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Jazz Generations Initiative Connects Jazz Scenes In New York & New Orleans, Announces Initial Programming

Jazz Generations Initiative Connects Jazz Scenes In New York & New Orleans, Announces Initial Programming
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The Jazz Generations Initiative (JGI) is an immersive new program that will cultivate and grow the rich and vibrant jazz scenes in New York and New Orleans. Overall, the JGI’s programs will ultimately span major concerts in both cities, a residency program, a jam session series, an innovative publication and much more, all geared toward expanding jazz scholarship, performance opportunities, diverse listening audiences, and archival preservation. Operating with support from the Jazz Foundation of America, the JGI is backed by a three- year, $5.8 million grant from the Mellon Foundation — part of a broader $35 million commitment by Mellon toward preserving America's first original art form.
INTRODUCING: THE JAZZ GENERATIONS INITIATIVE

NEW IMMERSIVE, MULTIDISCIPLINARY PROGRAM UNITES, PRESERVES & CELEBRATES JAZZ SCENES IN NEW YORK AND NEW ORLEANS

Backed by the Jazz Foundation of America, Funded by the Mellon Foundation


The Jazz Generations Initiative, an immersive new program that will cultivate and grow the rich and vibrant jazz scenes in New York and New Orleans, has announced a diverse slate of programming that kicks off with events this week in both cities.

Overall, the JGI’s programs will ultimately span major concerts in both cities, a residency program, a jam session series, an innovative publication and much more, all geared toward expanding jazz scholarship, performance opportunities, diverse listening audiences, and archival preservation. Operating with support from the Jazz Foundation of America, the JGI is backed by a three-year, $5.8 million grant from the Mellon Foundation — part of a broader $35 million commitment by Mellon toward preserving America's first original art form.

The JGI aims to preserve jazz legacies and spark new possibilities in improvised music and beyond through interdisciplinary and intergenerational performances and events, a multimedia publication, a comprehensive jazz listings calendar for both New York and New Orleans, innovative jazz studies scholarship, artist—and scholar-in-residence programs, educational initiatives and an oral history project. At every step, the initiative–dedicated to presenting “jazz in motion,” often through an interdisciplinary lens–will be entirely shaped and guided by the leadership of artists, writers, and scholars.

The Jazz Generations Initiative is led by Dr. Courtney Bryan, a composer, pianist, MacArthur fellow and professor of music at Tulane University, and Dr. Robert G. O’Meally, founder of the Center for Jazz Studies at Columbia University. The JGI will operate under the aegis of the Jazz Study Group—an interdisciplinary collective of scholars, artists and critics founded by O’Meally in 1995—that has transformed jazz scholarship across three decades. That incubator of art and ideas will now engage the public more broadly.

“An outgrowth of the Jazz Study Group, our Jazz Generations Initiative celebrates the dynamic cultures and communities of New Orleans and New York while facilitating spaces for creativity and experimentation,” Dr. Bryan said. “Jazz teaches us values of listening, of community, and freedom, and with our interdisciplinary and intergenerational initiative, we aim to build upon the wisdom of our elders and perspectives of our youth as we collectively imagine new futures and bold possibilities.”

The JGI seeks to embrace the jazz tradition as a model for collaboration and improvisation across space and place. “Jazz has always been about connection—between disciplines, between generations, between communities,” said Dr. O’Meally. “With the Jazz Generations Initiative, we are creating a bridge between New York and New Orleans—a living network where artists and scholars can listen, learn, and carry forward the transformative stories and sounds of this music.”

While expanding the art form’s live and in-person footprint across both cities, and engaging wider audiences as well as student populations, the initiative will be complemented by a strong digital presence to broaden the JGI’s global reach. In the coming months, the JGI website will grow to encompass a multimedia publication, a comprehensive live music listings resource for both New York and New Orleans, a podcast, and extensive video and social media content from both cities.

The JGI’s New Orleans programs begin Wednesday, Dec. 3, with a Deep Dish Listening session devoted to D’Angelo’s Voodoo. A program supported by the JGI’s Bamboula Creative Hub in the Treme neighborhood, the listening session will provide an intimate setting for audiences to engage in deep listening and discussion of an entire album.

Live programs in New York begin on Thursday, Dec. 4, with the inaugural installment of the SOUNDOFF SESSIONS at Cafe Erzulie in Brooklyn. The Trap Music Orchestra will perform a set of music blending elements of the Black American music tradition; DJ Late4dinner will spin vinyl records; and the evening will culminate in an open session where poets, musicians, emcees and artists of all media and disciplines will be invited to participate. The night will be hosted by New York native and versatile emcee JSWISS.

