{"id":2093,"date":"2022-09-30T10:51:00","date_gmt":"2022-09-30T14:51:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/sites.krieger.jhu.edu\/billie-holiday\/?p=2093"},"modified":"2022-10-13T14:17:12","modified_gmt":"2022-10-13T18:17:12","slug":"a-slice-of-jazz-in-the-square-2022","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/sites.krieger.jhu.edu\/billie-holiday\/2022\/09\/30\/a-slice-of-jazz-in-the-square-2022\/","title":{"rendered":"A Cut of Jazz in the Square, 2022"},"content":{"rendered":"\n

\u201cMan, I know what you are trying to do!\u201d With those words, Ray Rice, a lifelong resident of Sandtown, congratulated Professor Lawrence Jackson, the director of the Billie Holiday Center for Liberation Arts. It was the conclusion of the annual \u201cJazz in the Square\u201d concert. Attired in the ancient garb of the Avenue, an oxford shirt of white linen and a plaid driving cap, Rice clarified his observation about the afternoon event that had both the quality of a family reunion, a coming-out-party, and an occasion for deep historical inquiry and recovery.  In its fourth year, \u201cJazz in the Square\u201d has begun to symbolize precisely such a moment of eagerly anticipated reunion, renewing fellowship, as well as reconciliation. It is designed to foster a new kind of community, one that includes and celebrates Baltimoreans who have remained in black neighborhoods, those with longstanding ties through family and worship, and those employed by or studying at Johns Hopkins.  Jackson replied to his new friend, \u201cYou have read my mind and made the afternoon for me,\u201d acknowledging the genuine perceptiveness of the comment.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Since 2019 Jackson\u2019s Billie Holiday Center for Liberation Arts has conducted the annual concert featuring a trained jazz vocalist singing Holiday standards and accompanied by famed Peabody Conservatory musicians Nasar Abadey and Sean Jones (the director of the Jazz Studies program there). On September 10, 2022, local star Navasha Daya took the stage as headliner.  Wearing a red shawl and feathered headdress, Daya, a local favorite keen to perform Holiday-authored songs, played two sets between 3pm and 5:30pm.  The crowd approvingly responded to her versions of standards like \u201cFine and Mellow\u201d and \u201cBillie\u2019s Blues,\u201d but also less well-known numbers like \u201cTell Me More and More and Then So,\u201d a slow tune that the band played in \u201ctuba two,\u201d or, hot.   <\/p>\n\n\n\n