Call me naïve, but it's always a
disappointment for me whenever I find out that artists can be just as
prejudiced as the rest of us.
Take jazz. I love it, but the world
of jazz is a male chauvinist pigsty. If you're a woman, it's almost impossible
to find a decent job or decent bookings.
A typical case is the Lincoln
Center Jazz Orchestra, led by trumpeter Wynton Marsalis. In has never had a
fulltime woman member since its founding in 1988.
It has never held auditions, either.
Marsalis asks the section leaders who they like and makes the choice himself.
It's an old boy network.
And the same is true for the
country's other big bands, including the Glenn Miller and Duke Ellington
"ghost" bands. No women wanted.
Unless you're a vocalist, of course.
"Chick singers" have always been able to find work, as long as
they're pretty. The stories are legion about how hard it was for Ella Fitzgerald
to get a job starting out because she was thought to be missing in the looks
department.
But there are encouraging signs locally,
thanks to five amazing musicians: pianist Susan Muscarella, founder and
executive director of the Jazzschool in Berkeley, trumpeter Ellen Seeling and
saxophonist Jean Fineberg, director and assistant director of the Montclair
Women's Big Band; trombonist Sarah Cline, director of the award-winning
Berkeley High Jazz Program; and bassist Ariane Cap, founder of Step Up Music in
Vallejo.
They're all longtime friends and
collaborators. Cline and Cap play in the Montclair Big Band, Seeling and Fineberg
teach at the Jazzschool, and they all teach at the annual JazzGirls Day that Cline
holds at Berkeley High and the annual Jazzschool Girls' Jazz and Blues Camp and
the Women's Jazz & Blues Camp, both of which which Fineberg and Seeling direct.
Individually and together, they are
empowering women and girls to play the music that I consider America's greatest
cultural contribution to the world.
The Women's Jazz & Blues Camp
is coming up March 24-28 at the Jazzschool, with an all-female faculty teaching
jazz, blues, R&B, Latin and vocal combos, in addition to electives such as
percussion, theory/improv, vocal workshops, private consultations and
instrumental master classes.
If you've always harbored an
interest in jazz but have been told that women aren't good enough to play it,
you'll find out differently at this camp. To register, log on to
jazzschool.org/womensreg or call 510-845-5373.
By the way, the Jazzschool isn't going
to be called the Jazzschool anymore. It has just received accreditation by the
National Schools of Music, which means it can now offer a four-year Bachelor of
Music degree in Jazz Studies. To celebrate its new status, the school will now
be known as the California Jazz Conservatory. Congratulations to Muscarella,
who conceived, created and nurtured this school into what it is today.
And if you're game for a little
political action, Seeling is organizing a protest rally at 5 p.m. on March 22
at the San Francisco Jazz Center, 201 Franklin Street in San Francisco, where
the Lincoln Center Jazz Orchestra is playing a four-day stint.
She and her cohorts want Marsalis
to hold blind auditions, with the musician behind a curtain so the judges can't
determine the gender.
Sounds reasonable to me. How about
you?
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