Here’s an overview of what the JGI is planning…

New York City

The JGI’s New York Community Initiative will host a series of free performances and jam sessions at Cafe Erzulie in Bushwick/Bed-Stuy, Brooklyn, artist-curated residencies and quarterly major concerts around the city.

JGI Continuum Residency in New York

Starting in winter 2026, the JGI Continuum Fellowship will convene a rotating group of artists under 50 to curate intergenerational and interdisciplinary performance residencies at venues around New York. Inspired by the Jazz Legacies Fellowship, which honors jazz elders, the JGI Continuum Fellowship is a separate, independently administered program of the JGI, conceived as a next-generation counterpart.

The inaugural cohort of Continuum Fellows includes drummer Savannah Harris, multi-instrumentalist Morgan Guerin, tenor saxophonist James Brandon Lewis, cellist Tomeka Reid, alto saxophonist Godwin Louis, vocalist Tahira Clayton, visual artist Nate Lewis, pianist and vocalist Samora Pinderhughes and pianist David Virelles.

The JGI’s New York programs will also include SOUNDOFF SESSIONS every other week at Cafe Erzulie, and major concerts and satellite events at diverse spaces around the city throughout the year.

JGI Events in New York

Thurs, December 4, 2025 @ 7:00pm THE SOUNDOFF SESSIONS: Trap Music Orchestra @ Cafe Erzulie, 894 Broadway, Brooklyn

The Jazz Generations Initiative presents the Trap Music Orchestra to kick off THE SOUNDOFF SESSIONS, a new series of performances and open jams every other Thursday at Cafe Erzulie. The bandstand opens up after 10:00pm, so musicians, bring your axe. Poets, emcees, dancers, this night is for you too — so come ready to share. Vinyl selections curated by DJ Late4dinner; night hosted by New York native and versatile emcee JSWISS.

About the Trap Music Orchestra: Synchronizing the aural lineage of Black music around the centerpiece of Trap Music, the group is equal parts a time capsule, a mosaic, a lecture, and a party. With a global, multigenerational catalog to recontextualize and refurbish, the Orchestra finds no obstacles when it comes to feeling like a true celebration. Composed of 18-22 Black musicians at any given time, the energy remains enthralling, the improvised moments bring both the element of gleeful surprise and thoughtful reflection, and the on-stage comradery permeates through the crowd.

Thurs, December 18, 2025 @ 7:00pm THE SOUNDOFF SESSIONS: Tyrone Allen II @ Cafe Erzulie, 894 Broadway, Brooklyn

Tyrone Allen II is an exceptional bassist who has played with some of the top contemporaries of his time, including Nicole Glover, Sullivan Fortner, Miki Yamanaka, Kazemde George and myriad others. This SOUNDOFF SESSIONS show becomes an open bandstand after 10:00pm. Vinyl will be spun by DJ Late4dinner; night hosted by New York native and vocal artist Faith Quashie.

New Orleans

Led by Dr. Courtney Bryan, Bamboula: Jazz Studies in Motion is an innovative, interdisciplinary residency, fellowship and creative hub based in New Orleans, Louisiana.

While New Orleans, often referred to as the northernmost Caribbean city, is known for its rich history of music and culture — with people travelling to the city regularly to hear live music and experience the unique culture — there is a desire among artists for more spaces for experimentation away from the pressures of commerce and tourism. Bamboula: Jazz Studies in Motion offers opportunities for gatherings based on experimentation, creativity and interdisciplinary explorations, while drawing inspiration from the city of New Orleans and its connections with the African diaspora, the Global South, and the Gulf South region.

JGI Residencies in New Orleans

The Bamboula Residency program will offer short—and long-term residencies for artists, scholars, and writers at The New Quorum, a creative residence situated in an early 20th century mansion along the Esplanade Ridge National Historic District, hosted by Bamboula and The New Quorum director Gianna Chachere. The Bamboula creative hub, housed at Historic St. Luke’s Episcopal Church, will make space available for local artists and members of the community to stage creative inquiries, workshops, rehearsals and gatherings.

The program will partner with local universities and schools, including Tulane University, Dillard University and Xavier University, and the New Orleans Center for the Creative Arts (NOCCA), as well as community centers, religious institutions, book shops, performance venues, and institutes whose work overlaps with themes of the creative hub and its visiting guest artists and scholars.

