White House), Leonardo DiCaprio, Donna Karan, Téa Leoni, David Duchovny, Hugh Jackman, Forest Whitaker, and Gerard Butler. Throughout his career, he has performed with musicians such as Sting, The Roots, Natalie Cole, and Esperanza Spalding. In the spring of 2011, he joined singer-songwriter Josh Groban as the opening act on the American leg of the singer’s Straight to You Tour.

Hailing from East St. Louis, Illinois, Terreon Gully has performed with various musicians and genres, including the Christian McBride Band, saxophonist Ron Blake, vibraphonist Stefon Harris, vocalist Dianne Reeves and Latin band Yerba Buena among numerous others. He was the Professor of Drumset at University of Manitoba in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada from 2008 until 2010

Showtimes: Friday & Saturday ~ 7:30pm | 9:30pm

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BERNARD LINNETTE INTERACTIVE

Featuring: Julie Dexter ~ Vocals, Terence Harper ~ Trumpet, Louis Heriveaux ~ Piano, Frank Houston ~ TEnor Saxophone, Dishan Harper ~ Bass, and Bernard Linnette ~ Drums

Showtimes:

January 14 ~ 7:30pm | 9:30pm

January 15 ~ 7:00pm | 9:00pm

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SCOTTY BARNHART

Unity Jazz Concert Series

Special Guest ~ Stillwell High School Jazz Ensemble

Hosted By ~ WCLK 91.9FM’s Riva Blue

Tickets: $35.00 in advance | $40.00 at door (NO CASH)

Tickets Available at Unity-Jazz.Eventbrite.com, UnityJazz.org or call 770-899-1991

Doors at 3:00pm

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Three Wishes

When the Baroness approached Percy Brice to ask him what his three wishes would be if they could be granted, he told her the following:

  1. “Eternal life.”
  2. “Not to have any money at all. I’ll make out, y’know, as long as I’m living and playing.”
  3. “And that’s my third wish… to keep playing.”
*Excerpt from Three Wishes: An Intimate Look at Jazz Greats ~ Compiled and Photographed by Pannonica de Koenigswarter

SUITE TABU 200

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Daily Dose Of Jazz…

Waymon Reed was born on January 10, 1940 in Fayetteville, North Carolina and attended the Eastman School of Music. He went on to play with trumpeter/saxophonist Ira Sullivan. Joining James Brown’s band from 1965 to 1969, he played on It’s a Man’s Man’s Man’s World.

Reed worked with the big bands of Frank Foster and Thad Jones-Mel Lewis. He became a member of the Count Basie Orchestra in 1969, staying until 1973. He returned to play with Basie again in 1977–78.

He married Sarah Vaughan and worked with her from 1978–80, but shortly afterwards they divorced. He played on B.B. King’s album There Must Be A Better World Somewhere in 1981. In 1977, Reed recorded his one album as leader, 46th and 8th, featuring tenor saxophonist Jimmy Forrest, pianist Tommy Flanagan, bassist Keter Betts and drummer Bobby Durham.

Trumpeter Waymon Reed, who was principally a bebop soloist, transitioned from cancer on November 25, 1983 in Nashville, Tennessee.

DOUBLE IMPACT FITNESS

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