• Grand Performances (map)
  • 350 South Grand Avenue
  • Los Angeles, CA, 90071
  • United States

Come experience the groundbreaking and timeless sounds and selections of Max Roach’s stunningly diverse seven-decade career as one of the great musical artists of the 20th century and a pioneering cultural activist.

Max’s career was an epic musical journey – from the revolutionary Jazz of the 1940s to the Civil Rights years, through experiments in hip hop, percussion ensembles, strings and choirs, multi-media works, dance, poetry and beyond. 

The Celebration includes:

Drums: Michael Carvin * Jonathan Pinson * Tommaso Cappellato * Dr. Jaz Sawyer *
Percussion: Alan Lightner  * Munyungo Jackson * Nakeiltha Campbell * Gabriel Slam Nobles * Dexter Story
Vocals: Jimetta Rose
Piano / Keys: Brandon Coleman  
Upright bass: Jeff Littleton
Sax: Logan Richardson
Sax: Devin Daniels
Trombone: Ryan Porter
Trumpet: Tatiana Tate
Trumpet: Todd Simon
ICYOLA String Quartet
(Inner City Youth Orchestra of Los Angeles)

DJ Invocation set: LeRoy Downs (Just Jazz / KCRW)

+ Dance, poetry, choir

Music Director - Dr. Jaz Sawyer
M’Boom Music Director - Alan Lightner 

Producer, Curator - Jonathan Rudnick (Worlds Alive) 
Design - Lexx Valdez 

This FREE, ALL AGES Community Gathering is supported by FUSICOLOGYGIANT STEPJUST JAZZ

“I will never again play anything that does not have social significance. We American jazz musicians of African descent have proved beyond all doubt that we are master musicians of our instruments. Now what we have to do is employ our skill to tell the dramatic story of our people and what we've been through.” Max Roach

Beyond virtuosity, Max Roach was an innovator, on the cutting edge of every Jazz advent since BeBop. A formidable composer, he understood and played at the optimum every Jazz style, even those developed before his birth.

In a career lasting over 60 years Max performed, recorded and collaborated from his teens with the all time greats from Dizzy Gillespie, to Charlie Parker, Miles Davis, Clifford Brown, Art Blakey, Sonny Rollins, Duke Ellington, Charles Mingus, Archie Shepp, Abdullah Ibrahim to avant gardists Anthony Braxton, Cecil Taylor and embraced early hip hop with his Godson Fab Five Freddy though to poetry and dance.

Most striking to the Max Roach bandstand was his insistence that the music speak morally and politically. The message that freedom is inherent in all Jazz is forthrightly stated in Max Roach’s music and was highlighted during the American Civil Rights Movement by his “WE INSIST! Max Roach’s Freedom Now Suite” a timeless inspiring classic to this day.

Max Roach’s social consciousness often led to doors being closed to him, yet he expanded his career and its variety. He taught at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst; formed and directed an all-percussion orchestra, M-Boom; and attached a string quartet, Maxine Roach’s Uptown String Quartet, to his own working foursome, the Max Roach Double Quartet. Later, Max would create a brass band, the So What Brass. The compositional side of Max Roach also expanded and he was an ever-present force in The Third Stream, the blending of Western Classical and Jazz.

A broad-based percussionist, who was a pioneer in establishing a fixed pulse on the ride cymbal instead of the bass drum, Roach also collaborated with voice, string, and brass ensembles, lectured on college campuses extensively, and composed music for dance, theater, film, and television.

Please join us for this Centennial Celebration honoring the Jazz Hall of Fame’s illustrious Max Roach, bebop pioneer, virtuoso percussionist and bandleader and fierce advocate for change and justice in an Evening filled with rhythm and passion for all generations.

The Drum most certainly Also Waltzes!

Presented by Worlds Alive

Produced and Curated by Jonathan Rudnick and Grand Performances