Explore every episode of the podcast Women in Jazz
| Title | Pub. Date | Duration | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Episode 12 - Ellen Seeling | 05 May 2021 | 01:18:11 | |
My guest for Episode 12 is trumpet player and long-time advocate for women in jazz, Ellen Seeling. A Milwaukee native, Ellen was the first woman to earn a degree in Jazz Studies from Indiana University. In 1975 she moved to New York City, where she worked with the likes of The Thad Jones-Mel Lewis Orchestra, Machito, the Slide Hampton Big Band, Luther Vandross, Laura Nyro, The Temptations, Isis and Martha Reeves, among countless others. In 2009 Ellen founded and co-directed the United States’ first summer jazz camp for girls, the Girls’ Jazz & Blues Camp, featuring a women’s faculty from the Montclair Women’s Big Band. Then, in 2015, Ellen co-founded Jazzwomen and Girls Advocates, in an effort to address the systemic and historic gender discrimination in jazz. Thus far, the organisation has consulted with the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra, playing a role in their adoption of new hiring processes, and also helped to encourage the Monterey Jazz Festival’s 500% increase in women instrumentalists programmed for its 2018 edition. https://www.montclairwomensbigband.com/ (Ellen’s profile: https://www.montclairwomensbigband.com/about-us/ellen-seeling-bio) Jean’s website, which features work by both Ellen and Jean: https://deuceband.com/ And my Q&A with Melbourne International Jazz Festival: https://www.melbournejazz.com/news/womeninjazzpodcast-qna/ | |||
| Episode 11 - Kay D Ray | 25 Mar 2021 | 01:09:34 | |
This month’s guest is documentary filmmaker, Kay D Ray. Kay is the producer and director of the award-winning documentary Lady Be Good: Instrumental Women in Jazz, which features interviews with artists like Marianne McPartland, Vi Redd, Carline Ray, Roz Cron and Quincy Jones. She is also the producer and director of its more recent counterpart, In Her Hands: Key Changes in Jazz, which looks at women’s experiences in jazz today in the United States, and features artists like Anat Cohen, Grace Kelly and Ellen Seeling. Kay has also had decades of experience researching and producing content for museums, including her work as the senior film producer for Experience Music Project in Seattle, Washington, and as the co-curator and filmmaker for the Northwest Museum of Arts and Culture’s 2010 project Jumpin' With The Big Bands. For distribution of Lady Be Good: Instrumental Women in Jazz and In Her Hands: Key Changes in Jazz, you can contact Kay via her website (or Passion River Films for Lady Be Good: http://www.passionriver.com/) Check out Kay’s 25 minute Documentary “Ernestine Anderson: There Will Never be Another You” about the jazz and blues vocalist here: https://www.seattlechannel.org/feature-shows/agewise-tv/?videoid=x118106 The majority of Kay’s museum work is archived, but if you’re stopping by Hawaii and are interested in submarines, you can check out some films she created in 2019 at the Pacific Submarine Museum in Honolulu! 😉 Sally Placksin’s American Women in Jazz: 1900 to the Present: https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0872237605/ref=dbs_a_def_rwt_bibl_vppi_i2 Sherrie Tucker’s “Swing Shift: “All-Girl” Bands of the 1940s”: https://www.amazon.co.uk/Swing-Shift-All-Girl-Bands-1940s/dp/0822328178 | |||
| Episode 02 - Louise Messenger | 23 Dec 2019 | 01:10:51 | |
Louise is a vocalist originally from Adelaide, Australia, who is now based in London. Influenced by singers like Carmen McRae, Ella Fitzgerald and the Boswell Sisters, Louise is a true entertainer, who loves to connect with her audiences. A singer with 20 years experience, in 2016 Louise started swing dancing - she loves to sing for dancers as well as jazz lovers, and you can usually see her on stage totally unable to stand still. | |||
| Episode 01 - Jen Hodge | 28 Nov 2019 | 00:59:20 | |
Jen is bass player, band leader, and arranger from Canada who has spent the majority of her professional career based in Vancouver. Now living in New York City, Jen loves her swingin' grooves and New-Orleans-style horns. If you've ever seen Jen play, you'll know that her love for making music radiates when she performs, filling everyone in the audience with the same joy and excitement she has for jazz. | |||
| Episode 10 - Pureum Jin | 03 Mar 2021 | 01:23:09 | |
Pureum Jin is a South-Korean born, NYC-based, award-winning saxophonist, arranger, and composer. Pureum began playing saxophone as a teen in Korea, and developed her chops as a jazz musician in Seoul, before being accepted to a master’s degree program at Manhattan School of Music in New York City. After graduating in 2017, Pureum moved to Charlottesville, Virginia, for a year, where she performed as a member of the great John D’earth’s Sextet. Moving back to NYC in 2018, Pureum has been establishing herself as a key figure in the NYC jazz scene, and has played at international jazz festivals including Edinburgh Jazz & Blues Festival, Seoul Jazz Festival, DC Jazz Fest, and the GREC Music Festival in Spain. Her first album ‘The Real Blue’ - titled after the English translation of her name from Korean - was released in 2019 to rave reviews, further cementing Pureum’s place as a leading figure in jazz today. Pureum and I connected online in January 2021 to discuss her discovery of saxophone and jazz music as a teen in Korea; her experience studying at Manhattan School of Music, particularly as a young immigrant to the US; the inspiration for her album ‘The Real Blue’; and what it’s been like continuing her career in music as a young mother - including touring in Spain when her baby was just 6 months old! https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCyzr8sGJSMPSt0HhX8Lzw9g And some links to jazz-influenced pianist and K-Pop artist Lee Jin Ah’s work: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rhNpjpEK4ic | |||
| Episode 09 - Camille Thurman | 29 Jan 2021 | 01:27:13 | |