Short-Term Residents

  • Brandee Younger, harpist, composer, scholar, and bandleader
  • Allan Mednard, drummer and bandleader
  • Rashaan Carter, bassist and bandleader
  • Maxine Gordon, oral historian and archivist
  • Cory Diane, multimedia artist and scholar

Long-Term Residents

  • Dr. Tim Mangin, ethnomusicologist, composer, Senegalese popular music
  • Dr. Erna Brodber, Jamaican writer, scholar and social activist

JGI Events in New Orleans

Wed, December 3, 2025, 5:30pm-7:00pm Deep Dish Listening: D’Angelo’s Voodoo @ Historic St. Luke's Episcopal Church, 1222 N. Dorgenois St, Gaudet Hall, Cisco Room

Featuring Papa Titos Sompa in conversation with Chrishana Simon Creative Response: Trinity Smith, NOCCA Music: D'Angelo's VoodooLight refreshments provided. Free and open to the public. RSVP HERE

Deep Dish Listening is a community initiative program supported by Bamboula Creative Hub, a part of the Jazz Generations Initiative. The program features renowned musician Papa Titos Sompa, Posse graduate Chrishana Simon, and a visual artist and student from the New Orleans Center for Creative Arts, a public regional, pre-professional arts training center that offers students intensive instruction in the creative arts.

This series provides an intimate setting for audiences to engage in deep listening for an entire album. After listening is over, there will be a dialogue about the album, its connection with the Gulf and Global South, and jazz studies.

Save the dates!

✨ January 14-16, 2026: The Music of Alice Coltrane: Michelle Coltrane, Brandee Younger Trio & the Ashram Singers

Jan. 14: Oral History Presentation, Dixon Annex Recital Hall, Tulane UniversityTulane University, Uptown Campus, Newcomb Circle

‍Jan. 15 – Workshop, New Orleans Center for the Creative Arts, 2800 Chartres Street

Jan. 16 – Concert, New Marigny Theater at Church of Arts and Sciences

2301 Marais Street New Orleans, LA 70117

ABOUT JGI

The JGI teamincludes jazz scholar, Sonny Rollins biographer and University of Saint Joseph professor Dr. Aidan Levy as Program Director; educator, multi-media artist and arts administrator Dr. Denise Frazier as New Orleans Creative Director; writer, educator and organizer Giovanni Russonello as New York Creative Director; musician and arts administrator Faith Quashie as Program Assistant; and a diverse part-time staff of creative practitioners.

A multi-year initiative made possible with support from the Mellon Foundation, the JGI has its roots in the Jazz Study Group, an interdisciplinary collective of jazz studies scholars, artists and critics that has transformed jazz studies across three decades under the stewardship of Dr. Robert G. O’Meally. In full form, the JGI will work to support the jazz community and advance jazz studies while building more diverse audiences through the presentation of intergenerational and interdisciplinary concerts, residencies, jam sessions, listening sessions and other events.

About the Jazz Foundation of America

: For 36 years, the Jazz Foundation of America (JFA) has been keeping jazz, blues, and roots alive by helping the musicians who have played the soundtrack to our lives. With compassion and discretion, the Jazz Foundation makes it possible to pay someone's rent and keep them from eviction or homelessness when illness, accident, or old age prevents them from working. Our social work services and Musicians' Emergency Fund provide housing assistance, pro bono medical care, disaster relief, and financial support to musicians and their families in times of crisis. In the past year, the JFA provided assistance in more than 6,000 cases. Through our Jazz and Blues in the Schools and Gig Fund performance programs, we create purpose and dignified employment for hundreds of musicians every month and bring free concerts to thousands of underserved audience members at public schools, hospitals, nursing homes, museums, parks, libraries and community centers across the country. Whatever the need is, we don't just fix the problem, we heal it with love.

JGI Events

  • December 3 New Orleans, LA- Historic St. Luke's Episcopal Church: D’Angelo’s Voodoo Listening Session
  • December 4 New York, NY- Cafe Erzulie: SOUNDOFF SESSIONS: Trap Music Orchestra
  • December 18 New York, NY- Cafe Erzulie: SOUNDOFF SESSIONS: Tyrone Allen II
  • January 14-16 New Orleans, LA- New Marigny Theatre: The Music of Alice Coltrane

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