|
Marietta Ulacia |
Timbale Terrace will offer housing to
low-income families while the Afro Latin Music & Arts Center will provide
community programs, music and technical production training, after-school
programs, free arts education classes, community event spaces, world-class live
performances, and more.
|
James R. Wacht |
"East Harlem is the community that
best represents the mission of the Afro Latin Jazz Alliance, to use music as an
entry point for service to the community and to reflect back to that community
the beauty and ingenuity of its citizens," comments Arturo
O'Farrill, Founder, Artistic Director, Afro Latin Jazz Alliance.
"Partnering with the City of New
York, the Lantern Organization and Mega Development is an opportunity to put
theory into daily practice.
|
Dizzy Gillespie |
"We are honored to lock arms with
these partners and serve the people of East Harlem in a manner designed by
their needs. Timbale Terrace will be a place that welcomes all!"
|
Steve Turre |
"We feel that this is a historic
moment for New York: to witness the creative connection between affordable housing
and the performing arts in a way that enhances the life of people in our
communities and specifically in East Harlem," adds Marietta
Ulacia, Executive Director, ALJA.
|
Freddy Cole |
"The Afro Latin Jazz Alliance, in
partnership with Lantern organization and Mega Development, is uniquely
positioned to develop the first performing arts center dedicated to Afro Latin
music and arts in East Harlem.
"ALJA's commitment to free
educational programs, music performances, community engagement, and offering a
recording studio, archival library, and café will be placed at the service of
the community for the benefit of everyone."
|
Wynton Marsalis |
"ALJA is very excited to be an
integral part of the Timbale Terrace development to create a vibrant project
that will be a resource for the entire East Harlem community," says James
R. Wacht, President of Sierra Real Estate, ALJA board member and Head of the
Education Committee.
|
Antonio Sanchez
|
"This project will allow the Afro
Latin Jazz Alliance to expand our performance and educational programming,
which currently enriches over 1,000 elementary, middle and high school students
in underserved NYC public schools.
|
Regina Carter |
"Our Fat Cat youth ensembles will
now have a permanent home that will enable us to attract an even more diverse
and talented group of middle and high schoolers.
"The theater will become the new
home for our seven-time, GRAMMY Award-winning Arturo O'Farrill and the Afro
Latin Jazz Orchestra that has been performing at Birdland for the past
25 years."
|
Mandy Gonzalez |
For nearly two decades, the Afro Latin
Jazz Alliance has served as a leading New York City cultural institution
preserving the music and heritage of Afro Latin jazz.
|
Patricio Hidalgo |
The opening of their very own Afro Latin
Music & Arts Center affords an opportunity to advance a wider range of
innovative Latin jazz programs to diverse communities across the metro area.
|
Rahim AlHaj
|
Timbale Terrace consolidates and expands
ALJA's varied initiatives offering comprehensive support to their close network
of standout musicians and educators in the form of live performances,
educational teaching ventures, individual artist grants, and an ability to
participate in a citywide lottery for apartments at Timbale Terrace.
50% of the affordable units will be given a community preference
status for residents who live in East Harlem (or served by the Community Board
district of the project, Manhattan CB #11).
Many teaching artists and musicians (with or without families)
will qualify as Timbale Terrace applicants based on their household income.
Along with Lantern Organization and Mega
Development, ALJA is eager to work with essential local arts and cultural
groups such as Art For Change, the Association of Hispanic Arts, El Museo del
Barrio, La Casa de la Herencia Cultural Puertorriqueña, Speaking In Rhythms,
Taller Boricua PR Workshop, and many others.
