Honorees added to Nicholas Gerren Hall of Achievement


Please join us in celebrating the addition of four new honorees to the Nicholas Gerren Hall of Achievement.

The display at Murphy Hall is part of an effort by the University of Kansas School of Music to acknowledge its history of participation in the systemic exclusion and marginalization of under-represented communities of people in our society. The purpose of this hall is to honor the life and career of alumni, faculty, and staff from the KU School of Music who, despite exclusion and marginalization, made a positive impact in the field of music.

In September, we held a dedication ceremony for the Nicholas Gerren, Sr. Hall of Achievement with his family members in attendance. The ceremony also inducted two additional members, Etta Moten Barnett and William P. Foster.

In late October, as part of the 50th anniversary of the jazz program at the KU School of Music, we added four additional honorees to the Gerren Hall of Achievement. You can learn more about them below:

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Description automatically generated with medium confidenceNathan Davis (1937-2018) was born in Kansas City, Kansas, and earned a BM in Music Education (1960) from the University of Kansas, an MM and Ph.D. in Ethnomusicology from the Sorbonne (1968) and Wesleyan University (1974).  He spent most of the 1960s in Paris as a multi-instrumentalist and played with jazz luminaries, performing on more than 20 albums as a sideman and leader.  He returned to the United States in 1969 and founded the jazz program at the University of Pittsburgh in 1969, one of the first in the country. He composed over 200 works, including Jazzopera Up Above My Head. 

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Description automatically generated with low confidenceCarmell Jones (1936-1996) was born in Kanas City, Kansas. After service in the Air Force he used the G.I. Bill to enroll at University of Kansas (music education trumpet, 1958-1960).  He later moved to Los Angeles in 1960 and played trumpet as studio musician for films and regarded as one of the best trumpeters of early 1960s West Coast scene. He moved to Berlin in 1968, where he played with the Radio Free Berlin Big Band Orchestra. He was active as a sideman in both the United States and Europe. His albums include Jay Hawk Talk by his eponymous quartet.

Ron McCurdy was born in Belle Glade, Florida. He earned a BS in Music Education from Florida A&M (1976), and an MM (1978) and Ph.D. (1983) in Music Education from the University of Kansas.  While still a doctoral student he was appointed the first KU Director of Jazz Studies (1983); under his tenure the program gained national and international acclaim. He later served as the Director of Jazz Studies at University of Minnesota, the Director of the Thelonious Monk Institute of Jazz (1999-2001) and is currently a professor at the Thornton School of Music at the University of Southern California.

 

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Description automatically generatedWalter Page (1900-1957) was born in Gallatin, Missouri, and completed the three-year music teacher training program at KU (ca. 1920) in one year. In 1925 he founded Walter Page and his Blue Devils, later joining Bennie Moten’s Kansas City Orchestra, which created the distinctive style of Kansas City jazz. Count Basie took over the organization in 1935. The bassist was the key member of Basie’s “All American Rhythm section,” and is credited with making the bass a melodic instrument, as well as developing and popularizing the walking bass style that was a crucial element in the development of  swing jazz.