COTA CampJazz Music Camp
Campjazz Concert
 Come See The Campers Concert

Sunday August 1, 2010

5:00 PM to 6:30 PM

Presbyterian Church of the

Mountain

Gazebo
 
2010 Schedule

Master Daily Schedule (Monday, July 26 - Friday, July 30)

 

Monday - Friday

8:30-9:00 Check-in/Warm-up/Ensemble assignment (Church of the Mountain Annex)

9:00-10:30 Ensemble rehearsal (Friday: 9:00-11:30 -ESU, Al Cohn Jazz Collection)

10:40-11:50 Classes

  • Mon/Tues: Group I - Jazz Theory w/Evan Gregor
Group II - Ear Training w/Caris Visentin
  • Wed/Thurs: Group II – Jazz Theory w/Evan
Group I – Ear Training w/Caris


12:00-1:00 Lunch at the Deer Head Inn w/"Brown Bag" Performance

  • Monday: Phil Woods and Friends
  • Tuesday: Sue Terry and Friends
  • Wednesday: Lunch at Croasdale Manor (Jesse Green and Friends)
  • Thursday: Bob Leive and Friends
  • Friday: Dave Liebman and Friends

1:00-1:50 Master Class at Deer Head Inn

  • Monday: Phil Woods
  • Tuesday: Sue Terry
  • Wednesday: Jesse Green
  • Thursday: Bob Leive
  • Friday: Dave Liebman

2:00-2:50 Ensemble rehearsal - (Monday and Thursday, sectionals)

3:00-3:50 "Experiencing Jazz" with Michael Stephans

4:00-5:00 Ensemble rehearsal

Saturday, July 31

9:00-2:00 Ensembles record at Red Rock Studios

Sunday, August 1

3:30-4:30 Jazz Barbecue (Campers and families invited)

5:00-6:30 Ensemble Performances – Church of the Mountain Gazebo Concert

 

July 26 through August 1, 2010

     Faculty

  • Phil Woods - Director
  • Rick Chamberlain - Director
  • Jim Daniels - Education Coordinator
  • Evan Gregor - Ensemble Coordinator
  • Kent Heckman - Red Rock Recording
  • Spencer Reed
  • Caris Visentin
  • Eric Doney
  • Vicki Doney
  • Michael Stephans, Drums
  • Bobby Avey, Piano
  • Matt Vashlishan, Saxophone
  • Jay Rattman, Saxophone
  • Jesse Green, Piano

Phil Woods, NEA Jazz Master and multi-Grammy-Award-winning saxophonist
  • Dave Liebman
  • Bob Dorough
  • Bob Leive
  • and more!

Campus:

Delaware Water Gap, PA Historic Sites

  • Castle Inn (site of the COTA Festival)
  • Presbyterian Church of the Mountain
  • Deer Head Inn 

Curriculum: (level specific)

  • Improvisational training
  • Small-ensemble playing
  • Big Band Workshops
  • Theory of improvisation and arranging for a small group
  • Ear training
  • Listening workshops
  • Recording workshop and session
  • Brown-bag lunch concerts with faculty and guests
  • Classes with COTA Jazz Masters
  • All-ensemble performances at the Gap's Community Concert Series, Aug. 1 (Church of the Mountain Gazebo)
  • Field trip to explore the Al Cohn Memorial Jazz Collection at the Kemp Library of East Stroudsburg University

 Housing:

  • Housing is available at East Stroudsburg University for CampJazz students. The cost for room and board (breakfast and dinner included) is $395.00.
  • We have the third floor of the university apartments. 4 apartments - 2 male, 2 female - 3 bedrooms each apartment double occupancy. There will be a responsible chaperone for the floor. We will match age groups.
  • Since the other floors will be students of David Liebman's saxophone Master class - there will be plenty of music floating through the building that week.
 
Jazz camp hits the right notes
August 07, 2009 6:00 AM

The Pocono Record salutes area jazz musicians who are passing along principles of this unique American music to the next generation of performers.

Sunday, Aug. 2, marked the culmination of the third annual "Camp Jazz" with the campers' concert at the Church of the Mountain in Delaware Water Gap. Performing were students who had completed an intensive, weeklong immersion in jazz music and technique mentored by renowned jazz greats.

Grammy Award-winning saxophonist Phil Woods and Rick Chamberlain, principal trombonist of the New York City Ballet orchestra, first organized the camp in 2007 as a way to foster local talent. A camp, they figured, would be a natural complement — and feeder system — to the annual Celebration of the Arts jazz festival that takes place each September in the Gap. They enlisted camp space for lessons and practice from the Church of the Mountain, mined the jazz collection at East Stroudsburg University, got studio recording time at Red Rock Recording Studio, transportation from the Delaware Water Gap Trolley and performance space from the Deer Head Inn.

The Poconos are home to a number of internationally recognized jazz musicians, and for $450 for the week, students from eighth grade to this year's seniors took lessons from a distinguished faculty. Besides Woods and Chamberlain, jazz artists Brian Lynch, Roger Rosenberg, Bill Goodwin, Steve Gilmore, Bobby Rouch, Eric Doney, Nelson Hill, Tom Hamilton, Vicki Doney, Bob Dorough, Jesse Green, Spencer Reed and Jim Daniels have taught at the camp. And young jazz artists Evan Gregor, Bobby Avey, Matt Vaslishin, Jay Rattman and Chuck Cooper, themselves COTA veterans, served as mentors.

Campers study improvisation, small ensemble work, arranging, ear training and other skills. But the camp is about much more than lessons and study. It's about listening and responding, honing skills while learning and creating music.

Jazz offers young students a welcome alternative from the rap, pop, country and other more commercial musical styles that dominate the air waves. Born in America, jazz reflects American history and regional idiosyncrasies. It offers aspiring musicians a creative outlet and a fellowship of passionate colleagues. Hats off to Camp Jazz for providing this terrific opportunity to young jazz fans for the third year.

 
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