Jimmy Owens: Musician and Supporter
Jimmy Owens: Musician and Supporter
Pay. Pension. Protection. Process. The time is now!
Pay. Pension. Protection. Process. The time i…
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Jazz musicians playing in major
New York City clubs are not guaranteed fair pay, do not receive healthcare benefits and
often retire in poverty.

NYC’s Birdland, Blue Note, Dizzy’s Club Coca-Cola, the Iridium, the Jazz Standard and the Village Vanguard refuse to pay into a pension fund that would allow jazz artists to retire with dignity. Sign the petition below and tell the club owners to do right by the musicians who make them rich. Local 802 American Federation of Musicians
J4JA Endorsers:
  Prominent Musicians   •   Ron Carter   •   Jimmy Owens   •   Joe Lovano   •   John Pizzarelli   •   Bucky Pizzarelli   •   Dave Liebman   •   Bertha Hope   •   Bernard Purdie   •   Bob Cranshaw   •   Randy Weston   •   Janet Lawson   •   Wycliffe Gordon   •   Kenny Davis   •   Dr. Larry Ridley   •   Gene Perla   •   Seth MacFarlane   •   Rufus Reid   •   James Spaulding   •   Phil Woods   •   David Amram   •   Ed MacEachen   •   Butch Miles   •   Charli Persip   •   Carline Ray   •   Kenny Davis   •   Junior Mance   •   Charles Tolliver   •   Keisha St. Joan   •   Regina Carter   •   James Carter   •   Judi Silvano   •   Jason Moran   •   Supporters in Memoriam   •   Hank Jones   •   Dr. Billy Taylor   •   Jazz Organizations   •   Jazz Foundation of America   •   Andy Kirk Research Foundation   •   Central Brooklyn Jazz Consortium   •   Educational Institutions   •   New School Jazz Department Faculty Committee   •   Rutgers-Newark Master’s Program in Jazz History and Research   •   The Felix E. Grant Jazz Archives at the University of the District of Columbia   •   Writers and Journalists   •   Amiri Baraka   •   Stanley Crouch   •   Gary Giddins   •   Nat Hentoff   •   Dr. Lewis Porter   •   Dan Morgenstern   •   John Chilton   •  

News & Events

J4JA Petitioners Now Over 900!

Hey All:

J4JA! Petitioners have now reached over 900 concerned professional musicians and fans from all over! Here are some recent signers:

Dave Liebman
Helen Merrill
Bernice Watkins
Sean Gough
Gail Hightower
Ayodele Maakheru
Bob Blumenthal
Regina Carter
Laurence Donohue-Greene

We are building steam!

Keep up the good work!

Best,

Jimmy Owens
Bob Cranshaw
J4JA!

Work for Free? Not!

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.”

Building Trust

How the Union is Stepping Up Its Justice for Jazz Artists! Campaign

by Todd Bryant Weeks

When we regard our AFM local with an unclouded eye, one of the things with which we must come to terms is the notion that despite our shared vision of a democratic, unbiased body that serves all of its members equally; despite the fact that Local 802 has always been an integrated local; despite the fact that over the years 802 has bucked societal trends by having integrated governing boards; and despite the fact that in recent decades the local has reached out to jazz artists with the formation of a Jazz Advisory Committee – despite all this, the local is still learning how best to advocate for those who play vernacular music, and for our members of color.

One way 802 can achieve greater advocacy for these performers is by providing access to meaningful benefits.

For those older members who are not vested in the AFM pension fund, getting retirement benefits is an unlikely scenario, even for those who are still working.

Still, most elders I’ve spoken with are in favor of our Justice for Jazz Artists campaign, which seeks to provide a pension for jazz performers where no benefits have been previously available: the New York City clubs. The campaign has begun to gather momentum this summer and we expect to really ramp it up this fall.

Historically, musicians have rarely enjoyed union benefits while working in clubs. Even when union contacts exist, no artist works at any one club with enough frequency to secure eligibility in either the Local 802 Health Benefits Plan or the AFM pension fund from that employment alone.

Club owners have also found various ways to get around agreements, especially if they are conducting a cash business, which is typical for many.

