Brooklyn Jazz Underground Explained

Brooklyn Jazz Underground Records
Founder:Anne Mette Iversen, Alexis Cuadrado
Genre:Jazz
Country:U.S.
Location:New York City

Brooklyn Jazz Underground is a jazz association founded in Brooklyn, New York, in 2007. The association was formed by ten musicians to promote their work.[1] In 2008, Anne Mette Iversen and Alexis Cuadrado of the Brooklyn Jazz Underground started the sister company, the record label Brooklyn Jazz Underground Records.[2] [3]

Founding members of the association include Tanya Kalmanovitch, Alan Ferber, Alexis Cuadrado, Shane Endsley, Benny Lackner, Dan Pratt, Jerome Sabbagh, Anne Mette Iversen, Sunny Jain, and Ted Poor. In 2006, Kalmanovitch talked about the idea with Ferber and Cuadrado. They began their venture with performances at Smalls Jazz Club. Other activities that the BJU established and has hosted are weekly concert series at the Sycamore Bar & Flowershop and at The Tea Lounge, both in Brooklyn; a series of podcasts about the band members; benefits for schools; five CD samplers; the annual Brooklyn Jazz Underground Jazz Festival; and two albums as the Brooklyn Jazz Underground Ensemble,[4] the CDs A Portrait of Brooklyn and 7x7.

The record label was founded in 2008 with the intent to give musicians more control over their work. Early albums included Puzzles by Alexis Cuadrado, Night for Day by Bernard Emer Lackner, and the double album Best of the West and Many Places by Anne Mette Iversen. Brooklyn Jazz Underground Records continued releasing albums steadily over the years, and by the beginning of 2019 they had 68 albums in their catalog.[5]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Oullette . Dan. Jazz Notes: Collective Action. Google Books/Billboard magazine. Nielsen Business Media . 19 April 2017. 16 December 2006.
  2. Web site: Turner . Mark . Brooklyn Jazz Underground Records. All About Jazz. 19 April 2017. 20 May 2008.
  3. Web site: Miller. Matthew. Brooklyn Jazz Underground . All About Jazz . 12 February 2018. en. 23 June 2009.
  4. Web site: Brooklyn Jazz Underground.
  5. Web site: Home . bjurecords.com.