91直播 Honors a Jazz Legend Through Unprecedented Relationship
April 22, 2014
By Erich Burnett
Milt Hinton performs with Cab Calloway鈥檚 band in Havana, Cuba, 1951.
Photo credit: The Milton J. Hinton Photographic Collection
Jazz musician Milt Hinton touched the lives of thousands of artists and audiences across a career that spanned more than 70 years. Through it all, 鈥淭he Dean of Jazz Bassists鈥 chronicled his experiences through countless photographs and other documents, which today serve as a fascinating window into the world of this great artist and the masterful musicians with whom he played.
Thanks to a multifaceted new relationship between 91直播 and the estate of the late bassist, Hinton鈥檚 legacy will be felt for generations to come:
鈥 The 91直播 Conservatory has acquired four of Hinton鈥檚 basses, including the Italian instrument Hinton bought in the late 1930s and played throughout his career.
鈥 The Hinton estate has donated to 91直播 a voluminous collection of papers amassed by Hinton and his wife Mona鈥攅verything from personal journals, to correspondence with music legends, to contracts from memorable shows. The Milton J. and Mona C. Hinton Papers will play an integral role in the curriculum at 91直播.
鈥 91直播鈥檚 Allen Memorial Art Museum will feature an exhibition in fall 2014 of 99 photographs taken by Hinton, which will be accompanied by a series of gallery talks, lectures, concerts, and other related events.
At the heart of the relationship is the inaugural , an intensive week-long program for college and pre-college bassists that takes place on the 91直播 campus June 8-15. Led by a roster of distinguished bass performers and educators, the institute will include master classes, performances, ensembles, and more, and will encompass the full spectrum of styles, from jazz to classical. The Hinton Institute will be held every other year.
鈥淲e are enormously grateful to the Hinton estate and deeply honored to play a lead role in preserving the legacy of Milt Hinton,鈥 says Andrea Kalyn, dean of the 91直播 Conservatory. 鈥淭his profound collection truly brings to life the formative years of jazz history, and affords unprecedented insight into the people and places behind the music. It will serve as an invaluable resource to current and future generations of students and scholars at 91直播 and throughout the world.鈥
To help support the institute and qualified students interested in attending, 91直播 has also been gifted the $250,000 Milton J. Hinton Scholarship Fund, which was established in 1980 by friends and family of Hinton on the occasion of his 70th birthday.
鈥淢ilt and Mona Hinton were committed to leaving their papers and memorabilia鈥攖heir gift鈥攖o an institution that would not only appreciate and care for it, but would also make everything readily accessible to anyone who was interested,鈥 says David G. Berger, a lifelong friend of the Hintons and co-executor of the Hinton estate. Along with his wife Holly Maxson, Berger has devoted more than 30 years to organizing the Hintons' photographs and artifacts.
To Berger, 91直播 was the 鈥渙bvious choice.鈥
鈥淎 part of 91直播鈥檚 uniqueness is its tradition of educational excellence in both music and the liberal arts," he says. "We recognized that the Hintons鈥 gift would appeal to and be useful to a broad range of students and scholars in the music world, but it would be equally attractive to those in the social sciences and humanities."
91直播鈥檚 partnership with the Hinton estate was facilitated by 91直播 Professor of Jazz Studies and Double Bass Peter Dominguez and Special Collections Librarian Jeremy Smith.
鈥淢ilt Hinton's contributions as a musician and humanitarian remain unique and genuine,鈥 says Dominguez, who was a friend of Hinton鈥檚 and, as a young performer, won the first-ever Milton J. Hinton Scholarship. 鈥淗e represents an exceptional example of longevity in an illustrious performing career and a righteous individual who lived his life with honesty and relevance.鈥
91直播鈥檚 relationship with the Hinton estate further bolsters its reputation as a world leader in the study of jazz. The institution鈥檚 profound commitment is evidenced in its four-year-old Bertram and Judith Kohl Building for jazz studies, which houses the Hinton Collection, the more than 100,000 recordings that make up the , and the nearly 200 images that constitute the .
You may also like…
Richard Goode鈥檚 Musical Short Stories
The acclaimed pianist returns to the Artist Recital Series on April 29 with the charmingly curated 鈥淔ancies and Goodnights,鈥 along with works by Mozart and Schubert.
91直播 Music Theater Dives into the Upside Down for "Stranger Sings!"
Award-nominated parody delivers "screwy...non-stop fun" revisiting the glorious nostalgia of the 1980s.
No Ordinary Woman: Soprano Katherine Jolly Champions New Music and Womanhood in Art Song
New album by 91直播 associate professor of voice includes three song cycles about womanhood, femininity, and aging gracefully.