FRI 9 – SUN 18 NOVEMBER 2012 londonjazzfestival.org.uk bbc.co.uk/radio3 Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra with Wynton Marsalis 10 – 26 Jul barbican.org.uk Fri 9 Nov Jazz Voice - Celebrating a Century of Song Sat 10 Nov Melody Gardot Sun 11 Nov © Clay Patrick McBride John McLaughlin and the 4th Dimension + support Wed 14 Nov Brad Mehldau Trio Fri 16 Nov Sonny Rollins Sat 17 Nov Neil Cowley Trio Sat 17 Nov Chick Corea - Christian McBride Brian Blade Sun 18 Nov David Murray Big Band & Macy Gray Barbican International Associate Introduction © Clay Patrick McBride It is a great pleasure to welcome back the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra with Artistic Director Wynton Marsalis to the Barbican Centre. As our first International Associates in 2010 they made a huge impact on audiences, creating a real residency that extended beyond the Barbican into East London. Now we have planned an even more ambitious residency which gives audiences the opportunity to experience some of America’s finest jazz musicians in concerts, workshops, masterclasses and talks. This residency forms a highlight of the Barbican’s major contribution to the London 2012 Festival, with the UK premiere of Wynton Marsalis’s Swing Symphony (Symphony No 3), presented in collaboration with the Barbican resident London Symphony Orchestra conducted by Sir Simon Rattle, on the two nights before the opening of the Olympic Games. Before then there are many outstanding events, ranging from Congo Square on 10 July, written by Marsalis with Ghanaian drum master Yacub Addy, to the Abyssinian Mass on 13 July, a hugely ambitious choral work by Marsalis which brings together the orchestra with sixty-voice choir including the London Adventist Chorale, and the Croydon SDA Gospel Choir –an ideal collaboration between international and local talent at the highest level. One of the joys of experiencing Jazz at Lincoln Center is to hear the distinctive contributions of each of the virtuosos that make up the orchestra in a wide range of repertory by the greatest jazz composers and performers. From their base in Lincoln Center in New York, in the wonderful Frederick P. Rose 1 Hall, the orchestra travels to create a year-round programme of performance, education and broadcast events for audiences of all ages. There will be a Big Band Masterclass at the Guildhall School on the afternoon of 10 July, work with the East London Creative Jazz Orchestra and the JLCO’s very own Essentially Ellington programme. A Midsummer Night’s Swing Dance on 14 July will be an evening of red-hot swing for dance-lovers featuring a UK all-star Big Band with special guests from the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra in the stunning setting of the newly refurbished Bishopsgate Institute. It is a privilege for us at the Barbican Centre to partner this outstanding organisation. We are very grateful to all our supporters for making this possible. We hope you can join us as we draw the pre-Olympic period –which has provided so many thrilling cultural events in London -- to a triumphant climax! Enjoy! Sir Nicholas Kenyon Managing Director of the Barbican Centre This Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra International Associate Residency is supported by Arts Council England, the City Bridge Trust and the SHM Foundation. This programme is printed on 100% recycled materials. Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra with Wynton Marsalis The Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra with Wynton Marsalis (JLCO), comprising 15 of the finest jazz soloists and ensemble players today, has been the Jazz at Lincoln Center resident orchestra since 1988. This remarkably versatile orchestra performs and leads educational events in New York, across the U.S. and around the globe; in concert halls, dance venues, jazz clubs, public parks; and with symphony orchestras, ballet troupes, local students; and an ever-expanding roster of guest artists. Under Music Director Wynton Marsalis, the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra performs a vast repertoire, from rare historic compositions to Jazz at Lincoln Center-commissioned works, including compositions and arrangements by Duke Ellington, Count Basie, Fletcher