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Young Musician Spotlight

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Pianist and keyboardist Aaron found his passion for music when he started making “beats” for a rap group he started with a friend in 9th grade and began spending more time at the piano. Growing up in Oakland, California, his parents had signed him up for classical piano lessons when he was younger but he stopped going, not liking the very structured instructions to playing music. “I’m kind of a spontaneous person so I think that helps in jazz whether it’s listening to somebody else and reacting to it, or just playing what’s on your mind.” Improvising at Oaktown Jazz Workshops has given Aaron the opportunity to perform with other serious young musicians, “There is a feel for it here that I connect with and it’s pushed me to practice a lot and be a better musician. I hope to study music, play and gig in college.” Aaron will enter the School of Engineering at UC Santa Cruz this September.

Young Musician Spotlight

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When singer and alto saxophonist Ashanti of Oaktown Jazz Workshops thinks of Jazz, history and ancestry quickly come to mind. “I feel like a stronger person and a smarter person for knowing those things and connecting with them,” says the Skyline High School junior.

Raised in Oakland, California, Ashanti feels she has always had music in her heart, and from the stories her parents tell her, she’s always been singing. Some of her first performances were through her roles in school plays and singing with her church choir.

In the 3rd grade she started playing recorder at Piedmont Elementary and then moved to the clarinet the following year. By 5th grade she was playing the alto saxophone and continued as a saxophonist through 8th grade at Edna Brewer Middle School.

Toward the end of her 8th grade year she found out about Oaktown Jazz Workshops’ year round program for young musicians. “I was crying because I was going into 9th grade and that means that I would lose my instrument because it was not mine, it was the schools. Then Mr. Pitt-Smith started talking about this guy named Ravi and I was like, ‘who’s Ravi and what does he do?’ and that’s how it all started.”

Ashanti’s performances with Oaktown Jazz Workshops display her wide range of musical tastes as she goes from taking a modern jazz sax solo with the ensemble on one tune to stepping out front as the featured singer on the swing era classic “Take the A Train.”

“I truly listen to everything. If you go through my Pandora playlist it’s like Bhangra to Jay Z to Herbie Hancock.”

When asked what her plans are after high school, Ashanti replies, “Whatever I’m doing, it has to be musical.”

Check out this video of Ashanti singing at OJW’s 20th Anniversary Concert!

 

East Bay Gives 2015

6c8203cc-823d-4c50-b014-e6b2b1a5f5b7On Tuesday, May 5th, Oaktown Jazz Workshops will take part in East Bay Gives, an exciting online giving campaign hosted by The East Bay Community Foundation. Please mark your calendars and bookmark OJW’s profile page; https://www.eastbaygives.org//#npo/oaktown-jazz-workshops where your contributions will go directly to jazz performance education for young people who value it, taught by a small group of instructors dedicated to helping youth develop their talents.

 

Khalil Shaheed Scholarship Fund 2014

Dear Friend of Oaktown Jazz Workshops,

We are honored to have your support.  Not only has 2014 marked our 20th anniversary as a performing arts and youth development organization, but this year has been one of our busiest and most rewarding.

Our continuing partnerships with other performing arts organizations have enabled us to bring youth together from different artistic disciplines to collaborate on several original productions and participate in our Jazz Encounters clinics, where young musicians have opportunities to learn from today’s top touring jazz artists. We are pleased to also reach hundreds more students each year through our Jazz in the Schools program at public elementary and middle schools throughout the San Francisco Bay Area.

This year, our youth performance ensemble recorded Oaktown Jazz Workshops’ 4th full-length CD album, and engaged audiences at 27 community events, including two featured sets of jazz at Oakland’s Art & Soul Festival and our sold-out concert last month at Yoshi’s in Jack London Square.

