A memorial service for Bob Brookmeyer, the great jazz composer and valve trombonist who died in December, will be held in New York on Wednesday.
Here are the details, courtesy of Bill Kirchner, who is coordinating the event:
It will be held at St. Peter’s Lutheran Church (East 54th St. between Third and Lexington Avenues) in New York City on Wednesday, April 11, from 6:30 to 9:30 p.m. A reception will follow immediately afterward at the church.
That evening, Bob’s music will be played by the Vanguard Jazz Orchestra (for which he wrote for over forty years) and two specially-assembled smaller groups. There will also be a number of distinguished speakers: (in alphabetical order) Darcy James Argue, Greg Bahora, Dave Bailey, Bill Crow, Ed Dix, Jim Hall, Bill Kirchner, Jim McNeely, Dick Oatts, Jimmy Owens, John Snyder, Michael Stephans, and Terry Teachout. In addition, there will be an audio tribute by Clark Terry, and a video presentation by Maria Schneider, Ryan Truesdell, and Marie Le Claire.
If you want a seat, come early–we’re expecting a crowd.
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The Vanguard Jazz Orchestra plays Bob Brookmeyer’s arrangement of Fats Waller’s “Willow Tree” live in 2008:

Though Mr. Rice is only a fair-to-middling lyricist, he has contrived to turn the tale of Eva and Juan Perón (Elena Roger and Michael Cerveris) into a compelling chronicle of love and politics, and the music is for the most part worthy of the occasion. As always, Mr. Lloyd Webber’s tunes turn sugary whenever emotions run high, but his feel for large-scale scenic construction is unfailingly impressive. Much of “Evita,” which has almost no spoken dialogue, holds together as well as any of the extended musical sequences in “Sweeney Todd.” Heresy, I know, and I wouldn’t dream of suggesting that “Evita” is worthy of direct comparison to Stephen Sondheim’s masterpiece. Still, the best parts are good enough to make the worst parts tolerable…