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Updated 7/23/10! |



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Sonny Rollins Named 2010 Edward
MacDowell Medalist; First Jazz Composer to Be So Honored
Rollins Set To Perform at Boston Symphony Hall Sunday, April 18
BOSTON, MA: Jazz saxophonist Sonny Rollins,
who will perform at Boston Symphony Hall on Sunday April 18 at 7:00 pm has just
received a major honor and recognition. The MacDowell Colony, the nation’s
leading artist residency program, will present its 51st Edward MacDowell Medal
to jazz composer and tenor saxophonist Sonny Rollins. The MacDowell Medal has
been awarded annually since 1960 to an individual who has made an outstanding
contribution to his/her field, and this year marks the first time the Colony has
recognized the field of jazz. Rollins joins an impressive list of past
recipients, including Leonard Bernstein, Alice Munro, I.M. Pei, Merce
Cunningham, Aaron Copeland and Georgia O’Keeffe.
On Sunday, August 15, beginning at 12:15 pm, the award ceremony will take place
on The MacDowell Colony grounds, which will be open to the public for the
festivities and celebration. Robert MacNeil, chairman of The MacDowell Colony,
will award the Medal, along with Cheryl Young, executive director. MacDowell
Fellow and preeminent jazz writer and critic Gary Giddins, this year’s
presentation speaker, will introduce Rollins and describe his life and work to
the audience.
“I’m proud and pleased to be selected to receive this very special prize,”
Rollins said. “Edward MacDowell’s spirit engaged me many years ago when, as a
child, I was inspired by his composition ‘To a Wild Rose.’ Later, I had the
opportunity to make it a part of my repertoire, performing it on many occasions
and eventually recording it. Somehow I feel I’m getting to meet him again.”
In naming Rollins the 2010 Medalist, Giddins, also chairman of this year’s
Medalist Selection Committee, said, “Much as The MacDowell Colony represents to
countless artists a matchless paradise for inspired, uninterrupted creativity,
this year’s Medalist represents the zenith of his art. Perhaps more than any
other artist since World War II, Sonny Rollins has personified the fearless
adventure, soul, wit, stubborn individuality, and relentless originality that is
jazz at its finest. From the time he began recording, at 19, he was recognized
as a major talent; his innovative approach to the tenor saxophone was endlessly
copied, and his original compositions frequently adapted. But in jazz, composer
and performer are often one and the same, and perhaps his key achievement has
been the forging of an improvisational method that has given the idea of
theme-and-variations a renewed vitality. His singular music is at once
reassuring in its fortitude and daring in its detours. Incapable of faking
emotion or settling for rote answers to the challenges of creating music in the
moment, he keeps us ever-alert to the power of the present.”
Joining Giddins on the committee were composer and founder of the Skymusic
Ensemble, Carman Moore; composer, musician, and noted professor Dr. Valerie
Capers; and Dan Morgenstern, GRAMMY Award-winning jazz historian, critic, and
current director of Rutgers University’s Institute of Jazz Studies.
Called the “greatest living tenor saxophone player” by The New York Times and
“the greatest remaining master from one of jazz’s seminal eras” by the 2007
Polar Music Prize committee, Rollins has had a profound impact on music during a
long and storied career that began with his first recordings as a sideman in
1949. Rollins has since been honored with a lifetime achievement award from the
National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences and, in 2007, the Polar Prize in
Music, one of the most prestigious music awards in the world. In 2009, he was
awarded the Austrian Cross of Honor for Science and Art. One of Austria’s
highest honors, the award is given to leading international figures for
distinguished achievements. The only other American artists who have received
this recognition are Frank Sinatra and Jessye Norman.
Since the inception of the Edward MacDowell Medal, the Colony has rotated it
among its seven artistic disciplines. Rollins is the 14th Medalist in music
composition, but the very first in the field of jazz. He follows such luminaries
as Aaron Copland (1961), Edgard Varèse (1965), Roger Sessions (1968), William
Schuman (1971), Walter Piston (1974), Virgil Thomson (1977), Samuel Barber
(1980), Elliott Carter (1983), Leonard Bernstein (1987), David Diamond (1991),
George Crumb (1995), Lou Harrison (2000), and Steve Reich (2005).
In its 102-year history, MacDowell has provided Fellowships to more than 950
composers, including Bernstein and Copland, as well as other well-known artists
such as Anthony Davis, Lukas Foss, Meredith Monk, Paul Moravec, Ned Rorem, and
Duncan Sheik. These composers are part of the more than 6,500 artists from all
disciplines who have worked at the Colony, including playwrights Thornton Wilder
and Suzan-Lori Parks; visual artists Benny Andrews and Milton Avery; writers
Willa Cather, Alice Walker, and Alice Sebold; and architects Les Robertson and
Tom Kundig.
Following this year’s Medal Day ceremony, guests can enjoy picnic lunches on
Colony grounds. MacDowell artists-in-residence will then open their studios to
the public from 2 pm until 5 pm. There is no charge to attend Medal Day.
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