Henderson, Thelonious Monk, Mary Lou Williams, Dizzy Gillespie, Benny Goodman, Charles Mingus, and many others. Over the last few years, the orchestra has also performed collaborations with leading symphony orchestras and has been featured in education and performance residencies throughout the world. Wynton Marsalis & Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra Wynton Marsalis musical director, trumpet Ryan Kisor trumpet Marcus Printup trumpet Kenneth Rampton trumpet Christopher Crenshaw trombone Vincent Gardner trombone Elliot Mason trombone Walter Blanding saxophone, clarinet Victor Goines saxophone, clarinet Sherman Irby saxophone, clarinet Ted Nash saxophone, clarinet Joe Temperley bass clarinet Carlos Henriquez bass Ali Jackson drums Dan Nimmer piano For more information on Jazz at Lincoln Center, please visit jalc.org The City of London Corporation is founder and principal funder of the Barbican Centre 2 Jazz at lincoln cEntEr orchEstra Experience more with Membership With Wynton Marsalis Join from £40 and enjoy: + priority booking on key events + free entry to Barbican Art Gallery & exclusive Member events + 20% off for you & guest on key theatre events and much more. © Clay Patrick McBride Wynton Marsalis Wynton Marsalis is the Artistic Director of Jazz at Lincoln Center, Music Director of the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra, and a world-renowned trumpeter and composer. Born in New Orleans, Louisiana in 1961, Marsalis began his classical training on trumpet at the age of 12, entered The Juilliard School at age 17, and then joined Art Blakey and the Jazz Messengers. He made his recording debut as a leader in 1982, and has since made more than 60 jazz and classical recordings, which have won him nine GRAMMY® Awards. Marsalis is also an internationally respected teacher and spokesman for music education, and has received honorary doctorates from dozens of universities and colleges throughout the U.S. In 1997, Marsalis became the first jazz artist to be awarded the prestigious Pulitzer Prize in music for his oratorio Blood on the Fields, which was commissioned by Jazz at Lincoln Center. Time magazine selected Wynton as one of America’s most promising leaders under the age of 40 in 1995, and in 1996 Time celebrated Marsalis again as one of America’s 25 most influential people. In November 2005 Wynton Marsalis received The National Medal of Arts, the highest award given to artists by the United States Government. United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan proclaimed Wynton Marsalis an international ambassador of goodwill for the Unites States by appointing him a UN Messenger of Peace in 2001. jazz at lincoln center orchestra Photo by Frank Stewart aVa i l a B l E f o r s a l E CD / DVD COMBO W ynton M arsalis & E r i c c l a p t o n p l ay t h E B l u E s Live from Jazz at Lincoln Center CD Support Us hErE WE Go aGain with Wynton Marsalis, Willie Nelson, and Norah Jones DVD conGo squarE Live from Montreal CD / DVD COMBO Vitoria suitE Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra with Wynton Marsalis CDs available at the Barbican Foyer Shop. Congo Square and Portrait in Seven Shades are also available for digital download on Amazon and iTunes. jalC .Org 3 barbican.org.uk/ membership This Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra residency is part of a long-term partnership with five of the world’s leading ensembles, together the Barbican’s International Associates programme. In addition to performing an outstanding series of concerts, the musicians work directly with local communities, schools and young musicians to share their expertise and forge relationships that inspire audiences and participants alike. Barbican Patrons play a vital role in the success of the International Associates programme, as well as world-class arts and learning across all the art forms. We invite you to learn more about how you can get involved and support what you love about the Barbican. For more information please call Praveen Riat, Patrons & Individual Giving Manager, on 020 7382 2317, email [email protected], or visit barbican.org.uk/support-us We extend grateful thanks to our International Associate supporters: City Bridge Trust, the Embassy of the Federal Republic of