Hartford Jazz Society Presents "Celebrating Jazz & Community," a Fundraiser featuring Linda Ransom and Friends
Hartford, CT (September 19, 2025) – The Hartford Jazz Society invites you to an unforgettable evening of jazz, community, and celebration at their 2nd "Celebrating Jazz & Community" event on Saturday, December 6th, from 7:00 PM to 10:00 PM. This exciting event will be held at the Artists Collective Ballroom, located at 1200 Albany Avenue in Hartford.
Immerse yourself in the captivating performance of Linda Ransom and Friends, who will fill the air with classic jazz tunes and beloved favorites. This is a unique opportunity to experience exceptional live music in a vibrant and welcoming atmosphere.

Please join us as we honor percussionist Abu Alvin Carter with the Hartford Jazz Society's Lifetime Achievement Award.
In addition to the phenomenal music, attendees can participate in a raffle with exciting prizes, including:
- Gift baskets
- Jazz photos by Maurice Robertson
- Backstage passes to the Paul Brown Monday Night Jazz Series
- And much more!
Indulge in delectable hors d'oeuvres prepared by East West Grill and enjoy the convenience of a cash bar throughout the evening. Ample parking is available.
Get your tickets early – purchase by November 6th for a discounted rate.
- $40 HJS member
- $50 Non-Member
- $75 Includes ticket and HJS Membership
After November 6th
- $50 Hartford Jazz Society Members
- $60 Non-Members
- $75 Includes ticket and HJS Membership
- Tickets can be purchased at the door
Proceeds from this event will directly support the 2026 Paul Brown Monday Night Jazz Series and the Hartford Jazz Society's Scholarship Fund, which helps nurture the next generation of jazz musicians.
About the Hartford Jazz Society: The Hartford Jazz Society is dedicated to cultivating an appreciation for jazz music, culture, and history. Founded in 1960, it is the longest continuously operating jazz society in the country. Through live events, educational programs, and community outreach, the Hartford Jazz Society enriches the Greater Hartford community and preserves the spirit of jazz.
Don't miss this unforgettable community celebration of Jazz!
Directions
This exciting event will be held at the Artists Collective Ballroom, located at 1200 Albany Avenue in Hartford.
Brian Charette Trio with Houston Person

Born in Meriden, Connecticut in 1972, Brian was introduced to music by his mother, Catherine. By the age of 17, he was playing with jazz luminaries such as Lou Donaldson and Houston Person. Since graduating on the Dean's List from UConn in 1994 with a BA in Music, Charette has been performing extensively in Europe and the USA with his home base being the East Village, NYC. Brian is a staple of the downtown NYC scene working with virtually everyone who plays with an organist.
Brian has performed with many notable artists such as Joni Mitchell, Chaka Khan, Paul Simon, Cyndi Lauper, Oz Noy, Vinnie Colaiuta, John Patitucci, and many more. Charette is also an active author and educator, writing for Keyboard Magazine, The New York City Jazz Record, DownBeat, Electronic Musician and the Czech magazine, Muzikus. Brian teaches masterclasses all over the world and is on the faculty of the Czech Summer Jazz Workshop at Jesek Conservatory in Prague. In NYC, he teaches lessons and group classes at The New School and 92nd Y School of Music. His first book, 101 Hammond B3 Tips, released through publisher Hal Leonard, has become very popular, as well as his videos on the website, mymusicmasterclass.

