THE GLOBAL JAZZ NETWORK

a worldwide movement @the destination where great Jazz minds meet

ParlorJazz! Inc.
  • Brooklyn
  • United States
Share 

ParlorJazz! Inc.'s Friends

Music

Loading…

ParlorJazz! Inc.'s Discussions

ParlorJazz! Inc.'s Groups

 

ParlorJazz! Inc.'s Page

Comment Wall (2 comments)

You need to be a member of THE GLOBAL JAZZ NETWORK to add comments!

Join this social network

At 3:38pm on January 2, 2009, THE GLOBAL JAZZ NETWORK said…
Hi Jim

Happy New Year!
The competition is an online competiton.
The public and the judges will be votin on line.
In regard to your venue. The gig could be in 2010 because we don't know who is going to win nor where in the world they live. So you may want to consider that. If you do recinsider, you will recieve a hugh amount of PR and other opportunies and your logo will be linked high profile jazz name sponsors.

Have a splendid 2009!

Tamm E
At 3:33pm on December 21, 2008, THE GLOBAL JAZZ NETWORK said…
Give me a qoute for the new main page.
and if you can let other folks know about
TGJN accross the board. It will be greatly
appreciated. 2009 is bringing a vocal jazz
competition tot he table. Would love it if
you would be a venue sponsor for the second
prize winner as well as judges for the competition.

Let me know ASAP!

Profile Information

What is your profession?
Promoter, Agent, Visual Artist, Listener
What Instrument Do you Play?
none
Where Are you located?
Brooklyn, NY
How did you find out about TGJN?
Tamm E Hunt
About Me:
Bringing new ears to Americas home-grown music played /sung by the best Jazz musicians in NYC!
Website:
http://www.parlorjazz.com

"The best Jazz bargain in NYC!" Bill Francis, Entertainment/music journalist

ABOUT PARLORJAZZ! INC.
Still swingin' going on seven years, we continue to lure the best Jazz musicians to our Clinton Hill/Fort Greene home. While Jazz is the primary music played here, the musicians are free to stretch out across R&B, Funk, Neo-Soul, Nu-Jazz, Spoken-word, Blues and a bit of Gospel too! The audience is always very enthusiastic! Word of mouth, local city listings, internet postings and our website have attracted the attention of Jazz enthusiasts/musicians both locally and internationally.

Once a month we offer our home as a venue for jazz musicians to play, sing and swing, surrounded by contemporary and African art. Meet and hear some of the best jazz musicians that NYC has to offer in an atmosphere that is dedicated to bringing the jazz experience and its musicians together with the community. The musicians appreciate that we're supplying a unique venue that attracts a new audience for them in which they are the "main focus." The music and musicians alike are respected! The audience is as diverse as NYC, ranging in ages from 7 - 86, every cultural background and profession. Both the musicians and audiences love that "up close and personal" feeling of being "at the house party of a good friend" experiencing live jazz.
Before and between music sets, ParlorJazz! provides a wonderfully landscaped, softly lit, bi-level, backyard garden/gazebo area with a waterfall! When the weather gets chilly, we provide a warm chiminea fire in the gazebo for folks to sit around, offering a secluded, welcoming space to hang out, network, meet the musicians and new friends. For more information on our upcoming schedule or to see who's performed in the past, check out our website listed below on this page.
 
 

About

Member Quotes About TGJN

Hi Tamm E!

I was just saying that you knocked this out of the park with TGJN. We have needed something like this for so long and I am telling my friends about this. I said that it is sort of like a myspace for jazz but it is actually so much more. This is real. The people here truly love jazz and we know people like that are not your average people.

I have felt for a long time that straight-ahead jazz has been slipping away from us. I have hope now that there will be a resurgence (or shall I say an insurgency:-) to bring this baby back full force!

You just knocked it out of the park. Thanks again.

xoxo,
Janie

Badge

Loading…

RSS

A Rock Royal Finds Himself In The Digital Age

His father was a Beatle, but Dhani Harrison wanted a musical project that didn't carry the burden of his family name. So he started a band called thenewno2, where he's created a sound and a promotional strategy that is all his own.

