Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra & Wynton Marsalis - Freedom, Justice, and Hope (2024) [Hi-Res]
Artist: Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra, Wynton Marsalis, Bryan Stevenson
Title: Freedom, Justice, and Hope
Year Of Release: 2024
Label: Blue Engine Records
Genre: Jazz
Quality: FLAC (tracks) [96kHz/24bit]
Total Time: 1:16:31
Total Size: 1.26 GB / 366 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: Freedom, Justice, and Hope
Year Of Release: 2024
Label: Blue Engine Records
Genre: Jazz
Quality: FLAC (tracks) [96kHz/24bit]
Total Time: 1:16:31
Total Size: 1.26 GB / 366 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
1. Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra & Wynton Marsalis – Introduction: A Less Glorious Story (feat. Bryan Stevenson) (04:47)
2. Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra & Wynton Marsalis – Freedom Suite: Movement I (feat. Bryan Stevenson) (06:23)
3. Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra & Wynton Marsalis – Interlude: Exiles and Refugees (feat. Bryan Stevenson) (01:56)
4. Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra & Wynton Marsalis – Honeysuckle Rose (feat. Bryan Stevenson) (05:24)
5. Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra & Wynton Marsalis – Interlude: Freedom Doesn't Work Without Justice (feat. Bryan Stevenson) (04:24)
6. Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra & Wynton Marsalis – Elaine (feat. Bryan Stevenson & Josh Evans) (14:13)
7. Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra & Wynton Marsalis – Interlude: Four Precious Little Girls (feat. Bryan Stevenson) (02:13)
8. Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra & Wynton Marsalis – Alabama (feat. Bryan Stevenson) (05:25)
9. Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra & Wynton Marsalis – Interlude: A Life of Truth-telling (feat. Bryan Stevenson) (03:00)
10. Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra & Wynton Marsalis – Ida's Crusade (feat. Bryan Stevenson & Endea Owens) (08:01)
11. Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra & Wynton Marsalis – Interlude: Change (feat. Bryan Stevenson) (03:03)
12. Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra & Wynton Marsalis – Meditations on Integration (feat. Bryan Stevenson) (09:06)
13. Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra & Wynton Marsalis – Conclusion: Something Better Waiting for Us (feat. Bryan Stevenson) (03:19)
14. Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra & Wynton Marsalis – We Shall Overcome (feat. Bryan Stevenson) (05:12)
Blue Engine Records proudly releases Freedom, Justice, and Hope, the live recording of Jazz at Lincoln Center’s multidisciplinary concert that contextualizes jazz within Black Americans’ pursuit of equality.
Featuring the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra with Wynton Marsalis in creative collaboration with social justice activist and founder of The Equal Justice Initiative Bryan Stevenson, the recording features new arrangements of some of the most important protest songs in jazz history and new works by featured guest artists Endea Owens and Josh Evans.
On the occasion of Juneteenth (June 19, 2024), Freedom, Justice, and Hope will be available as a CD and on digital streaming platforms on June 14.
Exclusively on Freedom, Justice, and Hope, the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra performs new arrangements of revered jazz songs: “Honeysuckle Rose,” composed by Fats Waller (1929); “We Shall Overcome” (1947) “Freedom Suite,” composed by Sonny Rollins (1958); and “Alabama,” composed by John Coltrane (1963).
These songs are intermixed with Stevenson’s stirring monologues, which provide compelling commentary on American terrorism, disenfranchisement, and racial injustice while highlighting the history of fearless activism and incredible artistic creativity that defined the Civil Rights Movement. Freedom, Justice, and Hope also features Stevenson, an accomplished pianist, joining the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra on “Honeysuckle Rose” and “We Shall Overcome.”
“Art and music have always been essential forces in the pursuit of justice in America. When Wynton reached out about doing this project, I believed we could really reinforce the idea that, together, art and music – especially jazz music – play a critical role in meaningfully engaging people in the multiple ways that the struggle for racial justice in America must continue,” said Bryan Stevenson, Equal Justice Initiative Founder. He continued, “Premiering music by emerging composers – including Josh Evans’ incredible composition informed by the 1919 Elaine Massacre in Hoop Spur, Phillips County, Arkansas, and Endea Owens’ compelling new piece honoring the life and legacy of Ida B. Wells – is precisely the kind of integration of art and justice that makes jazz a force for change. Adding to the recording, works by jazz masters like John Coltrane and Sonny Rollins, whose compositions confronted racial injustice in their lives, further elevate this unique musical experience.”
Freedom, Justice, and Hope features the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra with Wynton Marsalis performing works, commissioned by Jazz at Lincoln Center, by two of jazz music’s emerging musicians and composers. “Elaine” by trumpeter Josh Evans, is informed by the 1919 Elaine Massacre in Hoop Spur, Phillips County, Arkansas.
Endea Owens, “Ida’s Crusade” is inspired by the life and work of Ida B. Wells (1862 – 1931) and Well’s crusade against the lynching and wrongful imprisonment of Black Americans.
Featuring the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra with Wynton Marsalis in creative collaboration with social justice activist and founder of The Equal Justice Initiative Bryan Stevenson, the recording features new arrangements of some of the most important protest songs in jazz history and new works by featured guest artists Endea Owens and Josh Evans.
On the occasion of Juneteenth (June 19, 2024), Freedom, Justice, and Hope will be available as a CD and on digital streaming platforms on June 14.
Exclusively on Freedom, Justice, and Hope, the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra performs new arrangements of revered jazz songs: “Honeysuckle Rose,” composed by Fats Waller (1929); “We Shall Overcome” (1947) “Freedom Suite,” composed by Sonny Rollins (1958); and “Alabama,” composed by John Coltrane (1963).
These songs are intermixed with Stevenson’s stirring monologues, which provide compelling commentary on American terrorism, disenfranchisement, and racial injustice while highlighting the history of fearless activism and incredible artistic creativity that defined the Civil Rights Movement. Freedom, Justice, and Hope also features Stevenson, an accomplished pianist, joining the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra on “Honeysuckle Rose” and “We Shall Overcome.”
“Art and music have always been essential forces in the pursuit of justice in America. When Wynton reached out about doing this project, I believed we could really reinforce the idea that, together, art and music – especially jazz music – play a critical role in meaningfully engaging people in the multiple ways that the struggle for racial justice in America must continue,” said Bryan Stevenson, Equal Justice Initiative Founder. He continued, “Premiering music by emerging composers – including Josh Evans’ incredible composition informed by the 1919 Elaine Massacre in Hoop Spur, Phillips County, Arkansas, and Endea Owens’ compelling new piece honoring the life and legacy of Ida B. Wells – is precisely the kind of integration of art and justice that makes jazz a force for change. Adding to the recording, works by jazz masters like John Coltrane and Sonny Rollins, whose compositions confronted racial injustice in their lives, further elevate this unique musical experience.”
Freedom, Justice, and Hope features the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra with Wynton Marsalis performing works, commissioned by Jazz at Lincoln Center, by two of jazz music’s emerging musicians and composers. “Elaine” by trumpeter Josh Evans, is informed by the 1919 Elaine Massacre in Hoop Spur, Phillips County, Arkansas.
Endea Owens, “Ida’s Crusade” is inspired by the life and work of Ida B. Wells (1862 – 1931) and Well’s crusade against the lynching and wrongful imprisonment of Black Americans.