Germany, the Embassy of the United States of America, the Gordon family, the Körber Foundation and the SHM Foundation. Barbican Centre Trust Ltd, UK registered charity no. 294282 4 Thu 10 Jul 7.30pm Congo Square Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra with Wynton Marsalis (see page 2 for players list) Featuring Yacub Addy & Odadaa! Yacub Addy founder & leader Okoe Nunoo assistant leader Imani Gonzalez percussion Otey Thompson percussion Laud Obuamah Addy percussion Ani Apang percussion Nii Ayaa Tagoe percussion Tawiah Nunoo percussion Musa Quaye percussion Jay Phelps guest trumpet There will be one interval in this concert This musical composition, written by Wynton Marsalis and master drummer, Yacub Addy, was inspired by the public square in New Orleans where, from the mid-1700s to the late-1800s, African slaves gathered on Sunday afternoons to dance and play a variety of African and European instruments. Due largely to the fact that New Orleans was originally a French colony, the square was the only place in the United States where slaves could congregate freely and perform their own music. Historians agree that it was the unique exception of Congo Square that made it possible for New Orleans to become the birthplace of jazz at the turn of the 20th century. The two-hour masterwork draws from the traditions instituted by Congo Square by combining the forces of the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra with the Ghanaian percussion ensemble Odadaa!, melding jazz music with African rhythms. From Beale Street to Basin Street and Lenox Avenue to Tuxedo Junction, jazz has a long tradition of enshrining places in song. Congo Square, a suite jointly composed by trumpeter Wynton Marsalis and master drummer Yacub Addy, is a grand dedication to something of a cultural Mecca in African-American history. It is the bustling quadrangle in New Orleans, where, from the middle of the 18th to the tail end of the 19th century, slaves assembled on Sunday afternoons to bend their bodies and dance in their own time rather than harvest cotton and indigo to the working hours set by plantation owners. They also played drums and percussion, thus ensuring that the complex rhythms from the other side of the Atlantic were not lost in the tumultuous formation of the ‘New World.’ All of which was pivotal in the genesis of jazz and other forms of black music that have since resonated way beyond the ‘Crescent City.’ Marsalis has long had an interest in the farreaching roots of jazz, and as one of the foremost improvising musicians to emerge from New Orleans in the last three decades he is carrying out a labour of love by investigating this key chapter of his hometown’s history. African drummers such as Guy Warren, Babatunde Olatunji, and latterly Lekan Babalola have all made important contributions to American jazz over the years, and Congo Square, running at two hours, is another ambitious meeting of musicians of different nationalities who nonetheless have entwined, overlapping cultural histories. 5 At the premiere of Congo Square, which took place in 2006 as part of the spiritual healing and revitalization of post-Katrina New Orleans, the combined force of the Jazz at Lincoln Center rhythm and horn sections and the Ghanaian percussion ensemble Odadaa! was nothing other than joyous. A battery of hand drums and balaphones as well as wailing horns and jangling piano, set to easy swaying 6/8 and 12/8 or hard swinging 4/4 meters, produced music that was both elemental and modern. It made the point that sounds created some three centuries ago have a timelessness and resistance to erosion, much like the people of New Orleans. The world has since rebooted into the digital age but that doesn’t mean that instant messaging can’t come as much from a beat on a drum as it does a click on a mouse. Freestage 6.30 – 7.15pm The Jo Wallfisch Quartet 10, 13, 16, and 25 Jul Ronnie Scotts late night Jam Sessions Hosted by Michael Mwenso with special guests from JLCO On select nights after the Barbican concerts the action moves over to legendary Ronnie Scott’s club for some late night Jam sessions hosted by Michael Mwenso with very special guests from JLCO. Tickets £10 / £5 students 6 © Frank Stewart for Jazz at Lincoln Center © Frank Stewart for