First jazz concert of the semester Feb. 15

Closeup of members of Jazz Northwest
Jazz Northwest

The Washington State University School of Music will present their first jazz concert of the semester at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, Feb. 15 in Kimbrough Concert Hall. The concert will feature faculty ensemble Jazz Northwest and the award-winning WSU Jazz Big Band under the direction of Regents Professor and Coordinator of Jazz Studies Greg Yasinitsky.

Jazz Northwest will perform “JP” by Darryl Singleton, percussionist with the group, and “Funky Changes” and “Chimera” by César Haas, guitarist with the ensemble. Jazz Northwest also includes David Turnbull, trumpet; Horace Alexander Young, alto saxophone; Jake Svendsen, piano; David Bjur, bass; and Yasinitsky, tenor saxophone.

The Jazz Big Band will present the premiere of the big band version of “Lincoln Street” by undergraduate composer and guitarist Shane Isom. The band will also perform Los Angeles composer Bill Liston’s “Tri-Bop,” Yasinitsky’s “Gator Tail” featuring the trombone section and “Gotta Have Soul,” a new piece written especially for the group by Yasinitsky. Soloists will include saxophonists Thomas Wieland, Christian Nicoll and Rogan Tinsley; trombonists Brad Dowson and Jason Kochis; and drummer Erik Hawkins.

The Jazz Big Band has received numerous accolades including a prestigious invitation to perform in February at the conference of the Washington State Music Educators Association (WMEA).

The concert will be free of charge, presented face to face, and will also be livestreamed on the WSU Pullman Music YouTube channel.

Next Story

Summer schedule for WSU Insider

Look for news highlights in the daily push email most days Monday through Thursday through late August, with Friday emails resuming around the start of the fall semester.

Recent News

A new era for the Institute for Shock Physics

WSU professor and former Los Alamos National Laboratory physicist Brian Jensen is the new director of the Institute for Shock Physics. He succeeds Yogendra Gupta, who led the program for 26 years.

Bot Brawl brings students together

Crimson Robotics recently held its spring Crimson Bot Brawl, where students create fighting robots and put them to a test in a tournament.

Incoming provost shares message

T. Chris Riley-Tillman shared his plans to host college-wide meetings this fall as part of a message to WSU faculty system-wide Monday afternoon. His first day is July 1.