New Jersey Stage logo
New Jersey Stage Menu



 

Live Music and Iconic Photography in Partnership with Jazz Foundation of America


By Sanford Josephson

originally published: 02/01/2023


Originally published in Jersey Jazz 2/1/23 - Reprinted by permission of the New Jersey Jazz Society

Last Year, JFA Assisted Musicians and Their Families Nationwide in Nearly 7,000 Individual Cases of Need.

Tuesday nights are special at New York’s Thompson Central Park Hotel (formerly the Parker Meridien). From 6-9 p.m. in Parker’s lobby/atrium bar there is now live jazz, thanks to the efforts of the Jazz Foundation of America, a nonprofit organization that has existed since 1989 to provide such things as housing and emergency assistance, pro bono medical care, and disaster relief for jazz musicians in need. 

On the night I was at the Thompson, January 17, the attraction was the Art Baron Quintet (seen at the top of this article), playing standards like Ellington/Strayhorn’s “Take the A Train” and Johnny Green’s “Body and Soul”. Baron was joined by Bill Crow on bass, Bobby DaVelle on tenor saxophone, Lafayette Harris on piano, and John Cooksey on drums.  

In addition to the music, the hallways at the hotel are embellished with classic photos of jazz legends such as Dizzy Gillespie, Miles Davis, Jimmy Heath, and Crow. Some of them were taken by longtime JFA Board member, photographer/author/music producer Hank O’Neal, who arranged for additional photos to be included from otherphotographers such as Carol Friedman and Richard Corman.

According to JFA Executive Director Joe Petrucelli, the connection with the hotel (located at 119 West 56th St.) goes back to 2019 “when our Board member, the entertainment lawyer Geoffrey Menin, introduced me to Joel Rosen, the President of GFI Hospitality, which was redeveloping the property. The pandemic intervened, and we weren’t able to work on the partnership in earnest until early 2022. From the start, the team at the hotel emphasized that they wanted to take a holistic approach, incorporating jazz as a theme at the hotel, not only programming music but by curating a gallery of jazz photography in the lobby and featuring jazz-inspired artwork in the rooms. 




Reach New Jersey's largest arts & entertainment audience, click here for info on how to advertise at NJ Stage



“Furthermore,” he continued, “the Parker Meridien was built on the site of the Old Northern Hotel, which housed the studios of Fine Recordings Inc., where many jazz sessions were recorded circa the early ‘60s. Retaining the name Parker’s for the bar was an homage to the hotel’s past identity but also a tribute to Charlie Parker. We have been thrilled to feature so many fantastic musicians at Parker’s.”

O’Neal joined the JFA Board in 1990, one year after the organization’s founding. The creator of two record companies, Chiaroscuro Records and Hammond Music Enterprises, O’Neal has produced more than 200 jazz albums; published several books; and photographed many of the giants of 20th century jazz. His book, The Ghosts of HarlemSessions with Jazz Legends, was published by Vanderbilt University Press in 2009. It consists of interviews conducted between 1985 and 2007 with more than 40 jazz artists who worked in Harlem during its prime. 

“In 1991,” O’Neal recalled, the JFA “probably helped 20 people.” Last year, JFA assisted musicians and their families nationwide in nearly 7,000 individual cases of need – from housing and healthcare to employment and emergency financial grants. “We have money in the bank and a wonderful Board,” said O’Neal. “And, we help people all over the country. I just finished writing a piece about Clark Terry,” he continued, “and I know we helped with Clark’s nursing at the end of his life. We fund lung transplants and things like that. Sometimes it’s musicians who are household names but never had any health insurance. Or those who didn’t have enough points with 802 (the Local 802 union) to get a pension.” Richard Parsons, former Chairman of Citicorp and onetime CEO of Time Warner, is the current JFA Chairman.