ALJA's outstanding contributions to the
arts and cultural sectors of New York City ensures that Latin jazz will be kept
alive and well for generations to come to enjoy.
|
Rendering of Timbale Terrace, a planned new mixed-use development on the east side of Park Avenue between East 118th Street and East 119th Street (formerly a NYPD 25th Precinct Parking Site) with a performing arts center operated by the Afro Latin Jazz Alliance. |
For more information regarding ALJA,
please visit: afrolatinjazz.org
About Arturo O'Farrill and the Afro Latin
Jazz Orchestra
GRAMMY Award winning pianist, composer
and educator Arturo O'Farrill -- leader of the "first family of Afro-Cuban
Jazz" (New York Times) -- was born in Mexico and grew up in New York City.
Son of the late, great composer Chico
O'Farrill, Arturo played piano in Carla Bley's Big Band from 1979 through
1983 and earned a reputation as a soloist in groups led by Dizzy Gillespie,
Steve Turre, Freddy Cole, Lester Bowie, Wynton Marsalis and Harry Belafonte.
In 2002, he established the GRAMMY® winning Afro Latin Jazz
Orchestra in order to bring the vital musical traditions of Afro Latin jazz to
a wider general audience, and to greatly expand the contemporary Latin jazz big
band repertoire through commissions to artists across a wide stylistic and
geographic range.
Following his 2009 GRAMMY® Award for
"Best Latin Jazz Album" for the Orchestra's debut recording, Song
for Chico (ZOHO), O'Farrill has received numerous GRAMMY® wins
for The Offense of the Drum ("Best Latin Jazz
Album"), Cuba: The Conversation Continues ("The Afro
Latin Jazz Suite," "Best Instrumental Composition").
His album
with Chucho Valdés, Familia: Tribute to Bebo & Chico, won a
GRAMMY® Award in the "Best Instrumental Composition" category for his
composition, "Three Revolutions," and Cuba: The Conversation
Continues won a 2016 Latin GRAMMY® for "Best Latin Jazz
Album."
This past March 2021, O'Farrill and the
Afro Latin Jazz Orchestra won their 7th GRAMMY® for Four Questions,
with Cornel West as guest orator.
In September 2018, O'Farrill released his
album, Fandango at the Wall: A Soundtrack for the United States,
Mexico, and Beyond, featuring the Afro Latin Jazz Orchestra, Antonio
Sanchez, Regina Carter, Akua Dixon, Mandy Gonzalez, Patricio Hidalgo,
Rahim AlHaj, and Ramón Gutiérrez Hernández. This was also released as a
documentary for HBO MAX called Fandango at the Wall.
In 2019, O'Farrill was appointed
Professor at The UCLA Herb Alpert School of Music in the Global Jazz Studies
department and is currently the Associate Dean for Equity, Diversity and
Inclusion. O'Farrill is a Steinway Artist and records for Blue Note Records.
Afro Latin Jazz Alliance
The non-profit Afro Latin Jazz Alliance
(ALJA) was established by Arturo O'Farrill in 2007 to promote Afro Latin Jazz
through a comprehensive array of performance and education programs.
ALJA's mission is to perform, educate
about, and preserve the music of all of the Americas, emanating from African
and indigenous roots, through the entry point of jazz.
ALJA embraces its mission with a
commitment to social justice, equity, inclusion, and the equality of all
cultures worldwide.
ALJA produces the Afro Latin Jazz
Orchestra's annual performance season in New York, and maintains a weekly
engagement for the Orchestra at the famed jazz club Birdland.
The Alliance also maintains a
world-class collection of Latin jazz musical scores and recordings.
ALJA's education programs include the
Afro Latin Jazz Academy of Music (ALJAM), an in-school residency program
serving public schools citywide with instrumental and ensemble instruction, the
pre-professional youth orchestra; the Fat Afro Latin Jazz Cats, which prepares
the next generation of musicians, and the Global Rhythms in Our Tribe
(G.R.I.O.T.); a community music program that engages underserved youth in
anti-violence activities.
The Afro Latin Jazz Alliance maintains
administrative offices in Harlem.
CONTACT:
Jesse P. Cutler
JP Cutler Media
925.253.3163
jesse@jpcutlermedia.com