Thursday, May 7, 2026

May 8 Free Performance at West Windsor Senior Center, 1-2pm

This Friday, May 8, Phil and I journey across the Stonybrook to perform our all-original latin and jazz at the West Windsor Senior Center. All welcome. 1-2pm, 271 Clarksville Rd, West Windsor Township, NJ


This is my second time presenting at the Senior Center this year. Back in March, around Einstein's birthday, they hosted a talk historian Cindy Srnka and I developed entitled "How Oswald Veblen Quietly Created Einstein's Princeton."


Wednesday, May 6, 2026

Sustainable Jazz Performs for a HIP Fundraiser

Sustainable Jazz, with Steve Hiltner on reeds and Phil Orr on keyboard, performed again this year for the Annual Spring Gathering of Housing Initiative of Princeton.

With our mix of original music and jazz standards, we sought to live up to the organization's fortuitous acronym: HIP.

This spirited and effective organization's mission is to "Assist local individuals and families experiencing housing insecurity build toward a sustainable future via stable housing, better employment, and a network of support services."

Introducing Singer Eva Martin--Chanteuse Extraordinaire

What a treat to be part of Le Jazz Fun in the debut performance by Eva Martin, an academic turned French teacher and singer. Eva has a gorgeous voice that's been waiting patiently through her other careers for the time and training needed to bloom.  

That training began when her brother, jazz guitarist Alex Martin, recommended a top flight voice coach:  Dr. Trineice, aka Trineice Robinson-Martin, formerly on the faculty of the Princeton University jazz program and now at Berklee College of Music. Trineice in turn recommended pianist and composer Phil Orr--my close musical collaborator--to be Eva's pianist, helping her expand and arrange her repertoire. 

As Eva tells it, she had always wanted to be a singer, and in fact sat in at a Paris jazz club earlier in her life. The band members encouraged her to continue, but she claims to have had only five notes she could sing. That, along with skepticism about the chances of sustaining herself with music, caused her to pursue instead an academic career. During this time, raising a family, her kids were the ones who got the benefit of her singing. Having achieved what she wanted in academia--a dissertation, a PhD, a book--she shifted to teaching in order to stay in the Princeton area. In 2025, she made a New Year's resolution that proved to be transformative: “Sing for 10 minutes a day. Just for joy.” That precipitated the sequence of events and mentoring that led to her vocal debut. 

With Kai Gibson on bass, Logan Bogdan on drums, and myself on sax and clarinet, we were the opening act at the April 11 Francophone Festival on Hinds Plaza. 

Here's a link to a video of the performance. 

By coincidence, I had played jazz with Eva's brother Alex in Durham, NC 25 years ago. Alex came up from his home base in Washington, DC to be part of the FrancoFest performance.