As you know, at the core of OJW are our intensive weekly jazz workshops where young instrumentalists are mentored by supportive, experienced musicians in the tradition of jazz as a community-based art form.  Oaktown Jazz Workshops’ Founding Director, Khalil Shaheed, addressed this need twenty years ago and now many of OJW’s alumni have grown up to use the voice they found in music to perform as professional musicians all across the globe.  Others have drawn upon the confidence they gained through artistic collaboration to excel in meaningful careers and leadership positions in fields ranging from the sciences to social justice. We are very proud of our alumni who serve as role models for the younger generation of musicians in our program.

It has always been through the generosity of friends like you that we remain such a healthy and vibrant organization.  Two years ago we launched the Khalil Shaheed Scholarship Fund to cover the cost of our workshops for young musicians who could not otherwise afford tuition.  We now ask for your contribution, in whatever amount you can manage, to encourage our children’s creativity, elevate music education and appreciation, and enrich our diverse community.

Sincerely,

Ravi Abcarian
Executive Director

Click here to make a donation through PayPal

20th Anniversary Benefit Concert @ Yoshi’s Oakland on Monday, November 10th at 8:00 pm

Oaktown Jazz Workshops will perform at Oakland’s premier venue for live music – Yoshi’s.

This night of jazz will highlight the talents of its outstanding young musicians and all proceeds will support programming that encourages artistic development among youth from across the Bay Area.

This concert will feature Oaktown Jazz Workshops’ Youth Ensembles and special guest performances by keyboardist and vocalist Janice Maxie Reid, and saxophonist, Dave Ellis.

Come support emerging young artists and enjoy an evening of jazz!

  • Monday, November 10th, 2014 at 8:00 PM
  • Yoshi’s Oakland, 510 Embarcadero West
    Jack London Square
    Oakland, CA 94607
  • Tickets $20
  • This event is wheelchair accessible and open to all ages

Fender Music Foundation’s Give Music Life Newsletter: June 2014

 

When you think of Oakland, California, perhaps what comes to mind is the NFL’s Oakland Raiders or maybe MLB’s Oakland Athletics. However, for Ravi Abcarian, Executive Director of the Oaktown Jazz Workshops, it’s all about infusing the rich sounds of jazz music with the backdrop of youth growing up in Oakland.

For Ravi, as an accomplished jazz bassist and teacher for over 20 years, sharing the passion of jazz music with the children of the East Bay, and the city of Oakland is something he truly enjoys.

Oaktown Jazz Workshops approach to teaching jazz music is different than what is taught in a high school, as where kids may read sheet music or perform in the school band. With the Workshops, professional musicians offer instruction and the traditional method is used, which consists of learning to play by ear, the freedom of improvisation, and creativity offered in the arrangements. The Workshops are available all year long and to children between the ages of 10 to 18.

Teaching with the Oaktown Jazz Workshops for more than 17 years, Ravi knew well the needs of the program and his students. Although having the fundamental instruments for a jazz band (drums, piano, bass) they were in definite need of an electric guitar. Knowing what he wanted but uncertain where to turn, he consulted fellow musician and contributing journalist to Guitar Player Magazine, Jude Gold.
“Fender was the first company that came to mind because of the solid, high quality instruments that it produces,” he says. Jude suggested Fender as a source of support as well, he says.

Upon contacting the Fender Music Foundation and qualifying for the donation of a Sunburst Gretsch Pro Jet electric guitar, Ravi and the Oaktown Jazz Workshops now have a complete musical ensemble.
Ravi believes the partnership between the Fender Music Foundation and the Oaktown Jazz Workshops program has been wonderful and he’s grateful because typically securing grants from other foundations would only cover operational expenses. Also, the kids enjoy the sound of the Gretsch because past instrument donations were used and worn-out.

“Playing on brand new Fender instruments has really boosted confidence levels among our young musicians,” he says.

Oaktown comes to Berkeley Monday at the Freight

by Andrew GilbertJune 6, 2014 3:00 pm

OJW Photo by Barbara Butkus

  • Oaktown Jazz Workshop group: the organization provides regular low-cost classes by veteran players and augments the jazz program in BUSD’s middle schools. Photo: Barbara Butkus

Without a master plan or any grand ambitions, Berkeley bassist Ravi Abcarian turned himself into an essential part of the Bay Area jazz scene, and the keeper of the grassroots flame that continues to burn brightly at the Oaktown Jazz Workshops.

