February 7, 2013 | 101 notes
Duke Ellington With Hookah and Tea in Iraq
Edward Kennedy “Duke” Ellington, born April 29, 1899 in Washington, D.C., was a global giant in jazz for more than 50 years. As a cultural ambassador, Ellington garnered global recognition for jazz as an original American art form and was admired by fans and heads of state, worldwide, for his artistry. Over the years, Washington, D.C. has celebrated its native son with numerous honors including a community-building contemporary art mural, the development of the Duke Ellington School of the Arts, a statue of Ellington at the piano in front of the legendary Howard Theater and the dedication of a park in his name in the Foggy Bottom neighborhood.
But perhaps two of the city’s best tributes to Ellington was the installation of the Duke Ellington Collection—an archival treasure trove of photographs, records and other materials, including 100,000 sheets of unpublished Ellington music at the Smithsonian National Museum of American History’s Archives Center, and the establishment, through federal appropriation, of the Smithsonian Jazz Masterworks Orchestra as ”the nation’s jazz orchestra” to preserve and disseminate Ellington’s jazz legacy and that of other jazz legends, to the nation and the world via tours, recordings, education, and concerts. - Continue reading at Smithsonian.com.
Photo courtesy of Duke Ellington Collection, Archives Center, National Museum of American History
December 13, 2012 | 117 notes
Esperanza Spalding Took on Bieber, Now Takes on Jazz
In 2011, [Esperanza] Spalding found herself onstage and on millions of television screens, collecting a Grammy Award in the Best New Artist category (and sending fans of pop post-teen sensation Justin Bieber, who lost out, into irate Twitter rants).
Her youth and beauty and progressive fashion-she accepted her Grammy in a deconstructed citron chiffon dress and a very intentional afro coaxed into a pompadour-were also an undeniable part of her appeal. Village Voice music critic Greg Tate calls Spalding the “sexiest and best thing to happen to jazz since Wynton.” - Continue reading at Smithsonian.com.
Photo by: Ethan Hill
Ed note: The inspirational winners of our first annual American Ingenuity Awards.
July 13, 2012 | 43 notes
Photo of the Day: Girls’ shoes during a jazz session.
Photo by: Borja Aguado Aizpun (Bilbao, Spain),Zorrozaurre, Bilbao, Spain


![Esperanza Spalding Took on Bieber, Now Takes on Jazz
In 2011, [Esperanza] Spalding found herself onstage and on millions of television screens, collecting a Grammy Award in the Best New Artist category (and sending fans of pop post-teen sensation Justin Bieber, who lost out, into irate Twitter rants).
Her youth and beauty and progressive fashion-she accepted her Grammy in a deconstructed citron chiffon dress and a very intentional afro coaxed into a pompadour-were also an undeniable part of her appeal. Village Voice music critic Greg Tate calls Spalding the “sexiest and best thing to happen to jazz since Wynton.” - Continue reading at Smithsonian.com.
Photo by: Ethan Hill
Ed note: The inspirational winners of our first annual American Ingenuity Awards.](http://25.media.tumblr.com/a8db16dd62d070c73afa549ff92043c6/tumblr_mezftbjjo71r7u6l5o1_1280.jpg)