Jazz at Lincoln Center Fri 13 Jul 7.30pm A breathtaking concert piece traversing jazz history, from spirituals to hard-bop, first performed to celebrate the bi-centenary of the Abyssinian Baptist Church in New York. This large-scale work brings together the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra with a mass choir performing modernist variants of New Orleans dirges and struts, the modal excursions of hard-bop and the Ellington big-band legacies of brassy interplay and sumptuously harmonised ballads. The trumpeter has often highlighted the vocal character of the horns in his arrangements for the Jazz At Lincoln Center Orchestra and the presence of a choir, with its rousing, deeply affecting timbres, should produce moments of fathomless emotional depth. While the skipping rhythms of New Orleans music remain a core part of Marsalis’ aesthetic he has, throughout his long career, created an engaging blend of bebop, modal jazz, big band swing and lush balladry. The Abyssinian Baptist church is one of the great cultural landmarks of New York. Founded in the early 19th century by free Ethiopian seafarers and African-American parishioners, this house of worship played a key role in the development of religious music during the Harlem Renaissance, and still remains at the forefront of the gospel tradition in the area. All of these forms of musical vocabulary can be enriched by the massed ranks of bass, contralto, tenor and soprano voices, and it will be fascinating to hear how the two elements, with their great technical skill and soulfulness, come together as one. Marsalis’ discography is so vast that it is easy to overlook some of its highlights, but in 1994 he recorded a fabulous album entitled In This House, On This Morning. It featured his septet with a special guest, Marion Williams, the pioneering gospel vocalist who launched her career with the Clara Ward Singers back in the mid 1940s. It proved an inspired collaboration, and raises the prospect of real magic when not one but many voices join with horns blown hard enough to make the walls of Jericho come tumbling down. Abyssinian Mass Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra with Wynton Marsalis (see page 2 for players list) Damien Sneed vocals Quinn Brown vocals Chenee Campbell vocals Lauren Dawson vocals Audrey Harris vocals Maeve Hogland vocals Kaleb Hopkins vocals Jamal Moore vocals Djore Nance vocals Nicole Phifer vocals Viola Elaine Sturkey vocals Matia Washington vocals Jorel Williams vocals 7 Abyssinian Mass choir members Damien Sneed US choir director / guest conductor Ken Burton UK choir director André Jones Andrea Philip Arnold Best Benjamin Beloni Bobby Barker CeCelia Wickham Anderson Chimaine Sampson Colin Anderson Cristina Rubio David Billett David Grant Debra Burton Doriel Benjamin Duane Wright Elias Chola Kalumba Elisabeth Sanguesa Emily Dankworth Georgia Yurkwich-Spink Gwyneth Johnson Hannah Brine Ilona Opulska Irene Serra Jenniffer Bailey Joan Saddler OBE Joanna Wallfisch Ken Burton Louanne Modeste-Sampson Mariachiara Terragin Marie Clarke Marlene Skerritt Maureen Simpson Michelle Boyd Michelle Boyd Paul Lee Paul Weekes Peter Burton Rachael Brown Reuel Jones Robert Carr Roderick Adams Rosanna Brandi Rosie Storr Samuel Massiah Sharon Semple Sonia Swaby Tina Brooks Tracy-Ann Henry V Elaine N Sturkey Valentina Passoni Veronica Williams Virginie Oculi-Dinal Vivegy Mckenzie-Cook Yasmina Sole (Burton) Thanks to Ken Burton for UK choir co-ordination There will be one interval in this concert Produced by the Barbican in association with Serious Tonight’s concert, which brings together the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra with Wynton Marsalis and the Barbican Mass Choir with guest conductor Damien Sneed, is a celebration of the bi-centenary of the Abyssinian Church. The sound of black Baptist services – the timeless ‘Negro Spirituals’ given such dignity by Mahalia Jackson and James Cleveland – is the wellspring of African-American music that has flowed into myriad others genres, from blues and R&B to soul and jazz. In fact, improvising musicians such as Max Roach, Billy Harper, James Williams and Duke Ellington, who famously recorded with Jackson, have all drawn on the vocabulary of gospel music to thrilling effect, and