Camille Thurman grew up in Queens, New York, and developed her love for music at an early age, practising flute, piano and vocals. As a teen, Camille was accepted to Fiorello H. LaGuardia High School of Music & Art and the Performing Arts, where she first picked up the tenor saxophone at age 15. Camille and I caught up via Zoom in December to discuss her earliest influences in music, her experiences at high school - including the gender-based bullying she endured in her later years there and how this contributed to a loss of confidence in her musical ability - the value of mentorship in the development of a young artist, her experience touring with Jazz at Lincoln Center, and some reflection on how integral representation and community outreach are in bringing more women to jazz, and in restoring jazz to black communities. https://www.camillethurmanmusic.com/ https://music.apple.com/au/artist/camille-thurman/514867580 https://www.facebook.com/CamilleThurmanMusic/ https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCESDy03qieJ44FiWxVz4CLg The Haven Hang Playlist on YouTube: https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLaOa12r61_SBKOB--RkVFJrobzGwkH6jt | |||
| Episode 08 - Risa Branch | 29 Dec 2020 | 00:57:26 | |
Risa Branch is a vocalist and songwriter from the US. Although currently based in New York City, Risa grew up in Dallas, Texas, and spent much of her musical career working in Vancouver. While those who have followed Risa’s musical development might recognise her for the futuristic R&B and soul sounds of her debut solo album, in recent years Risa has found her way back to her roots as a jazz and blues vocalist. Risa and I caught up back in July, when things were opening up a little again over summer in the northern hemisphere, to discuss her musical influences growing up, her earlier work as a professional musician in Vancouver, what drew her into the world of jazz and blues in more recent years, how she views herself as an artist the skills she’s currently developing, and some of her observations of the cultural norms and dynamics of New York’s hot jazz scene. https://open.spotify.com/album/3dsIUp7P1ePkJIZChnxqFt?si=afq6xp2QQEmVPGgyXdzcmw Facebook Page, with updates on Split Screen Sessions: facebook.com/RisaBranch | |||
| Episode 07 - Audrey Powne | 30 Nov 2020 | 01:54:23 | |
Audrey Powne is an Australian trumpeter, vocalist and songwriter. Born in Warragul, in country Victoria, Audrey moved to Melbourne as a teen, where she took every opportunity to get stuck into jazz and the local music scene. A prolific young musician who has been central to Melbourne's jazz and soul scenes in the last decade, Aussie audiences might recognise her from the sweet soul band Leisure Centre, and her electro funk project Au Dré. | |||
| Episode 06 - Marilyn T. Keller | 15 Sep 2020 | 01:31:40 | |
Marilyn T. Keller grew up in Alamogordo, New Mexico in the United States surrounded by music. The daughter of a baptist minister, gospel music was especially central to Marilyn’s early development, with both of her parents singing in gospel groups. Later trained in jazz as a member of the Mt. Hood Community College Vocal Jazz Ensemble in Portland, Oregon, Marilyn is a 39-year veteran of music and stage performance in Jazz, Gospel, R&B, Pop, Blues, and theater both in the States and internationally. Marilyn and I sat down in late June to discuss her early development as a musician and how she came to a career in jazz, what she learned about the legendary Ma Rainey when she was cast to play her in a 2011 production of playwright August Wilson’s play “Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom”, her involvement in US politics and her work in support of the Democratic party, and her thoughts about black female representation both in jazz media today and elsewhere. https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCVU6NbT_bJ6GT0-UBpFgJZw https://soundcloud.com/marilyn-t-keller https://www.instagram.com/marilyntkeller/ | |||
| Episode 05 - Tutu Puoane | 04 Aug 2020 | 01:20:34 | |
Tutu Puoane was born in Atteridgeville, Pretoria, in South Africa. She started playing music professionally in 1997 in Johannesburg, and soon began studying jazz vocals at the University of Cape Town. Now based in Antwerp, Belgium, Tutu has played all over the world in countries like Italy, the United States, Germany, The Netherlands, France, and of course Belgium and her native South Africa. https://www.tutupuoanemusic.com/ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E4R6ilpwA64 https://www.facebook.com/tutupuoanemusic/videos/2930200417262492/ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Miriam_Makeba https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lNeP3hrm__k https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lebogang_Mashile https://www.youtube.com/user/BokaniDyer https://www.facebook.com/Afrika-Mkhize-522818047821314/ | |||
| Episode 04 - Tricia Evy | 10 Apr 2020 | 00:57:36 | |
Born in the northeastern suburbs of Paris, Tricia grew up in Guadeloupe before returning to Paris as a young adult in 2006. Already a talented singer and lover of music, it was in Paris that Tricia discovered jazz, immersing herself in the music of Ella Fitzgerald, Billie Holiday, Louis Armstrong. Since then, Tricia has travelled all over the world playing jazz, and loves to bring a varied repertoire of jazz to her audiences, inspired by both standards and music from her from her Caribbean heritage. Her most recent album, Usawa, was released in 2018, alongside pianist David Fackeure. | |||
| Episode 03 - Heather Stewart | 28 Feb 2020 | 01:46:25 | |
Our guest for February is another Australian; Parisian-based violinist and vocalist, Heather Stewart. Born in rural New South Wales, Australia, Heather fell in love with music at an early age, and studied a variety of styles over the years. Now living in Paris, Heather’s current focus is on jazz, swing, acoustic blues and folk music - all of which she gets to explore in her ensemble The Dirty Ragtimers, who will be heading on tour in Australia in March and April of 2020 to promote their new album, ‘Fairytales of Montmartre’ Heather and I sat down in her apartment in Paris in November of 2019 to chat about life growing up in country Australia, and how that somehow led her to study and play music across the world. https://www.heatherstewart.com.au/ | |||