Hafez Nazeri: From Iran, Music Beyond Politics

On Nov. 14, Hafez Nazeri will headline at Carnegie Hall. The young Iranian musician has been attracting attention for "Sounds of Peace," an East-meets-West program inspired by a progressive political vision. Or is it?

Marin Alsop's Shared Musical Roots

The Baltimore Symphony conductor chooses a season of music built on the belief that understanding where we come from, and celebrating diversity, can create a sense of continuity, history and belonging — not to mention some great concerts.

Between Albums, Rivers Cuomo Digs Up Solo Work

Since Weezer's debut in 1994, the band has released six more albums, gone through a re-organization, and earned a devoted following. Their new album is called Raditude. Last year, Rivers Cuomo, Weezer's lead singer, guitarist and principal songwriter, released two solo CDs of songs that didn't make it onto the band's albums.

Interview: Thurston Moore Of Sonic Youth

Thurston Moore is a musician who, aside from being in the legendary band Sonic Youth, has collaborated with everyone from Glenn Branca to Lydia Lunch to Mike Watt. For Moore, Internet culture doesn't mean replacing music experience so much as reconfiguring it.

Swagger Like Us: Thoughts on Women in Music, 2000-09

At the end of the '90s, I got excited when I realized that young girls no longer needed to hang out with creepy record-collector guys in order to find out about cool music. Information was out there for everyone to access equally via the Internet. Knowledge about obscure records could no longer be hoarded and used as power.

Music Of Late Musician Explores Haitian Culture

The late Alan Lomax brings the sound of Haiti to life. Recordings that Lomax made decades ago are now being released as a 10- disc box set, along with a journal and other artifacts from his trip to Haiti. Host Michel Martin speaks with Gage Averill, an ethnomusicologist and a professor of at the University of Toronto. Averill was the project's curator and is joined by Ellen Harold, Alan Lomax's niece who also worked on the project.

A Life Of Craft Beer And Free Jazz

Some people know Bruno Johnson as the proprietor of the well-respected out-jazz record label Okka Disk. Others know him as the owner of the Palm Tavern and the Sugar Maple in Milwaukee, Wis. Talk about your jazz bars.

Quiet Anguish In Elgar's Cello Concerto

The concerto was the English composer's last major work for orchestra, as well as his most confessional. In this recording, cellist Jacqueline Du Pre gives one of her finest performances, exposing both gentleness in the pain and an edge to the tenderness.

Doveman: Soft-Spoken But Upbeat

With the release of the 2005's The Acrobat, 2007's With My Left Hand I Raise the Dead and an album in which he covers the soundtrack to the '80s movie Footloose, Thomas Bartlett established Doveman as a true sleeper. His third album of original material with Doveman, The Conformist, is a testament to his soft-spoken style. This time around, though, he adds flourishes of upbeat synths, drums and catchy choruses.

New Music From Long-Dead People

In 'What's in a Song,' our occasional series from the Western Folklife Center, we learn of one man's quest to channel the music of the Aztecs and Mayans through new compositions that combine inspiration with scholarly research.

A Raelette On Ray Charles

As a backup singer, Angela Workman was one of Weekend Edition host Liane Hansen's first music interviews. For Hansen's 20th anniversary show, Workman spoke about the legacy of Ray Charles, and what she's been up to since.

Music For Sting's Favorite Season

For the former Police frontman, the winter months are a time for imagination and reflection. His new album, If on a Winter's Night, takes traditional songs from his native British Isles as its starting point. Here, he performs one of them and speaks with Scott Simon.

Out Of Paul Simon's Shadow, A Son Rises

With the help of legendary Nashville session musicians and a little paternal assistance from Paul Simon, Harper Simon has just released his solo debut. But don't be fooled by his pedigree: The younger musician has his own sound.

New York City Opera Rises From Turmoil

A longtime scrappy alternative to the plush Metropolitan Opera, City Opera struggles to make a comeback with a new general manager, a renovated theater and a shorter but smarter season of operas.
 

© 2009   Created by THE GLOBAL JAZZ NETWORK on Ning.   Create Your Own Social Network

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Privacy  |  Terms of Service

Sign in to chat!