Abyssinian Mass affords Marsalis the opportunity to add to this lineage. Freestage 5.30 – 6.10pm The Joshua Jaswon Quartet Freestage 6.30 – 7.10pm East London Creative Jazz Orchestra 8 © Frank Stewart for Jazz at Lincoln Center Mon 16 Jul 7.30pm Afro-Cuban Fiesta Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra with Wynton Marsalis (see page 2 for players list) The Pedrito Martinez Group Pedrito Martinez percussion, vocals Jhair Sala percussion, vocals Alvaro Benavides electric bass, vocals Ariacne Trujillo keyboard, violin, vocals Guests Alex Wilson piano Omar Puente violin There will be one interval in this concert © Frank Stewart for Jazz at Lincoln Center Various Cuban popular idioms – son, danzon, and rumba among them – co-exist comfortably with sambas and chorinhos from Brazil, tangos from Argentina, a slew of styles from the Caribbean and South America, as well as jazz and the European and Cuban classical canons. This special concert, with musical director Carlos Henriquez, celebrates the remarkable Afro-Cuban jazz traditions with well-known favourites, new compositions, several guest artists and the remarkable Cuban percussionist, Pedrito Martinez. It features classic songs made famous by the bands of Machito, Tito Puente and Israel ‘Cachao’ Lopez. The concert will also feature the Pedro Martinez Group, and new music by members of the JLCO. Cuba is one of the great cultural touchstones of the Americas. Its unique synthesis of African and European music, religions, rituals and dances has yielded forms of expression that have exerted a profound influence far beyond the borders of the island in the Caribbean sea located within striking distance of Jamaica and Miami. Legendary Cuban percussionists such as Chano Pozo, Candido Camera and Mongo Santamaria enabled jazz to greatly broaden its rhythmic vocabulary at a relatively early stage of its development, thus building upon the feted ‘Spanish tinge’ that had streaked through the ragtime and hot music coming out of New Orleans. Wynton Maralis has always shown an awareness of this in his own work, and of his recent studio recordings, the 2007 album From The Plantation To The Penitentiary was a crystal clear manifestation of the great inspiration he draws from sensual, loping rhythms such as guanguanco, naningo and habanera. Three years later Marsalis and Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra made their way to Havana and performed with a host of Cuban musicians, consolidating and extending some of the pioneering work of Dizzy Gillespie, Machito and Chico O’Farrill. Afro-Cuban Fiesta provides a platform for the trumpeter to investigate and experiment with such rich musical vocabulary, and the meeting of JLCO and the superlative Cuban percussionist Pedrito Martinez is an electrifying prospect. his own ensemble, the Pedro Martinez Group. Two of his band members, Cuban vocalist Araicne Trujillo, and Peruvian hand drummer Jhair Sala join him for tonight’s ‘discussion in percussion’ in which intricate, gymnastic polyrhythms borne of ageless bata and rumba traditions will be to the fore. Furthermore, two of the UK’s most celebrated exponents of jazz with a distinct Latin flavour, pianist Alex Wilson and Cuban expatriate violinist Omar Puente are very special guests. The former has defined his own ‘R&B Latino’ to the delight of dancers while the latter has won many plaudits as an invaluable sideman to Courtney Pine and as a bandleader in his own right. Tonight’s concert is nothing other than a grand celebration of universal rhythm – a gathering of players from each side of the Atlantic who celebrate the epic journey of the drum from Africa to the Americas and Europe. Programme notes © Kevin Le Gendre Freestage 5.30 – 6.10pm The Adam Chatterton / Ru Patterson Group Freestage 6.30 – 7.10pm VIVE Acapella Vocal Group Since settling in New York in 2000, Martinez has made a significant impact on the city’s music scene, working with A-list jazz artists such as Joe Lovano, Stefon Harris and Cassandra Wilson, and forming 9 10 Creative Learning Throughout the residency Barbican/Guildhall Creative Learning will work in partnership with Jazz at Lincoln Center to present work at the Barbican, Guildhall School, and beyond with young people, emerging artists, the local