Alice Coltrane For President Tote
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- Alice Coltrane's landmark Journey to Satchidananda reveals just how far the pianist and widow of John Coltrane had come in the three years after his death. The compositions here are wildly open and droning figures built on whole tones and minor modes. And while it's true that one can definitely hear her late husband's influence on this music, she wouldn't have had it any other way.
- Jan 14, 2007 Alice Coltrane, the jazz performer and composer who was inextricably linked with the adventurous musical improvisations of her late husband, legendary saxophonist John Coltrane, has died.
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Forever “Grateful” for Education Support.
Alice Coltrane For President Tote Bag
We are so excited to have developed relationships with the jamband and Grateful Dead community, having received grants from two of the Dead-related foundations and managed display tables at Dead & Company concerts. (Like so many other contemporary bands, the Grateful Dead were enormously influenced by John Coltrane.) These funds are helping cover some expenses for our pilot Education Project – focused on school districts which have seen dramatic music education cuts.
Photos Wyandanch Public Library
This coveted honor signals the support of the nation’s most prestigious preservation group and makes clear the historic and cultural significance of the Coltrane legacy.
This award is such an important milestone for the project that we celebrated twice: in the morning at the Home with speeches made by supportive Long Island legislators and dignitaries and highlighted by the moving, eloquent memories of Michelle Coltrane, and later in New York at Jazz at Lincoln Center.
Thanks to tremendous stabilization and cleanup efforts, for the first time the newly landscaped Home was shown to the public as guided tours allowed guests to have a small preview of what the Home will be like when open to the public. The feeling was electric as guests visited Alice Coltrane’s famous basement recording studio, the upstairs study where Coltrane composed “A Love Supreme”, the “Meditation Room” and the rest of the Home.
Jazz at Lincoln Center hosted the incredible evening event on our behalf, beginning with the induction of our two newest Honorary Board members: seminal pianist McCoy Tyner and guitar great Derek Trucks — who was deeply influenced by Coltrane.
An exciting listening party followed with a panel of Coltrane experts, including Honorary Board member Dave Liebman, discussing tracks from both John and Alice Coltrane in keeping with an important part of our project: to increase engagement with Alice Coltrane’s ground breaking musical legacy.
2018 was also a year of great events which helped raise urgently needed stabilization funds. January’s sold out Jazz’n’Jam at the Landmark on Main Street in Port Washington — in partnership with the Integrated Medical Foundation — featured Downbeat winner Gary Smulyan, Eric Wollman, and rising star Brandon “Taz” Neiderhauer. Treme, Islip hosted a sold-out event featuring bass great Avery Sharp.
Another Terrific Coltrane Day.
For the 4th year in a row, we partnered with the Town of Huntington and the Huntington Arts Council to host another outstanding Coltrane Day Music Fest, this year featuring Joe Lovano, Michelle Coltrane, Zen Trickster members, Fantuzzi, and regional “rising stars”.
Building Community Through Music. The family-friendly event again drew thousands, and included workshops, community jams, great food and beer and children’s activities.
Past artists include Roy Haynes, Randy Brecker, Ravi Coltrane, Charles Neville and more.
The interest and support for our education and programs continues to grow, and includes the enthusiastic support of Bob Weir, Dave Matthews, and so many others!
Bob Weir and Dave Matthews signing our guitar and bass as part of our Coltrane Guitar Project. Signatures from Pat Metheny, Chick Corea, Stanley Clarke, Jaimoe, and others!
We owe a great debt to our devoted and growing group of volunteers who have manned events, spread the word about the project and done everything from raking the yard to scrubbing the interior of the Home.
We are united in our belief in the power of the Coltrane legacy and we are most thankful to them for all of their efforts.
2019 promises to be great! We are so excited about our next major steps – a campaign to complete our home stabilization, community events, concerts and educational programs, organizational growth, building new relationships, and more to be announced. We have much we need to do in 2019, but please stay tuned for some of our exciting next steps as we work to open the Home to the public as an inspirational museum and cultural center!
Please Join Us. We invite you all to support the Home, spread the word, and feel welcome to be a greater part of this incredible effort over this coming year.
Thank you again, and on behalf of the Board, Committees and Coltrane Family, our deepest thanks and Best Wishes to you and yours for a wonderful Holiday and peaceful New Year.
Ron Stein, Pres
The John and Alice Coltrane Home
BTW – More 2018 photos here , and stay tuned for our Year-In-Pictures.
Check donations can be mailed to:
Friends of the Coltrane Home
P.O. Box 2171
Huntington, NY 11743
Phone: 631-223-1361 Email: info@thecoltranehome.orgthecoltranehome.org
College of Education honors eight future teachers for excellence
Wednesday, Dec. 18, 2019
MANHATTAN — Eight graduating seniors from Kansas State University's College of Education have been recognized with special honors from the college.
Alice Coltrane Dies
Earning the college's Outstanding Undergraduate Student Award for outstanding leadership and scholarship are four students; two students are receiving the Outstanding Future Teacher Award for their potential as future teachers; and two students earned the Kansas State Department of Education Teacher of Promise Award.