In order for jazz musicians to have access to benefits, more of their work from different sources of employment and from a wider number of venues needs to be organized. The union has successfully organized some resident jazz orchestras, several tours and bandleaders, as well as teaching employment. For those receiving some contributions already, adding benefits from the clubs would be another important step towards a meaningful retirement package. For those who have no benefits, this could be a solid first step towards vesting in a strong and healthy national pension plan.

JAZZ TAKES BACK SEAT

When the AFM was at its peak membership in the 1950’s, vernacular music like jazz took a back seat to the concert field and Broadway, and the union’s neglect of the jazz field was often perceived by musicians as being anti-black.

The bassist and educator Dr. Larry Ridley recalls, “I’ve been in the union since 1960. As African-American musicians, we always had to fight to get the respect we deserved, even within our own union. Black musicians back then looked at the union as being insensitive to our needs – even as locals in every town, big and small, still demanded dues on every gig we played.”

This climate of indifference began to change in the 1980’s, as then 802 President John Glasel, who was a Broadway musician, worked to repeal the daunting cabaret laws that hamstrung musicians by prohibiting small venues and restaurants from hiring more than three performers at a time, and by excluding percussion and horn players from many gigs.

In the early 1990’s, Jimmy Owens, Benny Powell, Bob Cranshaw and Jamil Nasser formed the Local 802 Jazz Advisory Committee to address the inequities that had plagued jazz performers who were unionized – and those who weren’t but who wanted to take advantage of collective bargaining agreements and benefits programs.

Jimmy Owens remembers it this way. “It was a case of benign neglect,” Owens said. “That’s a nice way of putting it. The union and the musicians didn’t really look to secure the kinds of protections that should have been made available to all musicians. And, what was worse, the pension fund was kept a closely guarded secret.”

As the clubs foundered in the 1960’s, some jazz artists were able to make a living by working in studio bands, recording jingles, or playing in pit orchestras. Others sought refuge in Europe, where state-funded venues and a healthy appreciation for American vernacular music had created a vibrant, and expanding, jazz scene. Many musicians felt that both the country and the union had turned away from them.

A decade later, in an attempt to bring some equity to the New York club scene, the Jazz Advisory Committee, with the enormous help and support of New York City Assemblyman Herman “Denny” Farrell Jr. as well as upstate legislators George Maziarz and Joseph Morrelle, succeeded in getting a bill passed in Albany that allowed for an abatement of the sales tax normally charged on admission to small venues.

Like the earlier Turkus Award (the forgiven 1963 Broadway ticket tax utilized for Broadway employee benefits and still in effect today) the door tax dollars were now free to be contributed to the AFM Pension Fund.

The clubs, especially Birdland, the Blue Note, Iridium and the Jazz Standard, all agreed to support the 2007 lobbying effort by the union, but when the law was passed, the club owners balked.

Some felt that they would be deemed “employers” through their association with the fund, and thus would be liable for state statutory benefits like unemployment, workers’ comp, and disability insurance.

Others simply refused to participate, stonewalling any attempts by Local 802 to seek their co-operation.

Since the law as written did not actually compel the owners to do anything, the club owners were not violating any laws by refusing to redirect the tax. Even after the union successfully addressed the statutory benefits piece of the puzzle, allowing for a scenario where contributions could be made even as business in the clubs went on as usual, owners have yet to agree to sit down and discuss a resolution with the union.

Again, the jazz musicians found themselves on the outside looking in.

This summer, Local 802 hopes to move hearts and minds on this issue with two simple words – “Justice” and “Jazz.”

At this writing, the Jazz Advisory Committee has gathered over 800 signatures of prominent jazz artists in support of the campaign, and has put together a growing coalition of endorsers including the Jazz Ministry at St. Peter’s Church, New York City Central Labor Council, Jazz Foundation of America, New School Jazz Department Faculty Committee, Greater New York Labor-Religion Coalition and prominent music writers, including Nat Hentoff, Dan Morgenstern and Gary Giddins.

WE HAVE AN OBLIGATION

For some artists for whom these efforts may be too little, too late, there must be continued advocacy.

If they are unable to access basic benefits programs due to past inequities, then we all have an obligation to these senior members of our musical community; at the very least we should do what we can to promote their music and their legacy and ensure their comfort and security in their later years.

