Jazz of the City Atlanta portrait

The Jazz of the City Atlanta[1] is an historic, color portrait of over 100 jazz musicians surrounding Mayor Shirley Franklin created in the Atlanta City Hall Atrium.[2] Similar to the iconic, black and white, jazz portrait A Great Day in Harlem[3] taken by Art Kane[4] in 1958 — THE JAZZ OF THE CITY ATLANTA 2007 photograph marked a great day in Atlanta jazz history and the 30th anniversary[5] of the Atlanta Jazz Festival.

The Jazz of the City Atlanta 2007 is an historic, color portrait of over 100 jazz musicians surrounding Mayor Shirley Franklin taken at Atlanta City Hall.

On April 16, 2007, 162 photos were taken by Seve "Obasina" Adigun[6] and Gregory Turner. WCLK 91.9 FM radio and the City of Atlanta collaborated[7] to recreate Atlanta's own icon of Art Kane's 1958 classic black and white photo. One of the most famous musicians seen here is Averil Taylor, whose video of his performance of 'Flight of the Bumblebee' has received over 300,000 views.

The jazz portrait was presented[8] by WCLK radio station of Clark Atlanta University (CAU) in Atlanta, Georgia.

Participants

The photo features the following individuals:[9]

Row 1 (seated left-to-right): James Patterson, Edward Emory, Ojeda Penn, Mason P. Johnson, Janan, Mayor Shirley Franklin, Alfred Wyatt, Sr., James Dub Hudson, Billy Reid, Steve Ellington and John Peek

Row 2 (l-r): Kermit Walker, Janet Metzger, Antoine Knight, Melvin Miller, Earl Klugh, Theresa Hightower, Milkshake, Cooper Tisdale, Joanne Smith, Lawrence Jennings, Jon Roberts, Melanie Massell, Gordon Vernick, Camille Russell Love

Row 3 (l-r): Leonard McDonald, Will Scruggs, Donovan Henderson, Rick Bell, Steve Mays, Lorenzo Sanford, Prince Redd, Rhonda Thomas, Domingo Hipona, Merv Bronson, Gina Grate, Alan Blake, Tracy Hamlin, Charles Marvray, Jim Ward, Gary Harris, Bill Wilson, Andrew Fazackerley, Ben Bailey, Bill Norman, Traci Wynn, Kurt Mitchell, Ken Ford, Rod Kelley, Daleel Zakkee

Row 4 (l-r): Terrence Corcoran, Jeff Sparks, Neal Starkey, Kathleen Bertrand, Kyng-Ma'at, Delores Major, Adam McKnight,[10] Myrna Clayton, Tammy Allen, Jennifer Wrobeleski, Davide Durks, Maria Howell, Sonny Emory, Penny Iannuzzi, Nikki Moore, Ulysess N. Dupree, Dennis Springer, William Odum, J.O. Wyatt, Morris Baxter, Melvin Jones, Charles Edwards, Hudson on Bass, Penelope Williams, Averil Taylor

Row 5 (l-r): Vernard "Sticks" Hoover, Rai Ragland, Omar Martinez, Eddie Jackson, Chuck Mandt, Antonio Allen, Joe Jennings, Esau Fred Holloway, Dwight Andrews, Peter Ponzol, Jhelisa Anderson, Lilli Lewis, Laine Merrill, Kemi Bennings, Madoca, Tony Cunningham, Chanda McKnight, Lita Blake, Valerie Hines, Joie Taylor, Cindy Bell, Jennifer Perry, Joey Sommerville, Toni Redd, Kemba Cofield, Dave Bass, Stairs left: Gary Motley, Chester H. Orndorff, Anthony Duke Pearson, Reggie Hines, William Frazier, Jr., Yonrico Scott, William Green,[11] Jeffrey Smith, Bob Baldwin[12]

WCLK announcers (stairs right): Morris Baxter, Carl Anthony, Willis Perry, Tony Hart, Jay Edwards, Debb Moore, Gwen Redding, Thomas Simmons, Abdul Taymullah and Van Mimms[13]

gollark: Medicine is just very bodgey and unreliable hacky patches to the spaghetti code of life.
gollark: > as bad as it is to say, most of the deaths are people that are only alive from medicine artificially inflating life spans well beyond the designed parameters... is wanting to live longer a bad thing now? There are no "designed parameters" with humans, what with us being weird evolved systems, only "mostly works" ones, and we've been continually pushing those with stuff like, well, medicine.
gollark: The mortality rate of coronavirus is significantly higher than 1% or 2% or whatever if healthcare stuff gets overloaded. Which could happen, and I think is kind of in Italy.
gollark: The Earth isn't flat. It's nonexistent. r/noearthsociety
gollark: The flat moon, probably.

References

  1. http://www.photoreflect.com/pr3/Orderpage.aspx?pi=0ALN0013010075&po=75&pc=77. THE JAZZ OF THE CITY ATLANTA 2007 portrait. Seve "Obasina" Adigun and Gregory Turner. April 16, 2009.
  2. http://www.atlantaga.gov/media/citynewsbytes_050107.aspx#uevo. City Newsbytes. City of Atlanta. May 1, 2007.
  3. http://www.harlem.org/. A Great Day in Harlem. Art Kane. 1958.
  4. http://www.artkane.com/. Art Kane. (1925 - 1995). Photography.
  5. http://atlantafestivals.com/?page_id=452. Our History, Thirty Years. Atlanta Jazz Festival. 2007.
  6. http://www.photoreflect.com/pr3/store.aspx?p=26363. Seve Adigun. theDunlopDesignGroup, LLC. 2009.
  7. http://www.photoreflect.com/PR3/thumbpage.aspx?e=2868138. The Jazz of the City 2007. Photo Shoot. April 16, 2007.
  8. http://www.photoreflect.com/pr3/ThumbPage.aspx?e=2868138&g=0ALN001301. Mayor Shirley Franklin. The Press Conference. May 2007.
  9. http://www.photoreflect.com/pr3/Orderpage.aspx?pi=0ALN0013010075&po=75&pc=77. Individual Names Listed Below Photo. May 2007.
  10. http://www.musicmontaj.com/adam_news.html. Adam McKnight. Music Montaj, Inc. April 2007.
  11. http://www.musicmontaj.com/adam_news.html. William Green. Music Montaj, Inc. April 2007.
  12. http://jazzchill.blogspot.com/2009_01_01_archive.html. WJZZ-FM Smooth Jazz 107.5 Atlanta to Drop Format. The Jazz Chill Corner. January 21, 2009.
  13. http://www.photoreflect.com/pr3/ThumbPage.aspx?e=2868138&g=0ALN001300. In the Atrium After the Shoot. April 16, 2007.
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