Located steps from the Jack London Square waterfront, Oaktown provides some 40 kids ages 10-18 with weekly, low-cost classes led by veteran players (as well as augmenting the jazz program in BUSD’s middle schools).

The young Oaktown musicians perform Monday at Freight & Salvage with percussion master John Santos at an OJW fundraiser, a program that also features powerhouse tenor saxophonist Richard Howell & Sudden Changes, and the OJW Alumni Group featuring saxophonist Kaz George, pianist Ian McArdle, bassist Aneesa Al-Musawwir, and drummer Savannah Harris.

Oaktown Jazz Workshops founding director Khalil Shaheed and director Ravi Abcarian. Photo: Bob Hsiang 2009

  • Oaktown Jazz Workshops founding director Khalil Shaheed and director Ravi Abcarian. Photo: Bob Hsiang 2009

“We ask that most students be involved in the school band,” says Abcarian, who graduated from Berkeley High in 1987. “Oaktown was always meant to enhance what students are already doing. When they come to us it’s more about improvisation and learning to have a musical dialogue. We have musicians who play classical, who are involved in the Young People’s Symphony Orchestra. Some kids have their own bands. They go to JazzCamp West or the Jazzschool. It’s a good way to give them basic musicianship and a sense of what its like to be in a jazz environment.”

Founded in 1994 by the late, beloved trumpeter Khalil Shaheed, Oaktown has helped shape some of the most celebrated players to come out of the Berkeley High jazz program in recent years, including Ambrose Akinmusire, the most celebrated trumpeter of his generation. He was already a budding improviser when he started attending the Workshops, but credits Shaheed and the other well-traveled Oaktown mentors with instilling a sense “that there was no difference between the life of a musician lived and the music they played,” says Akinmusire, who performs with his stellar quintet at Yoshi’s on June 24. (Listen to a review by this reporter of his new Blue Note album the imagined savior is far easier to paint for the California Report).

“The students perceive it as being authentic in terms of learning the tradition,” Abcarian says. “It’s not an all-star band. It’s not something where you’re divided up by level. It’s easily accessible in every way. It’s easy to get to and we’re incredibly affordable. It makes jazz education available to everyone. It’s something attracts kids of all walks of life, from the flatlands or hills, regardless of gender.”

Born in Oakland and raised in Berkeley, Abcarian started getting into the guitar seriously as a young teen. At first drawn to classic rock, he soon found his way to Jeff Beck, which eventually led him to jazz. At Berkeley High, Charles Hamilton coaxed Abcarian to switch to bass to fill an empty chair in the jazz ensemble, and set him up with veteran master Herbie Lewis for lessons. Living in San Francisco, where he founded the jazz studies program at the now-defunct New College of California, Lewis was an esteemed accompanist who recorded with jazz greats like Bobby Hutcherson, Cannonball Adderley, Stanley Turrentine, Freddie Hubbard, and McCoy Tyner.

“The lessons were very unusual,” Abcarian recalls. “The first time I met him I go into the bandroom at Berkeley High and he started speaking Armenian to me. I’m of Armenian descent, but can’t speak it and didn’t understand what he was saying. He was mortified and disappointed.”

Richard Howell. Photo: Bob Hsiang

  • Richard Howell: plays Monday at the Freight with Oaktown Jazz Workshops. Photo: Bob Hsiang

Lewis it turned out had studied with an Armenian musician when he was growing up in Pasadena, and felt an affinity for the culture. In addition to instilling in Abcarian the essentials of jazz bass playing, Lewis was determined to help him connect him with his ancestry.

