The Morning Call (Sunday)

Kids can join in on jazz affordably in NYC

- By Katherine Roth

NEW YORK — New York has long been a city known for jazz. What’s less well-known is how kid- and family-friendly jazz performanc­es here can be.

Many performers have day jobs as educators, and although many venues are nightclubs, there are jazz performanc­es where even toddlers are welcome.

“When I was a kid, the Vanguard was an extension of my home. It was not only smoky, it was noisy. Now? Forget it. Make a peep and the noise police will shush you,” said Deborah Gordon, general manager of the Village Vanguard, opened by her father in 1935. “It was a rough-and-tumble place when I was a kid, and 13-year-olds definitely weren’t allowed in. You’d have to hang out on the stairs if you wanted to listen.”

A lot has changed. Today, the Vanguard is nonsmoking and cleaner, and the minimum age to attend a performanc­e is 13. But Gordon says not all kids are ready at that age for jazz (she says she wasn’t). Visitors should keep a few things in mind before making a reservatio­n:

“Do your homework first about who’s playing, and see if it’s what you want to hear,” she said. Also, no food is served, and the place is, still, a nightclub.

The Blue Note, Smalls Jazz Club, Birdland Jazz Club and the Jazz Standard have no minimum age and welcome wellbehave­d children accompanie­d by adults. The minimum age at Dizzy’s Club Coca-Cola is 7, and the Jazz Standard hosts a “Jazz for Kids” program on Sundays.

As for types of jazz, Todd Stoll, Jazz at Lincoln Center’s vice president of education, recommends vocalists and big band music as a good entry point for kids. He urges families to explore Jazz at Lincoln Center’s YouTube channel, featuring videos explaining improvisat­ion and various jazz artists and genres.

Jazz at Lincoln Center features performanc­es for kids as young as 8 months.

“We call them Family Jazz Parties, and we have six to eight of them a year. They’re family jazz concerts for a kid and a caregiver, with jazz that is very digestible for kids of that age group (8 months to 5 years) while also enjoyable for parents, held in a carpeted venue where kids can move around,” Stoll said. In addition, visitors to

New York can buy tickets to a single WeBop jazz appreciati­on class for a young person and a caregiver.

Jazz at Lincoln Center also offers two family-oriented concerts a year, created by Wynton Marsalis and inspired by a format begun by Leonard Bernstein in the 1950s. The concerts combine music and education around a specific concept, genre or important figure.

“Older than that, and most kids are really ready to check out Dizzy’s or the Vanguard or whatever other place they’re interested in going,” Stoll said. “Just do some research before you go. It’s not a musical or a pop concert, it’s fine art. It doesn’t pander.”

Jazz, said Marsalis, “demands that we develop our hearing. It’s our job to empower kids and to teach them to listen and to hear. We should encourage them to get with the harmony, get to the piano, learn three or four basic chords, a blues — it’s a great tool to encourage hearing.”

Stoll says that delving into jazz is also a great way to better appreciate New York City.

“The first jazz recording ever made was in New York in 1917, just about every jazz great came to New York to make their name here, and the vibe and feeling of New York is still a jazz vibe. New York sweats jazz,” he said.

And unlike many Broadway musicals, jazz performanc­es tend to be reasonably priced and readily accessible without much planning.

Not only can a family of four sit right up front at a jazz concert for around the price of a single Broadway ticket, but tickets to jazz clubs can often be had the day of a performanc­e. Reservatio­ns to shows are made online, and clubs generally have first-come, first-served seating. Jazz at Lincoln Center offers student discounts in their concert halls and at Dizzy’s Club Coca-Cola, as do some other places.

“With kids, you definitely want to get them right up close by the drums, where they can see all that’s going on. It really blows them away,” Gordon said.

Stoll said kids can learn a lot from jazz: “On an intellectu­al level, improvisat­ion is the freedom and the importance of the individual voice. Swing is how that voice is related to a group. Blues is facing adversity with optimism. Those are three things we want kids to get from jazz. It also teaches us culturally about America, with lessons about race, gender and socioecono­mic disparity, if parents want to make it a lesson about that.”

 ?? MICHAEL LARSON/VILLAGE VANGUARD ?? Instrument­s await the artists at the Village Vanguard jazz club in New York. Once rough-and-tumble, it’s now welcoming to younger audiences.
MICHAEL LARSON/VILLAGE VANGUARD Instrument­s await the artists at the Village Vanguard jazz club in New York. Once rough-and-tumble, it’s now welcoming to younger audiences.

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