For those younger musicians who work night after night in local clubs with no benefits, Justice for Jazz Artists will have a real and lasting impact.

J4JA! Update

Over 800 musicians have signed our Justice for Jazz Artists! (J4JA!) petition to get benefits in the NY area jazz clubs.

Most have come in via the J4JA website, the Broadway pit orchestras, and a Constant Contact mailing from earlier this month. Many signatures have also been procured by musicians.

Recent prominent signers include:

Regina Carter James Carter David Amram Bob Wilber

Phil Woods James Spaulding Rudresh Mahanthappa

Judi Silvano  Nicholas Payton  Phil Woods

Organist, DJ and Local 802 Member Jon Hammond came through with streaming video and KYOU radio spots, and some timely postings on the web, which have had a definite impact.

Thanks Jon!

http://tinyurl.com/mmyst8

http://www.viddler.com/explore/h…

Justice for Jazz Artists Facebook Cause page has 115 members and is growing daily.  If you are on Facebook, join the cause and get your frinds to join as well.

We are negotiating with Judson Memorial Church (in Washington Square Park) so that they may rent us space for an NYC rally at the end of September

Our letter to former NYC mayor Honorable David N. Dinkins is signed and ready to go. We are also preparing letters for Chairman of House Ways and Means Committee Charles Rangle and other prominent NY political figures

Here is an updated list of our Coalition Endorsers:

American Federation of Musicians, Tom Lee, President; Sam Folio, Secretary Treasurer
Local 802, American Federation of Musicians
Local 802 Jazz Advisory Committee
Local 802 Theater Committee
Jazz Foundation of America
Greater New York Labor-Religion Coalition, Rabbi Michael Feinberg Executive Director
New York City Central Labor Council
Jazz Ministry at St. Peter’s Church, Amandus J. Derr, Senior Pastor
New School Jazz Department Faculty Committee
Andy Kirk Research Foundation
Rutgers-Newark Master’s Program in Jazz History and Research
Dr. Lewis Porter, Jazz Historian and Educator
Dan Morgenstern, Jazz Historian and former editor of Down Beat
Amiri Baraka, Poet, Writer, Activist*
John Chilton, Jazz Historian
Loren Schoenberg, Jazz Writer, Archivist*
Stanley Crouch, Journalist, Jazz Historian*
Maxine Gordon (widow of Dexter Gordon) *
Gary Giddins, Jazz Journalist
Nat Hentoff, Jazz Journalist
NY City Councilwoman Diana Reyna (D-34, Brooklyn)
NY City Councilman Eric N. Gioia (D-26, Queens) *
NY City Councilwoman Jessica Lappin (D-5, Manhattan) *

*signed on in the last two weeks

Thanks for all of your hard work, and for supporting J4JA!

Spread the Word!

Best,

Todd Bryant Weeks
J4JA

Musicians and Union Ratchet Up Their Campaign

Originally in the June issue of Allegro:

