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Year round, this unique outreach organization offers an arts education
enrichment program in music, dance, drama and poetry; jazz workshops
for students over 16 taught by professional jazzmen; public school
lectures and demonstrations. All Jazzmobile activities are free, with
both public and private funding.
In the early 1970's, Taylor was named Musical Director for the popular
daily television program, The David Frost Show. Many feel he had the
best jazz band on TV at that time, which included Frank
Wess, Bob
Cranshaw and Bobby Thomas. They played an hour jazz concert every
night for the studio audience, and at least twice a week, Frost booked
guests like Louis Armstrong, Mel Torme, Tony Bennett, Pearl Baily,
Count Basie, or Buddy Rich to play and be interviewed. The band made
two recordings before the show came to an end three and a half years
later.
Billy Taylor then
returned to WLIB, this time as a broadcaster and the program director of the
station and began to build the largest jazz audience in New York City while
also hosting a popular local television program on New York's Channel 47. By
now, on television and on the radio, Billy Taylor was synonymous with Jazz.
Never one to rest on his previous accomplishments, and clearly a man
driven by the need to keep growing, Billy took Teddy
Wilson’s recommendation and Billy began piano studies with
Richard McClanahan in the late 40s, continuing for many years. In
1975, his dissertation on “The History and Development of Jazz
Piano, A New Perspective for Music Teachers,” earned him a combined
Masters and Doctorate in Education from the University of Massachusetts.
Billy has also been a Yale University Duke Ellington Fellow, and Yale
Fellow at Calhoun College.
He has since received twenty two honorary doctorate degrees including
Humanities degrees from Fairfield University, Carlton College, University
of Massachusetts, Clark College and Bank Street College and Honorary
Doctorates in Music from St. Johns University, Berklee College of
Music, University of Minnesota, University of Michigan-Flint, George
Washington University, and from Virginia State University, his father’s
alma mater.
Billy Taylor has
strived to maintain a balance between the performance and educational aspects
of his career. In the midst of his performing peregrinations, he has been an
adjunct professor at C. W. Post College in New York and a visiting professor
at Howard University. And every summer, he leads the Jazz in July program at
the University of Massachusetts, where he is the Wilmer D. Barrett Professor
of Music.
He was appointed
to the National Council for the Arts by President Nixon in 1970, and although
this was a tremendous honor, the amount of time required to be an effective
arts advocate took precious time away from practicing his music. Nonetheless,
he tackled the task at hand, alongside his distinguished colleagues, Maurice
Abravenel, Eudora Welty, Beverly Sills, and Nancy Hanks, who were doing so much
to help make the arts available to everyone. It was a highly productive and
rewarding period for Taylor.
All the while,
Billy Taylor continued his work in broadcasting, as Musical Director for Tony
Brown's Black Journal Tonight (PBS); and from 1977-1982, as host of NPR's most
listened to jazz program of its time, "Jazz Alive."
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