Jazz Music Institute
Link to VJS Website
Vaca Jazz Society's
Jazz Music Institute

Contact us for more information on
Youth Camps and Clinics held at
the Vacaville Public Library- Town
Square in partnership with the
Solano County Library










                

                   





                      
Save Our Music!
                          "Keep Moooving Forward"
JazzCrusader.com
            Jazz Music Institute Newsletter
  JAZZ FLASH!
2010 11th Annual
Vacaville Jazz Fest
September 18th.
11th Annual Vacaville Jazz Fest on
Saturday, September 18th, 2010
New Nut Tree Plaza Reopens
Crossroads Jazz
Symposiums At
Downtown
Clinics & Demonstrations

10th Annual
Vacaville Jazz Fest on Friday &
Saturday September 18th & 19th
Downtown Vacaville.
World Jubilee Day
Vacaville Jazz Festival
POW/ MIA "Fredoms Gate"
Military Tribute at Nut Tree

The Commanders USAF Band of The
Golden West will be featured at the
10th Annual Vacaville Jazz Fest
September 19th, 2010
Gospel Jazz
Sunday
At Nut Tree

2010 " Jazz Mass"
September 12th, Sunday
St. Marys Church at 10:30am
with Bill Bachman American
Heritage Band

"Freedom's Gate"
September 19h, Sunday


Featuring AMO Rhythm &
Brass, Frank Salamone, LtCol
Rob Rhyne, USAF & Jazz
Praise Pianist Jim Martinez.
Wynton Marsalis Suprises Vaca Jazz Fest Kids
         
Conductor/Musician wins local award
Reporter Newspaper Posted: 03/29/2009 01:01:19 AM PDT

Keith Stout was honored Saturday by the Vaca Arts Council with the
Marianna Pokorny Award.

Most education specialists agree teachers are the most important
element in any classroom, so consider what the 20th century's greatest
scientist, Albert Einstein, once said about them: "It is the supreme art of
the teacher to awaken joy in creative expression and knowledge." And it
is teachers, especially music teachers, who have so greatly influenced
well-known Vacaville musician Keith L. Stout.
In a recent e-mail, he cited a number of them, calling them "inspirations"
and "big ingredients" while growing up in Vacaville. From them, as
mentors, he learned not only the love of music and key vocabulary -- the
circle of fifths, various scales, time signatures, for example -- but he also
learned practical life lessons.
"I wanted to let you know," he said, "that Mrs. Pokorny was a wonderful
inspiration to all of us teenagers in the school music programs. She
encouraged me to participate and get involved in the community arts and
was always a great cheerleader to myself" and his music-loving brothers,
Ken and Artie. Stout, a city of Sacramento Asst. Architect for nine years,
Trumpeter and founder-conductor of local Alive Music Orchestra, cited
Pokorny because Saturday night he held in his hands a small but tangible
part of her legacy as the beloved longtime choir director for Vacaville
Unified -- the Marianna Pokorny Award.

The top honor bestowed annually by the Vaca Arts Council, it is given to
someone in Solano County whom advances the group's mission: to
support, participate in,
promote and coordinate the cultural arts. Additionally, the award
recognizes someone whose arts activities benefit the city's youth in some
way.

To a standing ovation, Stout received the evening's final award at the
council's 19th Salute to the Stars gala at the Opera House, a black-tie
event that shines a spotlight on people, most of them volunteers, and
area businesses involved in the county's visual, performing and lively
arts.

In an interview, he sounded modest and surprised, saying, "It's quite an
honor. It was very unexpected, especially with the economic times the
way they are right now."
Stout got word from arts council president Richard Gideon, a retired
visual arts teacher with Vacaville Unified, who e-mailed the news.
Unfortunately, it was the same day Stout, 46, who earned a bachelor of
science degree in environmental design from the University of California,
Davis, learned that he "probably will be laid off" from his job by
summertime. "It was a good time to receive the news," said Stout, one of
the prime movers behind the Vacaville Jazz Festival and its spin-off youth
jazz camps. "It really lighted up my day."

Sounding upbeat in the face of a likely layoff, he said he has much to be
grateful for, especially his wife, Martha, and three children, Amanda, Ally
and Keaton. He celebrates his seventh wedding anniversary today.

As the conversation turned to the city's annual jazz festival, in its 10th
year, Stout said, "We're diligently trying to keep this (free festival) alive.
The focus is being able to provide an opportunity for local people to enjoy
the arts, especially from their own musicians in the area."

The festival-sponsored jazz camps, he noted, are ways to preserve the
uniquely American musical idiom and pass on its beauty -- and its
collaborative and improvisational nature -- to the next generation.

As conductor of Alive Music Orchestra for the past twenty years, Stout has
always nurtured local young talent, seeking interns from area high school
jazz bands, noting that that Andy Herout, band director at Vacaville High,
was once a member.
Making the public aware of the importance of music education in public
schools has been a particular passion, especially in the last year, he said,
lamenting, "It's a shame we're at this state of challenging economic times.
The arts are the first to suffer. I'm trying to be as optimistic as possible."

"The (public school music) programs are going to be cut from the state
(budget)," he predicted. "I think it's going to hit Vacaville, Travis and
Fairfield. Some of our (jazz festival) programs might have to supplement
and help them, with classes and clinics for kids."

No surprise, but the classes and clinics are staffed by adult volunteers,
local musicians who give their time and talent, Stout said. Stout cited a
number of teachers and mentors he respects and credits for his success
as a musician, among them Jim Tutt, Dick Grokenberger and Gideon. "He
was one of my teachers in junior high school," he said of Gideon. "We all
look up to people like Richard Gideon, Don Kidder and others for a sense
of reassurance and direction. Their impact on the arts and ideas will be
carried through people in our generation, so we can teach the next."

Vaca Arts Council
Community Arts Award
* Marianna Pokorny Award: Keith L. Stout.
Local Community News Continues