Musicians and union ratchet up their campaign.
As Charlie Parker wrote, now’s the time! This summer, Local 802 and the Local 802 Jazz Advisory Committee will be heating up their campaign to win pension for jazz musicians.
We broke this story in the January issue of Allegro, but here’s the recap. In 2007, thanks to our lobbying efforts, New York State eliminated the 8.375 percent tax on admission to jazz clubs and other venues. Club owners no longer have to pay this tax to the state. The goal is to use these funds for musicians’ benefits instead
“We believe this goal is achievable,” said Local 802 Recording Vice-President Bill Dennison. “We spent nearly two years convincing New York State to forego the sales tax on jazz clubs just as they did on Broadway in the 1960′s. It’s only fair that this money now be used for the benefit of musicians and we’re determined to make that happen.”
This former sales tax is money that clubs previously had to pay the state, so it was built into their budget. It’s only 80 cents on every $10 the club collects, and it opens up the possibility for meaningful benefits for jazz artists and other musicians as well.
Dennison added, “We’re not seeking to change how the clubs do business, nor are we changing the relationship between the clubs and the musicians they hire. We are simply taking a stream of money that formerly went to the state and directing it to musicians benefit programs.”
Currently, musicians are circulating a petition urging the clubs to sit down with Local 802 to discuss how best to utilize the former tax revenues. Supporters include Ron Carter, Hank Jones, Joe Lovano and nearly 200 others.
To add your name to the list, or to find out how you can help in this effort, contact the Local 802 Jazz Department at (212) 245-4802, ext. 185 or e-mail JazzDept@Local802afm.org to give us permission to use your name on the petition.
Our plan is to network around this issue using all available modes of communication, including Allegro articles, phone banking, e-mail newsletters, blogging, text messaging and face-to-face meetings with musicians, coalition partners and jazz fans.
A coalition of local organizations and prominent endorsers is being put together to provide wide-based support. The Jazz Advisory Committee is currently seeking coalition partners to join in this fight for justice in the clubs.
As the year progresses, 802 will move from internal organizing to a more public campaign. A new Web site, www.JusticeForJazzArtists.org, will be up and running this month. For the moment, see our link on the front page.
Benefits for jazz artists: it’s the right thing to do!
FAIR STANDARDS
In addition to the jazz club tax campaign, the union is working to achieve fair standards for a number of smaller live music venues that may not have the same resources as the larger and more financially stable clubs and cabarets.
Fair standards means an end to the notorious “pay-to-play” venues as well as those that charge for the use of sound equipment or require musicians to guarantee an audience.
Local 802 is now seeking to co-ordinate with the many, often younger, musicians who work downtown or in Brooklyn to attempt to determine the most effective mode of advocacy.
Working with existing artists and community groups to build new coalitions, the goal is to educate musicians and demand higher standards, while simultaneously encouraging club owners to support live music by providing incentives ranging from public endorsements from artists, advocacy groups and fans, to encouragement in the form of tax breaks and subsidies that support live music.
To find out more about this effort or to get involved, contact Claudia Copeland in the Organizing Department at Ccopeland@Local802afm.org.

As Charlie Parker wrote, now’s the time! This summer, Local 802 and the Local 802 Jazz Advisory Committee will be heating up their campaign to win pension for jazz musicians.

We broke this story in the January issue of Allegro, but here’s the recap. In 2007, thanks to our lobbying efforts, New York State eliminated the 8.375 percent tax on admission to jazz clubs and other venues. Club owners no longer have to pay this tax to the state. The goal is to use these funds for musicians’ benefits instead

“We believe this goal is achievable,” said Local 802 Recording Vice-President Bill Dennison. “We spent nearly two years convincing New York State to forego the sales tax on jazz clubs just as they did on Broadway in the 1960′s. It’s only fair that this money now be used for the benefit of musicians and we’re determined to make that happen.”

Pianist Danny Mixon, who joined Local 802 in 1993, jams at the annual "Great Night in Harlem" benefit for the Jazz Foundation. Photo by Enid Farber.

Pianist Danny Mixon, who joined Local 802 in 1993, jams at the annual "Great Night in Harlem" benefit for the Jazz Foundation. Photo by Enid Farber.

This former sales tax is money that clubs previously had to pay the state, so it was built into their budget. It’s only 80 cents on every $10 the club collects, and it opens up the possibility for meaningful benefits for jazz artists and other musicians as well.

Dennison added, “We’re not seeking to change how the clubs do business, nor are we changing the relationship between the clubs and the musicians they hire. We are simply taking a stream of money that formerly went to the state and directing it to musicians benefit programs.”

Currently, musicians are circulating a petition urging the clubs to sit down with Local 802 to discuss how best to utilize the former tax revenues. Supporters include Ron Carter, Hank Jones, Joe Lovano and nearly 200 others.

To add your name to the list, or to find out how you can help in this effort, contact the Local 802 Jazz Department at (212) 245-4802, ext. 185; sign the petition online; or e-mail JazzDept@Local802afm.org to give us permission to use your name on the petition.

Our plan is to network around this issue using all available modes of communication, including Allegro articles, phone banking, e-mail newsletters, blogging, text messaging and face-to-face meetings with musicians, coalition partners and jazz fans.

A coalition of local organizations and prominent endorsers is being put together to provide wide-based support. The Jazz Advisory Committee is currently seeking coalition partners to join in this fight for justice in the clubs.

