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Hayes Greenfield -- producer,
composer, saxophonist, filmmaker, bandleader, and educator
-- has been active on the New York City jazz scene since
the late ‘70s. As sideman, he has built enduring associations
with such notable artists as Jaki Byard, Rashied Ali, Paul
Bley, Barry Altschul, and Richie Havens. As bandleader,
Hayes has recorded and produced a number of critically acclaimed
CDs and played throughout the U.S. and Canada, headlining
in such popular New York City clubs as the Blue Note, Birdland,
the Knitting Factory, and CBGB’s. European tours have
taken him and his bands to Vienna, the Aalen Jazz Festival
in Germany, Brighton Jazz Festival in the U.K., the Albi,
Coutances, Bordeaux, Amiens, Hyeres, and Avignon Jazz Festivals
in France, and the Aarhus Jazz Festival in Denmark.
In 1997, Hayes founded Jazz-A-Ma-Tazz,
his live, interactive show for young people that introduces
jazz in a fun, unique, and participatory way. While Hayes
and his band jazz up familiar songs, young people are encouraged
to join in through call-and-response, scatting, singing,
interpretive sound, movement, conducting, and tap dance.
Says Hayes, “What I am trying to do with Jazz-A-Ma-Tazz
is to show kids how much fun they can have with jazz. To
stretch their ears and minds to the magic and joys of improvisation
in a way that enables kids to embrace this beautiful music
and make it their own. When I get done with them they leave
chanting, singing and knowing that jazz is alive and well
and not old foggie music." Jazz-A-Ma-Tazz plays internationally
in a variety of venues, including festivals, performing
arts centers, schools, community events, and museums.
Hayes’ jazz CD for children, also
entitled Jazz-A-Ma-Tazz, features
vocalists Richie Havens and Miles Griffith and was produced
by the artist Roy Lichtenstein and his wife Dorothy. This
CD was honored with the Oppenheim
Toy Portfolio "Gold Award," Child
Magazine’s “Best of the Year” award,
the Publishers
Weekly “Listen Up” award, the Parents’
Choice Foundation "Silver
Honor Award," and the American
Library Association "Notable Children’s Recording
Award."
As an educator, from 1993 to 2000, Hayes
ran the music department at The Door, an enrichment center
for inner-city youth in New York City. He developed the
music component for an entrepreneurial program funded by
The Gap, designed the recording / rehearsal studio and MIDI
workstation production facility, taught music, and produced
The Door’s first CD of young people’s music.
For several of those years, Hayes also mentored young men
at Friends of Island Academy, an organization providing
services to those making the transition from incarceration
back to the community.
Hayes' residencies include teaching
jazz improvisa-tion on both coasts to both elementary and
high school students, designing and teaching an intensive
recorder program for 5th graders, and helping to develop
a Literacy Through Jazz curriculum for the New Jersey Chamber
Society that is currently being taught in New Jersey private
and public schools.
As a film composer, Hayes has scored
more than 60 films, documentaries, commercials, and TV specials,
many of which have received awards, including the prestigious
Emmy. In 2002, Hayes scored the feature documentary American
Rebuilds: A Year at Ground Zero, which aired
on PBS as part of its 9/11 memorial programming. Berlin
Metamorphoses, another feature documentary, premiered
in Berlin at the 2002 World Congress of History Producers.
Other notable sub-jects for which Hayes has composed scores
include films on the Berlin Airlift; Russia facing the future
in the new millennium; luminary figures such as General
George Marshall; artists Roy Lichtenstein, Frank Stella,
and James Rosenquist; architect Philip Johnson; poet laureate
Billy Collins; and photo-graphers Elliot Porter and Jan
Groover.
A filmmaker, as well, Hayes
Greenfield has produced two award-winning short films:
For
the Children, a film/music video, and Friends
of the Children. Both films examine problems facing
American youth in today’s society and investigate
ways that caring adults and community programs have helped
shape young people’s lives in positive and productive
ways.
In 2006 Hayes was recognized by New
York University who honored him with the SCPS/GSP 2005 Marc
Crawford Jazz Educators Award (previous recipients include
Clark Terry, Benny Golson, Kenny Barron, Al Grey, Barry
Harris, John Hicks, Dwite Mitchell, Willie Ruff, and Steve
Wilson). He was also awarded a grant from Chamber Music
of America for their 2006-07 Residency Partnership Program.
Hayes Greenfield is both a Yamaha
and Vandoren performing artist, and proudly plays
a Yamaha Custom Z alto saxophone, and Vandoren mouthpieces
and reeds on all his horns. |
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