Houston Person knows the music business inside out. As eclectic as he is talented, Person has recorded everything from
disco and gospel to pop and r&b, in addition to his trademark, soulful hard bop. After years as tenor saxophonist of
choice for vocalists, record companies and his instrumentalist colleagues, Person is now known as a master of popular
songs played in a relaxed, yet emotionally communicative style reminiscent of the great Ben Webster.
This seasoned veteran may make everything sound as breezy as a spring day but that distinct, throaty sound and
effortless-sounding solo style developed not through luck, but serious study, smarts and grit. So did his 60-plus-year
career as a self-managed, working musician who has toured five continents and whose playing has been documented on
literally hundreds of hours of recordings.
Person was born on November 10, 1934 in Florence, South Carolina. He was musically inclined as a child, and then
studied at South Carolina State University. After college, Person entered the service and was stationed in West Germany
for several years in an Air Force unit that included Cedar Walton, Lex Humphries, and Eddie Harris, among other jazz
musicians who became lifelong friends and influences. Upon discharge from the service, Person returned stateside for
further studies in graduate school at the prestigious Hartt Institute in Connecticut. Person finally began making his way
in the professional jazz world in the Boston/New England area. By the early 1960's he had established his mark and
began recording for Prestige Records. Person’s style also fit into the soulful jazz of the period and graces many live bands
and recordings in that groove. Person’s esthetic took shape in the time when jazz functioned as neighborhood social
entertainment and moved with a deep dance groove, a time when soloists never let you forget the melody and when
the saxophone sounded like it was making love to you. Prestige picked him up as a leader in 1966. His first release,
Underground Soul! was followed by nine more albums, two of which — Person To Person and Houston Express — were
re-released in 1996 as part of Prestige’s Legends of Acid Jazz series.
For a large part of his career he was best-known for his legendary partnership with the great vocalist, Etta Jones, which
lasted over 30 years until her passing in 2001. Over the years he became the go-to saxophonist for a veritable Who’s
Who of jazz vocalists, including Barbara Morrison, Ernie Andrews, Ernestine Anderson, Freddy Cole and Mary Stallings.
Houston’s appearances as sideman are as numerous as they are impressive, and include recordings with Lena Horne,
Lou Rawls, Dakota Staton, Horace Silver, Charles Earland, Joey DeFrancesco, and many others. As a record producer, he
has worked with many artists, including Freddy Cole, Charles Brown, David ‘Fathead’ Newman, Dakota Staton, and
Lafayatte Harris Jr. In 1990, his recording with Ron Carter, “Something in Common” (Muse), won the Independent Jazz
Record of the Year Award, and he received an Indie Award for his recording, “Why Not?” (Muse). Other awards have
included the prestigious Eubie Blake Jazz Award (1982) and the Fred Hampton Scholarship Fund Image Award (1993),
and he has been honored with a "Houston Person/Etta Jones Day" in Hartford County, MD (1982) and in Washington, DC
(1983). Houston Person has recorded over 150 albums as a leader on Prestige, Westbound, Mercury, Savoy, and Muse,
which became HighNote Records. His HighNote recordings as both tenor artist and producer, “My Buddy: Etta Jones
Sings the Songs of Buddy Johnson” and “Etta Jones Sings Lady Day,” were Grammy finalists in the Best Jazz Vocal
category in 1999 and 2000, respectively. In 2022. Houston released “Reminiscing at Rudy’s” on HighNote Records (HCD
7343). Houston was once again back in the Van Gelder Studio, now under the watchful eye of Van Gelder associate and
protegé, Maureen Sickler. Another recent album, “Houston Person Live in Paris” (HCD 7338) documented a live
recording made in front of an enthusiastic audience at Cite de la Musique in Paris.
Wrote Gary Giddens in the Village Voice, “I have always admired Houston Person for his huge tone, bluff humor, and
pointed obbligato…Person lucidly rides the beat with figures you think you've heard but haven't. These are not recycled
licks or clichés; they simply seem familiar, like family… gray hair aside, Person is unchanged, an unmoved mover of
certain jazz essentials.” Ask him what’s important in his music, and Houston Person notes that, “It's important that it's
relaxing…Relaxes you and makes you feel good… I'm going to always play the things that I think contributes to good jazz,
such as the blues and swinging.”
Jedda LaRue Quintet

portrait of Anne Marie (Jedda) Williams. Photos by Shana Sureck
Hartford's own Jedda LaRue is a powerhouse vocalist weaving together the soulful threads of Classic Jazz, R&B, and Funky Folk Children's music. A lifelong performer, poet, actress, playwright, choreographer, and storyteller, Jedda honed her jazz chops under the legendary Emery Austin Smith, infusing beloved standards with a captivating cabaret flair. Get ready to be transported by her masterful collaborations with Hartford musical luminaries Alvin Carter, Jr. (percussion), Christopher Casey (piano), Stephen Porter (bass), and William Bartlett (saxophone) as they connect us to stories, history, and the heart of Jazz.
Afro-Semitic Experience

