Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

J4JA! Jam Session a Grand Success

Friday, August 28th, 2009

The Justice for Jazz Artists! Jam Session on August 17th was a grand success.  A hearty congratulations to all who took part!

Two Mondays ago, Local 802, the Jazz Foundation of America and the 802 Jazz Advisory Committee hosted a Justice for Jazz Artists! Jam Session and Kickoff Event to raise awareness around the current campaign to bring benefits to musicians who work in NYC area jazz clubs.

The award winning filmmaker/musician Ron Grunhut created a splendid high definition video of the event, which features interview clips of Randy Weston, Dr. Billy Taylor, Benny Powell, Bernard Purdie, Junior Mance, Reggie Workman, Bob Cranshaw, Sean Lyons and Jimmy Owens, among others.

Featured in the J4JA! video are snippets of performances by Jimmy Owens, Benny Powell, Sean Lyons, Danny Mixon, Kenny Davis, Bernard Purdie, Guadencio Thiago de Mello, Vinnie Knight, Keisha St. Joan, Wade Barnes, Reggie Workman, Bertha Hope, Fran McIntyre and about 2o other performers.

The soundtrack for the video selected by filmmaker Grunhut, was, appropriately, the bluesy “Justice for Jazz Artists,” composed by trumpeter Owens.

The video is about 5 minutes in length, and will be posted on YouTube on or around September 14, 2009.

The Justice for Jazz Artists! campaign is gearing up for future events as we move our campaign into the public sphere this fall.

Local 802 and J4JA! have already been in contact with club owners and NYC political leaders in an effort to resolve issues surrounding the redirection of forgiven NY State tax dollars towards the American Federation of Musicians and Employers’ Pension Fund.

The tax dollars can be painlessly redirected from door admission charges towards benefits for performers who work in the club on any given night. The tax money is about .84 cents of every $10 collected at the door.

Club owners must comply with the intentions of state lawmakers, who passed a law forgiving the door sales tax in 2007, and allowing it to go to performers’ benefits.

Thus far, the clubs have refused to do so.

The Justice for Jazz Artists! campaign seeks to change that!

To volunteer in this important effort to help jazz artists in NY State, please email us or call the Local 802 Jazz Department at 212 245 4802 X185.

1,200 Signers

Wednesday, August 12th, 2009

We’ve reached 1,200 signers to the J4JA petition! If you haven’t signed yet, do it now.

Also, we recently received the endorsement of former NY City Mayor David Dinkins! Other recent endorsers include Michael O’Neill, Stanley Banks, Teddy Campbell, Montez Coleman, Jason Thomas, Larry Clothier, Hiroshi Itsuno, George Benson.

J4JA! NYC Kick-Off Event and Jam Session!

Wednesday, August 5th, 2009

Invited performers: Billy Taylor; Hank Jones; Bob Cranshaw; Jimmy Owens; Junior Mance; Keisha St. Joan; Lewis Nash; Bernard Purdie and many others…

Monday, August 17th 6-10PM
322 West 48th Street (8th/9th)
NY, NY

This is a FREE Kick-Off Event for the Justice for Jazz Artists Campaign to get benefits for jazz musicians who work in NYC clubs.

Fans Welcome!

All Musicians and Audience Members will required to sign a release upon entry, as this session is being filmed. No partcipation without RSVP!!

RSVP: 212 245 4802 X 158 (Claudia) or email us

See You There!

Best,
Todd Bryant Weeks

New J4JA Logos

Monday, July 27th, 2009

You can download any of these images for use on your site or e-mails as graphic links to our campaign site www.justiceforjazzartists.org to get more musicians AND music lovers to sign onto the campaign.

We put together a few sizes and looks playing off the print logo. Just pick the ones you like best. Simply right click the image to download the graphic file.

J4JA-logo1

J4JA-logo 2

J4JA-logo 3

J4JA-logo 4

J4JA-logo 5

J4JA-logo 6

If you have any problem downloading the files please send an email to [email hidden; JavaScript is required] or call Todd Weeks (212 245 4802 X185) or Claudia Copeland (212 245 4802 X158) at the union and we will be happy to assist you.

Work for Free? Not!

Thursday, July 16th, 2009

This short article details how the NYC musicians’ union was able to get payment for a young group of jazz performers in 2007. The article originally appeared in Allegro,
Volume CVIII, No. 2, in
February, 2008

by Todd Bryant Weeks

Twenty-four-year-old Colin Dean is an 802 member, jazz bassist, bandleader, composer, and a recent graduate of the New School’s Jazz and Contemporary Music program. And now he can add one more title to that list of accomplishments: Advocate for Fair and Just Treatment for Jazz Musicians.

Dean, who graduated from the New School in 2006, stepped up to the plate along with a group of other student performers who were being denied compensation for a session they completed for the New School, which was released by EMI Records. The January 2006 date, a collaborative effort between New School students and faculty, yielded an arrangement of the popular Christmas carol “Joy to the World,” seemingly intended for the winter holiday market. Dean and his peers were given no information as to how the music would be used, let alone marketed, and no contracts were ever presented. The recording was apparently to be entered in a competition. In November 2006, a CD entitled “Universidad Navidena” appeared on the EMI subsidiary, EMI Televisa Music — and the track was included. None of the students who participated in the session were ever informed of the release. Needless to say, no one was paid.

Ten months later, Lenart Krecic, who was also a New School student at the time, was trolling on the Internet, and he found the CD for sale on BarnesandNoble.com. “My arrangement of ‘Joy to the World’ was there on the Web page as a sample track for the CD,” remembers Krecic. “I listened to it in a state of shock.”

Dean approached the New School Administration who were “very apologetic,” but seemed unable to take any action to help their students get paid. “They put us in touch with their legal department,” says Dean, “who told us that this was an educational recording and that therefore no one would be compensated.” The students were not happy with that response. “We made the recordings during winter break,” Dean says, “there was no class whatsoever associated with the work we did.”

Krecic and Dean had been through a class taught by New School instructor Jimmy Owens, “Business Aspects of the Music Industry.” Owens is co-chair of Local 802’s Jazz Advisory Committee and is that committee’s liaison to the union’s Executive Board. The students asked Owens about the issue and he suggested they contact Local 802’s Recording Department. It was verified that EMI was an AFM signatory and that the collective bargaining agreement between EMI and the AFM trumped any agreement — or lack thereof — that the New School had with its students. “The New School even went as far as to ask us to sign a release,” remembers New School jazz major Emanuel Harrold, who played drums on the date. “They were apparently trying to find a way to pay us. But what we found out was that going through 802 was much better for us in the long run.”

802 Recording Department Supervisor Jay Schaffner got on the case, and after much back and forth between EMI and the New School, EMI eventually agreed to cut checks totaling $7,419.74. Pension and HBP contributions raised the payment to $8,484.72.

Dean credits Jimmy Owens for teaching the students the nuts and bolts of the music business. “The musicians on the session,” Dean says, “knew that what was going on was wrong. It was obvious that the New School administration was not really on top of the rules governing recording — particularly in regard to contracts. We all learned something in the end.”

But what did the students take away?

“Now I know that you should be wary of anybody who doesn’t come forward with a contract,” says Dean. “With [the recording industry’s] teams of lawyers and all the capital that they command, the deck is always stacked against musicians from the onset.”

Is Dean already jaded at the ripe old age of 24?

“No,” he says, smiling, “I’m just trying to get my music heard. And get paid for my work. Just like anybody else.”