The award winners are all December 2019 bachelor's candidates:
• Margo Coltrane, secondary education, Andover, College of Education Outstanding Undergraduate Student Award. A K-State honors list student, Coltrane was a College of Education ambassador, a squad leader for EDCATS and a student member of the Kansas National Education Association. She also worked in the college's Catalyst Technology and Media Center. Coltrane served as Family Day chair and public relations chair of her sorority, Alpha Delta Pi, and was a member of St. Isidore's FOCUS Women's Study. She received K-State's Foundation Plus Scholarship and was a finalist for the university's Nancy Kassebaum Scholarship. A 2015 graduate of Kapaun Mount Carmel High School in Wichita, Coltrane is the daughter of Mike and Alice Coltrane, Andover.
• Caitlin Morgan, secondary education and English, Garnett, College of Education Outstanding Undergraduate Student Award. Morgan served as secretary of the Kansas National Education Association; chair and political action chair of Polar Express/Read Across America; secretary of Kappa Delta Pi, the education honorary; and was a member of Chimes, the junior honorary. She participated in the KNEA Outreach to Teach in 2017, 2018 and 2019, and was a College of Education senator for the Student Governing Association. Her many scholarships include the K-State Legacy Scholarship for four years, Laura and Martin Turner Education Scholarship, Kansas Teacher Service Scholarship, and the Fern and Bernell Schneider Memorial Scholarship. As a state KNEA officer, she was underclassmen representative, KPAC student representative and Resolutions Committee student member. She also was a mentor for the UFM Community Learning Center's teen mentoring program. Morgan is the daughter of Dan and Amber Morgan, Liberal, both K-State alumni. She also is a 2015 graduate of Liberal High School, where she will begin her career as an English teacher in January 2020.
• Alyssa Kulp, elementary education, Leonardville, Kansas State Department of Education Teacher of Promise Award. Kulp was a squad leader of EDCATS and a member of the College of Education Council and Kappa Delta Pi, the education honorary. She also is a member of the Kansas National Education Association. The daughter of Scott and Jennifer Kulp, Leonardville, Kulp is a 2016 graduate of Riley County High School in Riley.
• Shawna Gower, secondary education, Overland Park, Kansas State Department of Education Teacher of Promise Award. Gower was a member of the National Society of Collegiate Scholars and served as president of the sixth floor of Marlatt Hall in 2017. She was the recipient of the Skeen Education Scholarship in 2017 and 2018 and the Staples Teaching Scholarship in 2019. The daughter of Kurt and Kristin Meier, Prosper, Texas, Gower is a 2015 graduate of Blue Valley Northwest High School, Overland Park.
• Ashley Billings, secondary education, Salina, College of Education Outstanding Future Teacher Award. The daughter of Tom and Nicole Billings, Salina, Billings is a 2015 graduate of Salina South High School.
• Byron J. Lewis IV, elementary education, Topeka, College of Education Outstanding Undergraduate Student Award. Lewis was president of Call Me MISTER, a mentor and facilitator for the Kansas Advanced Teacher Academy and squad leader of EDCATS. He also served as a modern languages ambassador and was a member of United Black Voices Gospel Choir. He was a recipient of the Call Me MISTER Scholarship, Kansas Teacher Service Scholarship, Joey Lee Garmon Undergraduate Multicultural Scholarship and an Education in Humanities Grant from the Jack J. Isgur Foundation. Lewis is the son of Byron and Marti Lewis, Topeka, and a 2013 graduate of Topeka High School.
• Adrianna Elliott, elementary education, Sunrise, Florida, College of Education Outstanding Future Teacher Award. Elliott was a member of the Kansas National Education Association and a student leader at Kramer Dining Center. She attended Drake University for one year where she was a member of the 2015-2016 golf team. The daughter of Brian and Lisa Elliott, Sunrise, Elliott is a 2015 graduate of Western High School in Davie, Florida.
• Rachael Duden, secondary education and mathematics, Lincoln, Nebraska, College of Education Outstanding Undergraduate Student Award. Duden was a member of Kappa Delta Pi, the education honorary; KNEA Aspiring Teachers; and a squad leader of EDCATS. A K-State honors list student, she also completed the University Honors Program and served on its Leadership Council. She presented 'STEM of the Arts: Incorporating Art into STEM Fields' at the Undergraduate Research and Creative Activities Fair; served as the undergraduate coordinator of Family STEAM Nights at local elementary schools with Sherrie Martinie, associate professor of curriculum and instruction; and was a National Science Foundation Robert Noyce/K-State math teacher scholar, presenting at the 2018 NSF Midwest Noyce Conference poster session. In addition, she served as a teaching assistant for Studio Algebra and was a paper grader for the mathematics department. Duden is the daughter of Diane Duden and the late Robert Duden and is a 2016 graduate of St. Pius X High School in Lincoln. She was a student teacher in Lincoln during the 2019 fall semester and will begin her teaching career at Manhattan High School's East Campus in January 2020.