photo credit Maurice D. Robertson
Band Personnel
Warren Byrd - Piano
David Chevan - Bass
Will Bartlet - Sax and Reeds
Alvin Benjamin Carter Jr. - Drums
Orice Jenkins - Guitar and vocals
Saskia Laroo - Trumpet
Jocelyn Pleasant - Drums
Pianist/Composer Warren Byrd is a Hartford, Connecticut Hartford, Connecticut native with an international touring schedule after many fruitful years playing Jazz throughout Southern New England and New York. Born in 1965 the youngest in a family of sixteen, he grew up in a musically fecund world. His experiences with performing began with singing in the church choir with his older siblings and led to rich performing adventures during his teen years, exposing him to the vast past and present of musical ideas. By the time he'd been awarded a full scholarship at for Classical Voice at Hartt College of Music, he'd decided he wanted to be a jazz artist. Through listening to and absorbing an eclectic continuum of music, he formulated his approach to improvisation. He has journeyed with many groups and performers in jazz, r & bm world, latin, pop, etc., as well as Dance and Theatre. A short list of performers would include Archie Shepp, Eddie Henderson, Saskia Laroo, Steve David, David Chevan, Mixashawn Lee Rozie, Kenny Hamber, Alvin Carter, Charles Tolliver and many more. Along with David Chevan, in 1999 they founded as an expansion of their duo project the celebrated group the Afro-Semitic Experience, with whom they have recorded several albums, including the soon to be, “Our Feet Began To Pray”. Other recent efforts include the 2020 re-release of his album “Truth Raised Twice” and notable collaborations with his wife, Saskia Laroo, such as her most recent release, “Trumpets Around The World” and their live-streamed “Feelgood Fridays” series produced midst the pandemic.
Bassist and composer, David Chevan “My open-minded passion for music has led me to explore a wide range of musical realms from singing in synagogue, to playing bass in Jazz, Gospel, Polka, Klezmer, and Italian wedding bands. My musical training is as a Jazz bassist and much of my compositional thinking and experience derives from that experience. In most every other sense I am a self-taught composer and arranger. As a composer I have an ongoing interest in writing musical pieces that explore the intersection between vernacular cultural music practice and jazz. My compositions and arrangements include writing music for the Afro-Semitic Experience, and the Nu Haven Kapelye, a 30-piece klezmer Orchestra and Big Band. I also compose liturgical jazz compositions melding jazz improvisational practice with Jewish cantorial modes. I recently wrote the libretto and composed the music for “Letters from the Affair”, a music theater piece that mixed opera, cantorial and jazz elements together and I am currently composing a Klezmer Purim Spiel. In addition to performing duos with pianist Warren Byrd and co-leading The Afro-Semitic Experience, I direct, play bass, compose and write arrangements for the Nu Haven Kapelye, and for Bassology, my swinging jazz group. I have recorded 9 CDs under my name and with the Afro-Semitic Experience. In 2016, I wrote, arranged, and produced “What’s Nu” a CD of music for the Nu Haven Kapelye. That recording has roughly 30 musicians on many of the tracks.”
Will Bartlett has over forty years of experience as a professional musician and music educator. He studied with Jimmy Heath and Lew Tabackin and performed with Frank Foster, Lee Konitz, Slide Hampton, and Roswell Rudd among many others. Will practices Buddhism in the lineage of Thich Nhat Hanh where his dharma name is Compassionate Sound of the Heart.
Alvin Benjamin Carter, Jr., a multi-percussionist, is a husband, father and minister of The Gospel and is a mainstay in the Greater Hartford arts community. Known as “Babafemi” to his friends, his involvement in the community is multifaceted. He works as an educator, organizer, performer, consultant, adviser, and motivator. He is an original “Artists Collective Baby,” having his artistic beginnings in drums, dance and acting at The Artists Collective. He later taught drums at “The Collective, as did his father, Alvin Carter, Sr. His diverse music experience includes but is not limited to jazz, R&B, blues, Latin jazz, gospel, and world beat. As a performer he has been the drummer with The Afro-Semitic Experience, The Kenny Hamber Show, The Crystal Blue Project, Don DePalma and Friends, Tony Harrington, and Touch, Charmagne, People of Goodwill, La Orquestra Espada, Edwin West and many, many others. He currently leads LEGACY: The Keepers of Tradition and The Alvin Carter Project. He has also been a lead drummer for Sankofa Kuumba Cultural Arts Consortium where he plays west Afrikan and afro-caribbean drums.
Guitarist and vocalist Orice Jenkins is a recording artist, performer, educator, and genealogy researcher from Hartford, Connecticut. His music has been featured in Jazz Times magazine and charted at #11 on the iTunes Jazz chart. Jenkins has performed extensively across all genres, including Hip-Hop, R&B, Jazz, Gospel, and Classical music. He serves as the Executive Director of Música Franklin, an afterschool music program for youth in Franklin County, Massachusetts. Jenkins is also the author of Chesta’s Children, a genealogy blog that explores his deep stateside roots as a descendant of enslaved Americans. He ties his passions together in his lectures and historical presentations, commenting on the relationships between racism, culture, art, and family.
Saskia Laroo, hailed by American public and press at large as "Lady Miles of Europe", is one of the few women trumpet stylists, blowing for more than three decades. Born in Amsterdam, she began on trumpet at age 8, never dreaming of becoming a professional musician. That all changed when Saskia, turned 18, after briefly majoring in Mathematics at University of Amsterdam switched her focus to a career in music. She worked extensively in various groups from this point, primarily on upright bass, though eventually, on both bass and trumpet. Saskia Laroo combines today’s music by uncontrived romps into new styles, eagerly limned as "nu jazz" or "swingin’ body-music"--a vivacious blend of hip-hop, jazz, salsa, funk reggae, and world, that many other artists dare not venture. Her artistry and her groove ring vibrantly and free on her recordings journeying us through the music she has absorbed and plays from heart and soul.
Jocelyn Pleasant is a musician and educator, originally from Bloomfield, Connecticut. Her studies in percussion began at age 9 in her school band program, and then branched out to the Hartt School Community Division and the Artists Collective (Hartford, CT). She continued her studies in Washington, DC, as a Presidential Arts Scholar at The George Washington University from 2000-2004. Currently, Jocelyn is pursuing a Master's degree in Ethnomusicology at Wesleyan University. As an educator, Jocelyn has been on staff with many schools and programs including the Artists Collective, Green Street Arts Center (Middletown, CT), Center for Creative Youth (Middletown, CT), Institute for the Musical Arts (Goshen, MA) and The Greater Hartford Academy of the Arts (Hartford, CT), teaching theory, percussion, and African/Cultural Rhythms to students of all levels. Jocelyn's performance credits on drum set and percussion are extensive and showcase her versatility and ability to play many genres of music (jazz, blues, West African, funk, reggae, Latin, etc.). She is currently the percussionist for The Afro Semitic Experience and drummer for Orice Jenkins, both based in Connecticut. She also leads her own band, The Lost Tribe, which fuses traditional West African music and percussion with other styles of music.
Sarah Hanahan

