Janine Irons on Arts Council Funding and Southbank Centre status

Ace-black_logo
Southbankcentre

Tomorrow's Warriors Managing Director, Janine Irons MBE, comments on our continued Arts Council funding and relationship with the Southbank Centre: "We're delighted to have our funding confirmed by the Arts Council who continue to endorse and support our work. The Arts Council money will help us develop our programme at the Southbank Centre as well as our regional partnerships. And we're also delighted that the Southbank Centre has confirmed our weekend residency until 2015."
Facebook Twitter More...

Black Empowerment... Dune Records

237929520_460140e89c
In 2008 Willard Jenkins of Open Sky Jazz interviewed Dune MD Janine Irons for his blog The Independent Ear.

A few years back my friend and colleague John Murph turned me on to a then-burgeoning record company started by black musicians in the UK, Dune Records. The label has released potent music by such UK stalwarts as bassist Gary Crosby at the helm of his Nu Troop and the large ensemble Jazz Jamaica All-Stars rich amalgamation of jazz and Caribbean flavors; alto saxophonist-rapper Soweto Kinch; tenor saxophonist Denys Baptiste, and New Orleans transplant trumpeter Abram Wilson. 

 Dune is an example of black empowerment in the record business that recalls such other African American-fueled record enterprises as the Stanley Cowell/Charles Tolliver Strata East label, as well as Detroit’s sister Strata label, Harold Battiste’s New Orleans modernist label AFO, and the old Black Jazz label; and in its musicians’ collective work and mentoring efforts, the AACM. The latest releases from Kinch and Baptiste all have significant narrative qualities that aren’t about Ooo Baby Baby or cash money pursuits and further propel their music.  Impressed with the collectivism evident in their musician-controlled environment, their education outreach, and the fact that each Dune recording is project-oriented and not some simple blowing session, I sought out Dune’s CEO Janine Irons for some insights.

Read the rest of this post »

Facebook Twitter More...

Tomorrow's Warriors Key Personnel

237929520_460140e89c

Janine Irons MBE - Managing Director 

Janine studied classical piano for nine years and was lead vocal in a semi-professional funk band in her teens before studying modern dance at university. She worked for 13 years as an Administrative Manager for international banks in the City of London but her yearning for involvement in the arts led her to photography. She left the City in 1993 to be a freelance photographer and journalist after meeting her partner, bassist Gary Crosby and in 1994 started working full-time in jazz supporting Gary and other musicians. With Gary, she set up Crosby Irons Associates in 1996 (which later became The Dune Music Company) and formalised the constitution of Tomorrow’s Warriors in 1998. Today, in addition to her work with Tomorrow's Warriors, she is a jazz artist manager and executive producer, and has guided her artists to win more than 25 awards in the UK and abroad, including two Mercury Music Prizes for An Album Of The Year, two MOBO Awards for Best Jazz Act, two Urban Music Awards, and several BBC Radio Jazz Awards.

In 2006, Janine was awarded an MBE (Member Of The Order Of The British Empire) by Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II for Services To The Music Industry.

 

250px-gary_crosby

Gary Crosby OBE - Executive Artistic Director

A founder member of the seminal Jazz Warriors in the mid-1980s, and founder of Tomorrow’s Warriors in 1991, Gary is an award-winning professional double bassist, bandleader, music arranger, producer and educator. He leads five bands of his own - Gary Crosby's Nu Troop, Jazz Jamaica, and Jazz Jamaica All Stars - and has worked with a number of top artists including Art Blakey, Mal Waldron, Art Farmer, Gary Bartz, Eddie Henderson, Johnny Griffin, Hugh Masekela, Courtney Pine, Steve Williamson, and Gary’s uncle, Ernest Ranglin, to name just a few.

Gary is well known for his tireless commitment to developing and nurturing young jazz musicians, maintaining the jazz tradition, and promoting excellence in jazz. He is highly respected by his peers and industry associates, not only for his musical skills, but also for his vision, drive, and ability to make things happen. In 2007, Gary was awarded the prestigious BBC Jazz Award for Services To Jazz.

Facebook Twitter More...