“He started bringing books on Armenian history by my parents house,” Abcarian says. “They didn’t really know what to think. The lessons with him were very intense. He was very perceptive about what was going on in my head. He didn’t want to just give me riffs or lines or anything a 15-year-old wants from a lesson, you know, show me something cool to play. I remember him playing me Clifford Brown and Max Roach. He wanted to get my reaction. When he didn’t really get one he said you need to listen to more modern jazz. I got Wynton’s Black Codes from the Underground and wore out the grooves.”

After graduating Abcarian enrolled at San Francisco State to study biology, but he gradually realized he was more interested in playing music. When the Loma Prieta quake made the commute into the city untenable, he started taking music classes at Laney College. He connected with a variety of mentors, such as East Bay drummer Achyutan and pianist Muziki Roberson, and he started working with vocalist Faye Carol, whose band has served a proving ground for generations of excellent young musicians. Within a few years, he was gigging full time.

“It happened without me noticing. I had a part-time retail job, and one thing that really got me out there was when I met Bishop Norman Williams,” Abcarian says, referring to the charismatic bebop saxophonist who came up on the Kansas City scene in the 1950s. “He got me out on the café circuit in San Francisco and I started meeting a lot of musicians. Music was something I always enjoyed doing, but nothing I sought out aside from practicing. I was fortunate to be coming up when the economy started to boom, and venues and restaurants were booking live music. My phone started ringing.”

It was through the drummer Achyutan that Abcarian met Khalil Shaheed, who had come up on the Chicago scene and settled in the Bay Area in the late 1960s, earning respect as a producer, composer, bandleader and educator who had collaborated with stars in jazz, rock and R&B. His connections meant he was able to bring in heavyweights such as Branford Marsalis, Gene Harris, Art Farmer, Terence Blanchard, Nicholas Payton, Arturo Sandoval, and Michael Brecker to work with the Oaktown kids.

Abcarian was already teaching at the East Bay Center for Performing Arts in Richmond, and welcomed the opportunity to join the Oaktown fold when Shaheed recruited him in 1997. He continued to record and perform, collaborating closely with artists like trumpeter Mark Wright and guitarist Terrence Brewer, but his responsibilities at Oaktown gradually increased, particularly when Shaheed appointed him education director.

“Khalil was happy to focus on the director role,” Abcarian says. “That freed him up to make connections in the community, seek funding and promote events. I was busy tuning the kids up. That worked very well for many years. When we found out that he was living with cancer he was determined to keep working. It was a very challenging time. He founded Oaktown and it was such an extension of him.”

In the months before Shaheed died in March 2012, he stepped back to focus on his health, and the Oaktown board appointed Abcarian interim director, a position that became permanent later that year. He leads an impressive cadre of players who teach workshops at the Oaktown space on Jack London Square and go into local schools.

“We just wrapped up an onsite program at Claremont Middle School, where they didn’t have a school program,” Abcarian says. “And we go in and work with young musicians in the jazz programs at Willard, Longfellow and King, supporting the teachers by leading sectionals and working on improvisation.”

The Oaktown students are busy gearing up for a busy month of gigs. They perform Saturday at KCSM’s free Jazz on the Hill event at the College of San Mateo. Pianist Muziki Roberson features them at a June 22 concert at the Sound Room in Oakland, and the kids open for the Oakland East Bay Symphony at the Craneway Pavilion at a free Independence Day celebration on July 3 (conductor Michael Morgan is vice-chair of the Oaktown board).

Andrew Gilbert covers music and dance for Berkeleyside, the San Jose Mercury News, San Francisco Chronicle, and KQED’s California Report. Read his previous Berkeleyside reviews.

A Benefit Concert

Featuring John Santos and Richard Howell

at Freight and Salvage on Monday, June 9th at 8:00 pm

 

The young musicians of Oaktown Jazz Workshops (OJW) will perform on the same bill as acclaimed musicians John Santos and Richard Howell & Sudden Changes at Berkeley’s premier venue for live music – Freight and Salvage.  This night of jazz will highlight the talents of its young musicians and all proceeds will support programming that encourages artistic development among youth from across the Bay Area.