Dizzy Gillespie, photo by Hank O'Neal

One of the iconic photos taken by O’Neal that is hanging in the Thompson is of Dizzy Gillespie, and it was Gillespie’s battle with cancer at the end of his life that ultimately provided the JFA with a means to provide medical care for jazz musicians that need it. “One of our Board members,” said O’Neal, “is Dr. Frank Forte, an oncologist at Englewood Hospital. He was Dizzy’s doctor. Dizzy made Dr. Frank promise that he would never turn away a jazz musician who needed help. And, Englewood never has. The hospital has provided over $13 million of medical care to jazz and blues musicians in need and made a significant difference in the many lives they have touched.”

To raise funds in 2022, O’Neal and JFA reissued a CD called One Good Turn that O’Neal originally produced as a fundraiser for JFA in 2002. It contains tracks from Chiaroscuro albums including recordings from legends such as Lionel Hampton, Gerry Mulligan, and Clark Terry as well as a never-before-heard collaboration between Dizzy Gillespie and Buddy Rich. Another JFA partner, Santa Barbara, CA-based apparel company, 32 Bar Blues created a One Good Turn t-shirt, with 100 per cent of the net proceeds going to the JFA Musicians’ Emergency Fund.

O’Neal recalled one of JFA’s earliest fundraisers held to benefit the Jazz Musicians’ Emergency Fund, a 1992 concert at Town Hall featuring three pianists: Dorothy Donegan, Dick Hyman, and George Shearing. It was called “The Fine Art of Jazz” and also included Jon Burr on bass and Ray Mosca on drums. The concert was held in conjunction with The Metropolitan Museum of Art and The Stuart Davis Centennial Retrospective, raising more than $60,000, much of it from the sale of prints by Davis and other artists.

Antoinette Montague, photo by Melanie Futorian

The lineup of live music in February at the Thompson is as follows: February 7, tenor saxophonist Bill Saxton; February 14, vocalist Antoinette Montague; February 21, guitarist Ed Cherry; and February 28, bassist Kim Clarke. And, Art Baron will be back on March 14.




Reach New Jersey's largest arts & entertainment audience, click here for info on how to advertise at NJ Stage



Baron, who is 73, joined the Ellington band in 1973. “Jimmy Maxwell, the trumpet player, was a dear friend of mine,” he said, “and he told me Mercer (Ellington) needed someone to play trombone. At the time, they had a small band during the week at the Rainbow Grill, but on Sundays they’d go out of town and do gigs in other cities such as Washington, DC, and Boston with the full band. When I got on that band bus, people told me to be careful where I sat. Some of those guys had their seats for 50 years. But those guys were so nice to me. I was a hippie with long hair.”

Baron still leads a sextet called The Duke’s Men, aimed at keeping Ellington’s music alive. Crow often plays with the group, and Baron describes the 95-year-old bassist as “a walking history of our glorious music.”

Ed Cherry

Ed Cherry, the February 21st Thompson performer, was profiled in the June 2021 issue of Jersey Jazz. He was part of Gillespie’s band for 14 years. “From 1978 until he (Dizzy) passed,” he told Jersey Jazz’s Schaen Fox, “I was always in the band. He changed drummers and bass players two or three times and added this or that, but I was the one guy who was in the band through the whole thing.” The 68-year-old Cherry released an album on January 20 that is climbing on the JazzWeek charts. His Cellar Music Group recording, Are We There Yet?, was added by 27 jazz radio stations the first week after its release. Jazziz.com called it, a “formidable showcase of his fine, expressive musicianship and the melodic approach that he is renowned for, as well as his profound understanding of the blues.”

The partnership between JFA and the Thompson Central Park Hotel appears to have a bright and long future. “We’re very thankful for JFA for being so generous with their time and sharing some incredible talent with our guests,” said Amanda Reed, TCP’s Director of Sales and Marketing. “JFA is now an essential piece of Thompson’s success, and we’re looking forward to what is to come.”

This year’s major JFA fundraising event,“A Great Night in Harlem”, will be held on Thursday, March 30, at Harlem’s Apollo Theater. For more information, or to order tickets, log onto www.jazzfoundation.org/Gala2023.