Sarah Hanahan is an emerging jazz saxophonist based in New York City and a leading voice in
the world of alto saxophone. A graduate of the Jackie McLean Institute of Jazz at the Hartt
School of Music (B.A., 2019) and The Juilliard School (M.M., 2022), Sarah has studied with
jazz greats like Abraham Burton, Nat Reeves, Steve Davis, Billy Drummond, and Marc
Cary. Her distinctive style blends tradition with innovation, earning recognition for her dynamic
performances and compelling musical voice.
Sarah has performed with renowned musicians such as Jeff “Tain” Watts, Nat Reeves, Peter
Martin, Steve Davis, Billy Hart, Dee Dee Bridgewater, Jason Moran, Marc Cary, Joseph
Farnsworth, Peter Washington, and Nicholas Payton. She regularly leads her own group at iconic
New York venues including Smalls Jazz Club, Dizzy’s Club, Smoke Jazz Club, Birdland, and
Zinc Bar.
In addition to performing in NYC, Sarah has toured nationally and internationally with her band
SH4, as well as with Ulysses Owens Jr. and Generation Y, Sherrie Miracle and the Diva
Orchestra, Joe Farnsworth, and the Grammy-award winning Mingus Big Band.
Her debut album, Among Giants, is out now, receiving a 5-star review in Downbeat Magazine
and included in their list of Best Albums of the Year for 2024. Featuring a powerhouse rhythm
section of Marc Cary, Nat Reeves, and Jeff “Tain” Watts, the album highlights Sarah’s bold and
expressive sound.
Sarah’s music bridges the gap between tradition and innovation, blending the timeless elements
of jazz with fresh, contemporary ideas. With her unique sound and thoughtful approach, she is
shaping the future of jazz, inspiring listeners to embrace both the roots and evolution of the
genre.
GOZA Latin Band

