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Grammy-winning musician Don Byron to be MLK Visiting Professor
Don Byron
--photo by Cori Wells Braun |
For Immediate Release: August 2, 2007
Contact:
Lynn Heinemann
MIT Office of the Arts
77 Massachusetts Ave, Rm E15-205
Cambridge, MA 02139
e-mail heine@media.mit.edu
617-253-5351
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Cambridge, MA...Composer and clarinetist Don Byron, who
has explored and redefined musical styles from klezmer to classical to
hip-hop to R&B and every known form of
jazz has been appointed a Martin Luther King Jr. Visting Professor, the
first full-year MLK appointment in music and theater arts at the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology.
"We're all very excited about having an artist of this stature, talent,
and enthusiasm join us," said Kenan Sahin Distinguished Professor Music
Evan Ziporyn, who has performed with Byron with the Bang on a Can All-Stars. "Don
is a Grammy nominated musician with a wealth of knowledge and playing experience
that ranges from straight ahead jazz through American musical theater into
concert music."
Byron visited MIT in March 2005; he performed withpoet Paul Auster and the MIT Festival Jazz Ensemble in a
program titled "Words and Music and Other Sonic Collaborations."
"I am the kind of musician who figures out how things work, and in an
environment like MIT, one finds students who can do a lot with that kind of
information," Byron said. "I can't wait to get started."
While on campus with MIT's Music and Theater Arts Section in the 2007-2008
academic year, Byron will teach a course on improvisation and coach a rock/funk
chamber ensemble, as well as perform with faculty and students.
"Having him here will really allow us to expand our offerings in jazz
and composition, as well as for the first time do something significant with
popular music performance as part of our program," said Ziporyn.
A native of Bronx, NY, Byron was exposed to a breadth of musical genres at an early age.
His father, a mailman, was a bassist who played jazz and calypso
music and his mother was a pianist. The young Byron also attended symphony
and ballet performances and spent hours listening to recordings by Dizzy Gillespie,
Miles Davis and Machito. He graduated from the New England Conservatory in
1984 where he expanded his jazz and classical repertoire as an original member
of the Klezmer Conservatory Band.
Byron was named Jazz Artist of the Year by Down Beat magazine in
1992 and his tenor saxophone recording, "Ivey-Divey" (Blue
Note, 2004) with pianist Jason Moran and drummer Jack DeJohnette, was nominated
for a Grammy and was voted Album of the Year by Jazz Times magazine in 2004.
Currently a visiting professor at the State University of New York, Albany,
Byron teaches theory, saxophone, improvisation, and composition. As recipient
of a 2007 Guggenheim Fellowship, he is writing a chamber opera based on Laura
Z. Hobson's 1946 novel, "Gentleman's Agreement," in which a reporter
investigates anti-Semitism by pretending to be Jewish. In Byron's version, the reporter
is black, his partner is Jewish, and the opera
will be be about white-on-black racism, as experienced by a bi-racial couple.
For information on working with Byron or on signing up for his courses or
workshops, MIT students can e-mail Ziporyn at zipo@mit.edu.
Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Visiting Professors Program, established in 1995
through the efforts of the Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Planning Committee, appoints
participants for their contributions to their professions, and their potential
contributions to the intellectual life of MIT. The Program, which supports
six to 12 visiting professors and scholars in each academic year, is open to
individuals of any minority group, with an emphasis on the appointment of African
Americans.
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