The New Jersey Jazz Society is a non-profit organization of business and professional people, musicians, teachers, students and listeners working together for the purpose of advancing jazz music. Their mission is to  promote and preserve America’s original art form – jazz. The Society seeks to ensure continuity of the jazz art form through its commitment to nurture and champion local talent, along with showcasing outstanding national and international artists providing for the younger generation via arts education programs.



Sanford writes for the New Jersey Jazz Society (NJJS) - a non-profit organization of business and professional people, musicians, teachers, students and listeners working together for the purpose of advancing jazz music.

EVENT PREVIEWS

(NEWTON, NJ) -- Fans of grunge music will want to mark their calendars for GRUNGEFEST on Friday, April 10, 2026 at The Newton Theatre.  The Ledbetters will pay tribute to Pearl Jam and Superunknown will perform songs by Chris Cornell. Showtime is 8:00pm.
SOPAC presents Texas Flood - A Tribute to Stevie Ray Vaughan

SOPAC presents Texas Flood - A Tribute to Stevie Ray Vaughan

(SOUTH ORANGE, NJ) -- Texas Flood - A Tribute to Stevie Ray Vaughan comes to the South Orange Performing Arts Center (SOPAC) on Friday, April 10, 2026 at 7:30pm.
Westminster Conservatory Faculty Recital on April 10th to honor Galina Prilutskaya

Westminster Conservatory Faculty Recital on April 10th to honor Galina Prilutskaya

(PRINCETON, NJ) -- On Friday, April 10, 2026 at 7:30pm, Westminster Conservatory of Rider University will present a faculty recital to honor the memory of Galina Prilutskaya, a long-time member of the Conservatory's piano faculty who died on October 11, 2025. The recital will take place in Hillman Performance Hall in the Marion Buckelew Cullen Music Center (101 Walnut Lane) in Princeton. The recital is open to the public free of charge.
State Theatre presents Graham Nash in April

State Theatre presents Graham Nash in April

(NEW BRUNSWICK, NJ) -- State Theatre New Jersey presents Graham Nash - Live on Tour 2026 on Saturday, April 11 at 8:00pm. Graham Nash will perform a career-spanning retrospective of his six decades of contributions to contemporary music. Tickets start at $47.
Outpost in the Burbs and Montclair Film presents the Music of John Prine: Film and Concert

Outpost in the Burbs and Montclair Film presents the Music of John Prine: Film and Concert

(MONTCLAIR, NJ) -- Outpost in the Burbs and Montclair Film presents "In Spite of Ourselves," a concert and film screening of You Got Gold, on Saturday, April 11, 2026. The concert and film are a tribute to the music of the legendary singer-songwriter John Prine.
RVCC Theatre presents Rolling Stones Tribute Band on April 11th

RVCC Theatre presents Rolling Stones Tribute Band on April 11th

(BRANCHBURG, NJ) -- The Theatre at Raritan Valley Community College's Mainstage series will rock out its season with a performance of Satisfaction: The International Rolling Stones Tribute Show, Saturday, April 11, 2026 at 7:00pm.
State Theatre New Jersey and Metropolitan Entertainment present Graham Nash

State Theatre New Jersey and Metropolitan Entertainment present Graham Nash

(NEW BRUNSWICK, NJ) -- State Theatre New Jersey and Metropolitan Entertainment present Graham Nash - Live on Tour 2026 on Saturday, April 11, 2026 at 8:00pm. Nash will perform a career-spanning retrospective from his six decades of contributions to contemporary music.
Grunin Center presents Latin Grammy Award Winner, Nella

Grunin Center presents Latin Grammy Award Winner, Nella

(TOMS RIVER, NJ) -- Renowned singer Nella brings her multilingual artistry to Ocean County College, performing on Saturday, April 11, 2026 at the Grunin Center for the Arts. Showtime is 7:00pm.
Kean Stage presents Tito Puente, Jr.

Kean Stage presents Tito Puente, Jr.

(UNION, NJ) -- Tito Puente Jr., son of legendary American salsa and Latin jazz musician Tito Puente, will perform at Kean Stage on Saturday, April 11, 2026. The concert takes in Wilkins Theatre at 7:30pm.

 

UPCOMING EVENTS