Jazz weekend in Denison
By Donna Dow, Main Street Director, City of Denison
May 15, 2012
Print this page
Email this article
This weekend, downtown Denison will feature a jazz lover’s dream with music and photographs. The Ephraim Owens Experience and Jazz at Five will complement The Fine Art of Jazz, an exhibition showcasing the names and faces synonymous with the Kansas City tradition of American jazz. The free photographic exhibit is open Tuesday through Saturday and will run through Friday, May 25 at 413 W. Main in Downtown Denison. 

The Ephraim Owens Experience will be live at the Rialto Theatre in Denison on Friday, May 18 at 8 p.m. Tickets are only $10. Ephraim will be featuring Red Young on the B3 Hammond and Brannen Temple on drums.

Ephraim is one of the hottest horn players on the Austin Club Scene, and he is especially well known for his signature solos. He is a very popular South by Southwest artist and has been voted the “Best Horn” in Austin.

Saturday, May 19 will feature Jazz at Five performing in the exhibit space at 413 W. Main. During this free concert, performers will be offering commentary from 4-7 during “Downtown Open Late.”  Downtown Denison businesses will have sidewalk sales and extended hours on this special Saturday evening.

Concerts are made possible through a grant from the Wal Mart Foundation. ExhibitsUSA is a national program of the Mid-America Arts Alliance through support of the National Endowment for the Arts and the Texas Commission of the Arts. For more information, call 903-464-4452 or visit www.downtowndenison.com.

Charlie Parker. Pete Johnson. Mary Lou Williams.
Count Basie. Jay McShann. Booker Washington.

These and many more musicians and vocalists associated with Prohibition-era jazz found a welcome home in Kansas City nightclubs, bustling with crowds eager for the entertainment. The Roaring 20s saw local and out-of-town musicians forge a distinctive Kansas City style of jazz as they enjoyed the camaraderie of all-night jam sessions with boisterous, noisy clubs as the backdrop. Many of the musicians who got their start in Kansas City’s jazz hub became household names across the nation in the 1930s and 1940s as jazz exploded in popularity, but the genesis of the movement also left its mark forever on the Kansas City music scene. Today the tradition jams on, with clubs across the city featuring jazz nightly. 
 
It is this mixture of activity, tenacity and nostalgic charm that moved Pulitzer Prize winner Dan White to spend almost 20 years photographing and interviewing renowned jazz musicians.

 “I began photographing jazz musicians in 1987, hoping to create a visual record of these talented artists and to help preserve Kansas City’s tradition as a birthplace of jazz,” White says. “I’d been listening, watching and talking to those in the local jazz scene for quite some time. They were very open to passing along their knowledge and traditions with anyone who shared their love of the music; I wanted to capture some of this feeling before it slipped away. Players like Rusty Tucker, Speedy Huggins, Milt Abel and Pearl Thuston. They had a certain sound. When they were on, there was nothing like it. I’ve shot more than 50 portraits of these players and singers over the past twenty years. It’s a good feeling to have captured part of Kansas City’s history.” 

The result of White’s work is a series of  50 black-and-white portraits of Kansas City jazz musicians and vocalists, complete with commentary from exhibition curator Chuck Haddix, co-author of Kansas City Jazz: From Ragtime to BeBop – A History.

The exhibition is organized and toured by ExhibitsUSA, a national program of Mid-America Arts Alliance. ExhibitsUSA sends more than 20 exhibitions on tour to more than 100 small- and mid-size communities each year. Mid-America is the oldest nonprofit regional arts organization in the United States. More information is available at www.maaa.org and www.eusa.org.

 

Exhibition Name: The Fine Art of Jazz 

This exhibition showcases the impact Kansas City Jazz musicians and vocalists had on the national jazz movement of the 1920s and 1930s through photographs of and commentary on renowned jazz musicians who got their start in Kansas City and grew from there to have great impact on American jazz as we know it today. Many of these artists are performing today and remain a powerful influence on the jazz genre. 

Organized by: ExhibitsUSA, a national program of Mid-America Arts Alliance 

Curator: Chuck Haddix, director of the Marr Sound Archives at the University of Missouri-Kansas City 

Artist: Dan White, Pulitzer Prize-winning photographer 

Exhibition Contents: A series of 50 black-and-white photographic portraits of Kansas City jazz musicians