 

This special event will feature John Santos, Richard Howell & Sudden Changes, the OJW Alumni Group, and the OJW Youth Ensembles.  According to Oaktown Jazz Workshops’ alumnus, trumpeter Ambrose Akinmusire, now on the prestigious Blue Note Records, “Oaktown Jazz Workshops was not only my first experience with jazz but the most important because it taught me there was no difference between the life a musician lived and the music they played.” Jesse Levit, another outstanding OJW alumnus states, “The skills that I learned in OJW go way beyond music and will continue to be invaluable to me in my life as a musician and a human being.”

 

Come support emerging young musicians and enjoy an evening of jazz!

  • Monday, June 9th, 2014 at 8:00 PM
  • Freight and Salvage, 2020 Addison Street, Berkeley, CA 94704
  • Advanced tickets $12 to $22 are available at www.thefreight.org           ($24 at the door)

 

About OJW

The mission of Oaktown Jazz Workshops (OJW) is to promote, preserve, and present jazz music so that youth develop a sense of ownership and pride in this uniquely American cultural and artistic tradition.  The young and talented musicians of Oaktown Jazz Workshops have impressed audiences for twenty years.  Formed in 1994 by the late, talented jazz trumpeter, Khalil Shaheed, Oaktown Jazz Workshops (OJW) celebrates jazz music as an American indigenous art form of profound artistic and cultural significance.

Represent the East Bay and support OJW

On Tuesday, May 6th, Oaktown Jazz Workshops is participating in a unique local giving initiative – East Bay Gives!  Thanks to the East Bay Community Foundation, your donation through East Bay Gives will allow us to potentially secure additional grant prizes – making every gift, no matter the size, even more effective.  Your support will enable our young musicians to continue participating in afterschool jazz ensemble workshops, clinics with accomplished musicians, and community performances across the East Bay.  Help keep Oaktown Jazz Workshops thriving!  This special event lasts for only 24 hours -on-line giving begins at 12:00AM and ends at 11:59PM this Tuesday, May 6th.

Photo by Barbara Butkus

Join us at https://eastbaygives.org//#npo/oaktown-jazz-workshops to donate.

 

 

Khalil Shaheed Scholarship Fund 2013

Dear Friend of Oaktown Jazz Workshops,

We are looking forward to entering 2014 with the momentum of a year full of growth and great music behind us.  Thanks to your support we continue to make high quality jazz education accessible to young musicians in our community.

As a part of our “Jazz Encounters” program, this past summer we featured an inspiring Afro-Latin Jazz Listening Party hosted by percussionist John Santos and we collaborated with 51Oakland to present an insightful clinic with saxophonist Billy Harper and pianist George Cables.

Our “Jazz in the Schools” program continues in the 2013/2014 academic year with OJW now leading the after school jazz band at Claremont Middle School in Oakland with twice weekly rehearsals and our instructors regularly conduct clinics at both King and Longfellow Middle Schools in Berkeley.

This fall we introduced a musicianship class and a music theory class for students to improve their understanding of musical skills and concepts.  These courses will be offered every spring and fall and will enhance the students’ performance education.

At the core of Oaktown Jazz Workshops are year round, weekly performance workshops, where young musicians learn the musical language, idioms and repertoire of jazz from professional musicians dedicated to helping youth develop their talents.  OJW’s Performance Ensemble regularly performs at community events throughout the San Francisco Bay Area.

These programs are a continuation of our Founding Director, Khalil Shaheed’s vision of an organization that strengthens our community through music, promotes jazz as a cultural art form and invests in the future of young musicians.  It has always been through the generosity of friends like you that we remain such a healthy and vibrant organization.  Last year we launched the Khalil Shaheed Scholarship Fund to cover the cost of our workshops for young musicians who could not otherwise afford tuition.  We now ask for your contribution in whatever amount you can manage. Your support of Oaktown Jazz Workshops encourages our children’s creativity, elevates music education and appreciation, and enriches our diverse community.

Sincerely,

Ravi Abcarian
Executive Director

Khalil and Kids 2006