Fair Standards

In addition to the jazz club tax campaign, the union is working to achieve fair standards for a number of smaller live music venues that may not have the same resources as the larger and more financially stable clubs and cabarets.

Fair standards means an end to the notorious “pay-to-play” venues as well as those that charge for the use of sound equipment or require musicians to guarantee an audience.

Local 802 is now seeking to co-ordinate with the many, often younger, musicians who work downtown or in Brooklyn to attempt to determine the most effective mode of advocacy.

Working with existing artists and community groups to build new coalitions, the goal is to educate musicians and demand higher standards, while simultaneously encouraging club owners to support live music by providing incentives ranging from public endorsements from artists, advocacy groups and fans, to encouragement in the form of tax breaks and subsidies that support live music.

To find out more about this effort or to get involved, contact Claudia Copeland in the Organizing Department at Ccopeland@Local802afm.org.

J4JA Petitioners Increase to over 800

This week we received an unprecedented 300+ petitioners! Included are these folks:

  • James Spaulding
  • Judi Silvano
  • Chris Lightcap
  • Phil Woods
  • David Amram
  • Maxine Roach (daughter of Max)
  • Ed MacEachen
  • Mike LeDonne
  • Butch Miles
  • NY City Councilmember Eric Gioia (D-26, Queens)
  • Amiri Baraka
  • Stanley Crouch

If you haven’t yet done this, we urge you to sign the online petition — and please encourage your friends to do so as well.

This is not limited to musicians–it’s for fans, friends, and people who just like to see a little social justice now and again!

We also wrote letters to several local politicians, including David Dinkins and Charles Rangel. If you know a local elected official, encourage them to add their name to our list of Coalition Endorsers. They can this by signing the petition.

We have secured a spot for our rally in September. More later on this topic.

Jon Hammond on J4JA

Jon Hammond writes:

Here is an excerpt and photos of the very important issues being dealt with head on at today’s Jazz Advisory Board meeting at AFM Local 802 Musicians Union. A ‘who’s who’ of veteran jazz musicians attended and also young pro jazz musicians, including:
drummer BERNARD PURDIE, JUNIOR MANCE, BOB CRANSHAW, JIMMY OWENS, Local 802 Asst to the President JOEL LeFEVRE, Local 802 Recording Vice President BILL DENNISON, CHARLES TOLLIVER, BENNY POWELL, 802 Jazz Rep. TODD BRYANT WEEKS, MATTHEW PLUMMER, RUDY SHERIFF LAWLESS, KEITH DAMES, COLIN DEAN and more. Things are just getting rolling so I personally encourage professional jazz musicians and fans and supporters of America’s Music and Musicians to get involved now.

More Background on J4JA Campaign

Jrmance

Junior Mance - Photo credit Jon Hammond

For more information about the history of the admissions sales tax, see this comprehensive article from Local 802′s Allegro.

J4JA Adds Facebook Cause Page

Justice for Jazz Artists! has recently added a Facebook “Cause” page.  The social networking site allows individuals to connect with like-minded “Facebook friends” and share information, photos and links to other sites.

The J4JA Facebook  page has already quadrupled in membership in its first week in existence, and we expect users to access it as a way to find out information about J4JA events and other announcements, even as they post their thoughts and ideas about how we can make the NY jazz scene a richer, more vibrant place that puts fairness at the top of the list.

To access the Justice for Jazz Artists! cause page on facebook, you must first be a member of Facebook.  Joining is simple.  Just click here
and follow the easy instructions. Once you’ve joined, do an internal search for “Causes” and then look for the cause Justice for Jazz Artists!

Fair Standards for NYC Music Clubs

While larger and more financially stable clubs and cabaret spaces offer reasonable compensation to performing musicians, there are a host of smaller venues that do not. The abuse ranges from notorious pay-to-play venues to those that charge for the use of sound equipment or require musicians to guarantee an audience.

What can be done? What are “fair standards” for the treatment of musicians? Give us your feedback as we work to establish a “fair standards code” for these music venues.

Send an email to jazzdept@local802afm.org or call 212 245 4802 X185.

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