community and the Barbican audience. The aim of this work is to take the music and its musicians off the concert platform and into the heart of East London, bringing the residency to life for audiences, participants and musicians alike. © Rosie Reed Gold © Clay Patrick McBride Sat 14 Jul 8.30pm, Bishopsgate Institute Wed 25 & Thu 26 Jul 7.30pm, Barbican Hall A Midsummer Night’s Swing Dance Swing Symphony (Symphony No 3) Tom Rees Roberts trumpet Nathan Bray trumpet Byron Wallen trumpet Tony Dixon trumpet Shabaka Hutchings sax Colin Skinner music Director, sax Ben Castle sax Martin Williams sax Claire MacInerney sax Barnaby Dickinson trombone Mark Frost bass trombone Alistair White trombone Winston Rollins trombone Bunny Thompson piano John Coverdale guitar Tom Mark bass Dave Tandy drums Rachmaninov Symphonic Dances Wynton Marsalis Swing Symphony (Symphony No 3) - UK premiere An opportunity to rediscover the dance roots of jazz; to dress and impress, with live music from a handpicked band of brilliant musicians from London and NYC, in the stunning setting of the newly refurbished Bishopsgate Institute. 11 London Symphony Orchestra Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra with Wynton Marsalis Sir Simon Rattle conductor Swing Symphony (Symphony No 3) Swing Symphony (Symphony No 3) is the latest symphony work by Wynton Marsalis, commissioned by the Berliner Philharmoniker in collaboration with the New York Philharmonic, the Los Angeles Philharmonic, and the Barbican Centre. This UK premiere performance of Wynton Marsalis’ symphonic meditation on the evolution of swing offers a synthesis of jazz styles in collaboration with a symphony orchestra. The Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra with Wynton Marsalis share the stage with the London Symphony Orchestra, conducted by the awardwinning Chief Conductor of the Berliner Philharmoniker, Sir Simon Rattle. Wynton Marsalis was the first jazz composer to have been awarded the Pulitzer Prize in Music for Blood on the Fields. Swing Symphony (Symphony No 3) is Marsalis’ third symphonic work. 25 Jul Freestage 5.30 – 6.10pm The George Moore Ensemble Freestage 6.30 – 7.10pm The Miguel Gorodi Quartet 26 Jul Freestage 6.30 – 7.10pm East London Creative Jazz Orchestra Tue 10 Jul 2pm – 4pm, Guildhall School Lecture Recital Room Big Band Masterclass Led by Jazz at Lincoln Center faculty musicians, this is a free opportunity to see some of America’s finest jazz musicians work with the Guildhall Big Band under the direction of Martin Hathaway (Head of Jazz at the Guildhall School of Music & Drama). Expect to hear music written by Wynton Marsalis, Duke Ellington and other jazz greats. Admission free but tickets are required Call the Box Office on 020 7638 8891 Wed 11 Jul 8pm, The Spice of Life Guildhall School & JALC Faculty Concert Come and join us in a more intimate setting for an evening of three sets featuring guest appearances from JALC faculty musicians. With performances from two Guildhall School jazz quartets and the Guildhall School Big Band, this promises to be a full night of swing! Tickets £10 / £8 Fri 13 Jul 6.30pm, Barbican Freestage East London Creative Jazz Orchestra This band of under-18 jazz musicians from across East London was set up during the first JLCO residency back in 2010 and was so inspiring it never stopped. They have continued to appear at high profile events, including the London Jazz Festival for two consecutive years, and under the direction of Paul Griffiths, the group compose their own pieces, as well as playing jazz standards. Tonight they will perform newly created pieces inspired by Congo Square and Afro Cuban Fiesta, working closely with Jazz at Lincoln Center Faculty musicians who will also perform alongside them. Free Sat 14 Jul 10am – 7pm, Barbican Hall Essentially Ellington UK Essentially Ellington is a High School Big Band competition and has been running across all American states for the last 17 years. During the first JLCO residency, the Barbican/Guildhall Creative Learning team worked together with JLCO to deliver the first Essentially Ellington UK half day event (EE UK) working with three youth big bands from London. This year we’re delighted to run a full day competition with 11 big bands under the age of 18 from across the UK. The ethos of this competition is about sharing jazz music, learning and listening to each other, and most of all supporting each other in making music swing! Judged by Julian Joseph, Issie Barratt and JALC faculty musicians you’ll learn a thing or two about 12 Barbican Centre ‘Traore’s rich and mesmerizing voice, regal bearing and fluid movement has enchanted critics.’ New York Times Essentially Ellington jazz, plus we’re delighted to announce that the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra themselves will be performing at the beginning of the event, followed by Wynton Marsalis taking questions from the floor. Tickets £5 Thu 12 Jul 11am, Holy Trinity Dalston East London Community Concert This concert aims to celebrate and bring together all of the people the JLCO Education and Barbican/ Guildhall Creative Learning teams have worked with behind closed doors and is something that the public often doesn’t get to see! During this residency the two organisations have delivered workshops with the Hackney Creative Jazz Orchestra, one to one tuition with Guildhall students, workshops across the UK with young big bands and a training day for Youth Big Band Directors from across the country. This special one-off free concert has been organised for community members – from local care homes to school children, who often can’t make it as far as the Barbican – to ensure that everyone gets to hear this fantastic music and meet the musicians. Desdemona By Toni Morrison, Peter Sellars and Rokia Traoré The story of Shakespeare’s Desdemona re-imagined in words and music Barbican Centre Board Chairman Catherine McGuinness Deputy Chairman John Tomlinson Board Members David Graves Tom Hoffman Roly Keating Vivienne Littlechild Jeremy Mayhew Brian McMaster Wendy Mead Guy Nicholson Christopher Purvis CBE Richard Regan Matthew Richardson Sue Robertson Keith Salway John Scott Dr Giles Shilson Jeremy Simons Clerk to the Board Julie Mayer Barbican Centre Trust Chairman Christopher Purvis CBE Lesley King-Lewis Catherine McGuinness Tony Medniuk Professor Henrietta Moore Graham Nicholson Stuart Popham QC (Hon) Sir David Scholey CBE Sir Nicholas Kenyon Barbican Directors Managing Director Sir Nicholas Kenyon Chief Operating and Financial Officer Sandeep Dwesar Director of Programming Louise Jeffreys Director of Creative Learning Sean Gregory Director of Audiences and Development Leonora Thomson Buildings Director (Interim) Shaun Kerfoot PA to Sir Nicholas Kenyon Ali Ribchester (Maternity leave) Barbican Music Department Head of Music Angela Dixon PA to the Head of Music Tobias Perkins Consultant Creative Producer Bryn Ormrod Music Programmer Chris Sharp Programming Assistants Mette Skriver Eoin Quirke Concerts Planning Manager Frances Bryant Concerts Co-ordinator Katy Morrison Technical Manager Ingo Reinhardt Stage Managers Julie-Anne Shannon Hannah Wye Deputy Technical Manager Mark Bloxsidge Platform Supervisor Paul Harcourt Technicians Maurice Adamson Michael Casey Lee Evans Jason Kew Martin Shaw Tom Shipman Senior Stage Assistant Andy Clarke Stage Assistants Ademola Akisanya Joan Doyle Roger Garnett Danny Harcourt Robert Rea Producing Administrator Colette Chilton Events Producer Alison Cooper (Maternity leave) Nigel Cutting Production Managers Jo Athroll Claire Corns Kate Packham Eddie Shelter Mez Jones Company Production Managers Rachel Smith Rob Timmer Barbican Marketing Department Head of Marketing Rob Baker Senior Marketing Campaigns Manager Ben Jefferies Marketing Campaigns Manager – Classical Music Bethan Sheppard Marketing Campaigns Executives Peter Di Toro Matteo Plachesi Marketing Assistants Jessica Tomkins Patricia Mediavilla Barbican Communications Department Head of Communications Lorna Gemmell Media Relations Manager Annikaisa Vainio Senior Media Relations Officer Sabine Kindel Media Relations Officer Naomi Burgoyne Media Relations Assistant Robert Severyn-Kosinski Barbican Development Department Head of Development Lynette Brooks Barbican Guildhall Creative Learning Department Programme Manager for Leadership Jose Martins Music and Cross Arts Producer Anna Rice Creative Learning Officer Jenny Beer Projects Assistant Kathryn Allnutt 19 & 20 Jul barbican.org.uk 13 14
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