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Joe Chambers - UNCW’s
Distinguished Professor of Jazz by Dana
Fischetti
Internationally known jazz drummer, composer
and educator Joe Chambers has been selected as the first Thomas S.
Kenan Distinguished Professor of Jazz in the Department of Music at
the University of North Carolina Wilmington. His appointment on the
music faculty begins with the fall semester for the 2008-09 academic
year.
In addition to being an experienced educator,
Chambers is a legendary performer in the field of jazz. He has
worked with some of the most historic figures on the jazz scene in
the last several decades and is also a recognized composer whose
works have been performed at Carnegie Hall and Lincoln Center.
“Joe is the model of a distinguished professor
where both performance and teaching are concerned,” said Frank
Bongiorno, chair of the Department of Music. “He brings a depth of
experience in both areas that is unmatched for most university
faculty.”
The Kenan Distinguished Professor of Jazz was
established in August 2007 through a grant from the C.D. Spangler
Foundation of Charlotte. The Foundation granted UNCW $667,000, which
was matched with $333,000 from the State of North Carolina’s
Distinguished Professors Endowment Trust Fund to create a $1 million
endowment. It is the first endowed professorship in the Department
of Music.
Bongiorno said that much of Chambers’ teaching
will be one-on-one with students, in a master and apprentice
situation, but that he will also teach in small groups as well as
give presentations and performances on and off campus, including
direct involvement with the annual Jazz Festival and summer
workshops.
“The whole idea of jazz education, in my
opinion, is that jazz is the center point that the musician is
moving out of, incorporating the experience of jazz and the music
and art of jazz,” Chambers said. “However, like all areas of art and
music, it is a highly competitive field, so the idea of focusing on
just being a jazz player is not a good approach. Jazz musicians
should have the skills to play in a studio orchestra or go to a
Broadway show and play in the pit. These are areas that jazz
students can easily branch out to.”
Over the past 15 years, the UNCW Jazz Program
has received accolades and awards on the national and international
levels in recognition of the high performance quality of its
ensembles, as well as the quality and talent of individual students
and faculty within the program.
Coming to Wilmington is like icing on the cake
for me,” he said. “The department has a strong program in classical
and orchestral percussion, which will enable me not only to teach
but also give me the opportunity to branch out into other areas,
like writing for orchestra and possibly big band, as well as to
advance percussion for jazz drummers. These are the things that
impress me about the music program.”
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