Trinity Lutheran Church and Candlelight Concerts presents Jazzin' with the Classics for Christmas
WHAT: Jazzin' with the Classics for Christmas
WHEN: Saturday afternoon, December 21, 2024 at 2:00 PM
WHERE: Trinity Lutheran Church
18341 SR 525 at Woodard Road in Freeland
MORE INFO: (360) 331-5191 or www.candlelightnw.org
ADMISSION: Donations (a free will offering) towards expenses will be welcome
For the 10th year, the annual JAZZIN' WITH THE CLASSICS FOR CHRISTMAS will be presented by Trinity Lutheran Church, featuring jazz pianist, flutist and clarinetist Martin Lund, classical flutist Jeffrey Cohan and bassist Paul Gabrielson in a unique and joyous celebration of music for the holidays that bridges the jazz/classical divide on Saturday afternoon, December 21, 2024 at 2:00 PM at Trinity Lutheran Church at 18341 SR 525 at Woodard Road in Freeland.
Donations (a free will offering) towards expenses will be welcome. Please call the church at (360) 331-5191 or see www.candlelightnw.org for more information.
In this program, three renowned jazz and classical artists and friends meld their musical perspectives in an unusual collaboration and unique celebration of the Yuletide season that is guaranteed to generate an abundance of Christmas cheer. Lund, Cohan and Gabrielson team up to bridge contemporary improvisational jazz and the "art music" of baroque and renaissance times. Instrumental musicians have "jazzed up" melodies familiar to them in the style of their day for centuries, and this team's virtuoso improvisations on Yuletide favorites, and their renditions of classical standards will bring together the best of jazz and classical worlds in a new program for 2024.
Candlelight Concerts, dedicated to George Shangrow and a non-profit in Washington State since 2011, continues a tradition which George initiated featuring chamber music both familiar and unusual performed by some of the Northwest’s finest musicians around the Puget Sound.
About the
MARTIN LUND
Martin Lund, an extremely diverse musician, has played with some of the great blues artists of our time and worked in the studios of LA as a composer, arranger and musician with artists like Mel Torme to Isacc Hayes. His eclectic background has allowed him to move freely through any style of music from classical to rock and from jazz to Broadway. He is equally adept at clarinet, saxophone, flute and piano. Martin is a well-known performer and teacher who produces one of Orcas Island's most popular summer music events, the Orcas Island Jazz Festival bringing in top talent from around the northwest and beyond. Martin graduated from the University of Washington with a BA in both music and music education.
PAUL GABRIELSON
Jazz bassist and educator Paul Gabrielson has been playing professionally for over 30 years. Recently relocating back to Seattle from New York City, Paul brings with him a performance roster of some of the finest jazz musicians on the scene today, having performed with Jeff Watts, Jeff Herschfield, Mark Ferber, Benny Green, Bob Florence, Bill Mays, Geoff Keezer, Larry Fuller, Arturo O’Farrill, Ron Affif, Paul Bollenbach, Corey Christianson, Randy Johnston, Don Mock,Ingrid Jensen, Duane Eubanks, Terrell Stafford, Jon Gordon, Mingus Big Band, Diane Shure, Jay Clayton, Mark Murphy and many more. Paul has taught at Pacific Lutheran University, Central Washington University and City College of New York and has given numerous clinics and recitals nationwide. Paul is also the festival founder and director of the annual Pinehurst Jazz Festival in Pinehurst, NC.
JEFFREY COHAN
Flutist Jeffrey Cohan has performed as soloist in 25 countries, both on modern and early transverse flutes from the Renaissance through the present. The winner of many important
competitions and awards, he has performed throughout Europe, Australia, New Zealand and the United States, and worldwide for the USIA Arts America Program. Many works have been written for and premiered by him, including five new flute concerti since 2000. He is artistic director of the Capitol Hill Chamber Music Festival in Washington, DC, the Black Hawk Chamber Music Festival in the Midwest and the Salish Sea Early Music Festival in the Pacific Northwest. He can "play many superstar flutists one might name under the table" according to the New York Times and is “The Flute Master” (headline) according to the Boston Globe.