Noah Baerman QT w/Jimmy Greene

Noah Baerman Quartet and Sextet
personnel:
Jimmy Greene - tenor and soprano saxophone
Noah Baerman - piano
Henry Lugo - bass
Johnathan Blake - drums
with
Malin Carta - alto saxophone, clarinet, flute
Kate Ten Eyck - euphonium
Bio:
Noah Baerman is a jazz pianist, composer, educator, and activist who has recorded over a dozen acclaimed albums under his own name and several more as a co-leader of cooperative ensembles including Trio 149, Envisage Collective, and Playdate, earning praise from Downbeat, Jazz Times, Jazziz, the NYC Jazz Record, WNPR's Jazz Corridor, All About Jazz, and the Village Voice. He is the author of ten instructional books published by Alfred Publishing Company and teaches at several institutions including Wesleyan University, where he is the jazz piano instructor and has directed the Jazz Ensemble since 2007. In 2012 he founded Resonant Motion, a non-profit dedicated to the intersection of music and positive change. He has been awarded an Artists Respond grant from the CT Office of the Arts and the Arts Advocacy award from the City of Middletown, where July 10, 2020 was declared “Noah Baerman Day” in the city.
Taken by: MDRobertson
William Cepeda AfroRican Quintet

William Cepeda AfroRican Quintet
About William Cepeda AfroRican Quintet
A four-time Grammy nominee and composer, William Cepeda was born and
raised in Loíza, the heart of Puerto Rico’s “Little Africa.”
His artistic excellence, authenticity, and advocacy for research and
comprehensive documentation of Puerto Rican music, dance, and culture have
earned him multiple awards, grants, and recognition.
In 1992, he revolutionized Latin music with the introduction of Afro-Rican Jazz,
an innovative blend of traditional Puerto Rican roots, folk, dance, progressive
jazz, and world music. He is widely credited with creating and innovating the jazz
sub-genre known as Afro-Rican Jazz. Cepeda’s musical influences include Dizzy
Gillespie, Miriam Makeba, Miles Davis, Fela Kuti, and Lester Bowie, among others.
His ensemble has toured internationally, performing at prestigious jazz festivals
such as Montreux, North Sea, and Tabarka, as well as at major performing arts
venues and clubs. A protégé of Dizzy Gillespie, Cepeda was a member of the
United Nations Orchestra. He has also traveled extensively and performed with
renowned jazz artists including Lester Bowie and his Brass Fantasy, David
Murray, James Moody, Steve Turre, Bobby Watson, Miriam Makeba, and Slide
Hampton & the Jazz Masters. He is equally celebrated in the Latin music scene,
having performed with legendary figures such as Tito Puente, Paquito D’Rivera,
Arturo Sandoval, Eddie Palmieri, Celia Cruz, Marc Anthony, Rubén Blades, and
Oscar D’León.
In addition to his jazz and world music repertoire, Cepeda’s oeuvre includes
Bomba Sinfónica, a full-length orchestral work for symphony, opera, choir, and
soloists.
In 2013, Cepeda was awarded an Honorary Doctorate from Berklee College of
Music. That same year, the Puerto Rico Heineken Jazz Festival was dedicated in
his honor.
In 2024, he was named Cultural Ambassador by the Puerto Rico Institute of
Culture. The following year, in 2025, his album The Sound of Puerto Rican Jazz
was recognized as one of the top 20 productions of the year by the National
Foundation for Popular Culture. Cepeda continues to compose, develop new
projects, and explore new creative opportunities.
Abena Koomson-Davis Quartet

