58 7th avenue
Brooklyn, New York 11217

Brooklyn Conservatory of Music presents
Bob Stewart Clinic, March 26, 1pm
&
Howard Johnson & Scott Robinson Multi-Instrument Salon, March 27, 6pm
Free Admission!

What: Bob Stewart Clinic, Howard Johnson & Scott Robinson Multi-Instrument Salon
Who: Bob Stewart, Howard Johnson, Scott Robinson
When: Saturday, March 26, 2011, 1pm & March 27th, 2011, 6pm
Where: Brooklyn Conservatory Concert Hall, 58 7th avenue, Brooklyn
(Q/B train to 7th Ave, 2/3 train to Grand Army Plaza)
Cost: FREE ADMISSION

Brooklyn Conservatory of Music is delighted to present two free, educational events not to be missed by students, musicians, families and music lovers. Highly acclaimed tuba player Bob Stewart will present an educational clinic, March 26, 1pm and then Sunday, March 27, 6pm Howard Johnson & Scott Robinson will present a multi-Instrument Salon. Both events present a rare opportunity to see true master musicians at work in an intimate, conversational setting. Open to the public, free admission.
Bob Stewart Clinic, Saturday, March 26, 1pm, Free!
Free and open to the public and students from all the 5 boroughs, this clinic will focus on Bob Stewart’s educational concepts and on concepts used by famed tuba player, Howard Johnson.

A sought after educator, Stewart has toured and recorded with such artists as Charles Mingus, Gil Evans, Carla Bley, David Murray, Taj Mahal, Dizzy Gillespie, McCoy Tyner, Arthur Blythe, Freddie Hubbard, Don Cherry, Nicholas Payton, Wynton Marsalis, Charlie Haden and many others both in the United States, Europe and the Far East.

"Bob Stewart brings agility and wit to the art of jazz tuba"
- New York Times

Howard Johnson & Scott Robinson Multi-Instrument Salon, Sunday, March 27, 6pm, Free!
Free and open to the public this and students from all 5 boroughs this salon will focus on multi-instrumentalists Howard Johnson and Scott Robinson. Both musicians will explore and explain how they move from one instrument to another seamlessly demonstrating technique while showcasing a wide range of rare and unique instruments. The salon will involve discussion and live performance making it a “must see” event for any student, musician or music lover.

Howard Johnson was born in Montgomery, Alabama on August 7, 1941. He taught himself the baritone sax in 1954 and the tuba a year later. He moved to New York in 1963—at a time when the tuba was not a fashionable jazz instrument (outside of the New Orleans-style bass-line chores, the only visible player was Ray Draper) but Charles Mingus welcomed Howard into his workshop in 1964. In 1965 he toured with soul jazz alto saxophonist Hank Crawford, playing baritone sax, but returned to the Mingus’ workshop for a year beginning in July 1965. In 1966 he played with the Archie Shepp band for some months and appeared with him at the Newport Jazz Festival in 1966 and 1968. Gil Evans used his multi-instrumental capacity at various points between 1966 and 1988.
One of today's most wide-ranging instrumentalists, Scott Robinson has been heard on tenor sax with Buck Clayton's band, on trumpet with Lionel Hampton's quintet, on alto clarinet with Paquito D'Rivera's clarinet quartet, and on bass sax with the New York City Opera. On these and other instruments including theremin and ophicleide, he has been heard with a cross-section of jazz's greats representing nearly every imaginable style of the music, from Braff to Braxton. Scott has been heard numerous times on film, radio and television, and his discography now includes more than 190 recordings. His releases as a leader have garnered five-star reviews from Leonard Feather, Down Beat Magazine and other sources worldwide. One, Melody From the Sky (featuring the seldom-heard C-Melody saxophone), was recently the subject of a Wall Street Journal article by Nat Hentoff. His newest, Forever Lasting (featuring the compositions of Thad Jones and with guest artist Hank Jones), appeared on four "Best Of" lists for 2008 including All About Jazz and Jazz Improv Magazine.
This project has been made possible be the National Endowment for the Arts as part of American Masterpieces: Three Centuries of Artistic Genius.
Programs at the Conservatory are supported by The Achelis Foundation, Ann and Gordon Getty Foundation, Barclays/Nets Community Alliance, The Beatrice S. Wind Charitable Remainder Trust, Bloomberg, Brooklyn Community Foundation, ConEdison, Fund for the City of New York/Open Society Foundations’ Performing Arts Recovery Initiative, Joseph LeRoy and Ann C. Warner Fund, JPMorgan Chase Foundation, National Guild for Community Arts Education/MetLife Foundation, Park Slope Civic Council, The Rudin Foundation, and Youth, I.N.C., as well as numerous individual donors. Programs at the Conservatory are also supported in part, by public funds from the National Endowment for the Arts, New York State Council on the Arts, New York City Council Member Stephen Levin, and the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs in partnership with the City Council.

Official Website: http://www.bqcm.org

Added by Brooklyn Conservatory on February 7, 2011