Abena Koomson-Davis is a performer, educator and wordsmith. Abena originated the role of Fela’s mother in the Off Broadway musical FELA! and reprised her role in the Broadway production which earned 3 Tony awards. She has performed alongside Stevie Wonder, Carly Simon, Angelique Kidjo and many other luminaries. Abena can be heard on Natalie Merchant’s most recent album ‘Keep Your Courage' where she is featured on two duets, “Come on Aphrodite” and “Big Girls.” For over 15 years, Abena has been the lead vocalist of the funk rock band Van Davis. She is the musical director for the Resistance Revival Chorus, and her song “Joy in Resistance” is featured on their debut album, entitled “This Joy.” Abena’s debut jazz album on WJ3 Records, entitled “Where is Love” features time-honored standards and original compositions co-written with her husband, acclaimed jazz trombonist Steve Davis. She is a member and featured collaborator of Scapegoat Garden, a New England based creative engine whose most recent project, ‘Liturgy | Order | Bridge’ conceived by Hartford native Deborah Goffe, was the recipient of the Creative Capital grant. Abena currently serves as Ethics Chair of the middle school division at Ethical Culture Fieldston School, where she teaches ethics and social justice to middle & upper school students. Abena is a graduate of Sarah Lawrence College where she earned a B.A. in Liberal Arts, and also of Teachers College, Columbia University where she earned a Masters in Education Leadership. Abena is excited to play with longtime collaborator and guitarist Jake Ezra Schwartz of Van Davis. www.abenakoomsondavis.
Sarah Uyar

Sarah Uyar is a Connecticut-based jazz trumpeter, composer, and educator. She currently lives in Hartford where she recently graduated from the Jackie Mclean Institute of Jazz at the Hartt School of Music. Sarah has been playing the trumpet for eleven years and her journey into jazz trumpet began in her junior year of high school when she stumbled upon the Artists Collective, Inc. in Hartford, CT, founded by the great saxophonist Jackie Mclean. Beginning her studies under the tutelage of renowned saxophonist Rene Mclean in the Youth Jazz Orchestra summer program, she remained there for three summers before enrolling in the Jackie Mclean Institute of Jazz for her collegiate studies.
Sarah has been fortunate to study and share the stage with masters of the music in and out of her undergraduate studies. At the Hartt School, Sarah was under the instruction of distinguished jazz educators such as trumpeter David Smith, trombonist Steve Davis, bassist Nat Reeves, pianist Zaccai Curtis, and saxophonists Rene McLean, Michael Thomas, and Javon Jackson. As part of the 2023 Woman in Jazz Organization mentorship program, she was a mentee to trumpeter Bria Skonberg, from whom she learned much about succeeding as a woman in the jazz industry. Sarah has also been privileged to study under the mentorship of the great trumpeter Jeremy Pelt in his private studio.
Sarah started gigging as a professional in her junior year of her undergraduate degree, playing at venues in Connecticut such as Black Eyed Sally’s, The Side Door, Cafe Nine, Jazzy’s Cabaret, the Bushnell, and many others as a bandleader and side-woman. She has also had the extreme privilege of sharing the stage with masters such as Yoron Israel and Avery Sharpe with a band called The Makanda Project, playing primarily in Boston and once in New York City. Sarah also had the opportunity to open for the Clifford Brown Jazz Festival in the summer of 2023 as part of the Boysie Lowery Living Jazz Residency.
Currently, Sarah is one of the most sought-after trumpet players in the Connecticut jazz scene. Her current project, Iris, is a chordless quartet that includes four of Connecticut’s most talented young jazz musicians. The band features post-bop, avant-garde, and modern jazz as its main vehicle for expression.
Amina Claudine Myers

Band:
Amina Claudine, Pianist/Vocalist
Jerome Harris, Bass
Reggie Nicholson, Drums
Bio:
Haneef Nelson Quintet

Band:
Born in Brooklyn, NY and raised in Uniondale, NY, Haneef N. Nelson has been a lifelong lover
of music. His early music education continued at the famed Jazzmobile Program where he
studied trumpet, music theory, as well as played in ensembles taught by jazz luminaries such as
Eddie Preston, Cecil Bridgewater, Dr. Donald Byrd; John Stubblefield; Frank Foster; Charles
Davis; Roland Guerrero as well as several others. Donald Byrd became a mentor outside of
Jazzmobile along with his high school music teachers Cedric J. Lemmie from Uniondale High
School and Dave Burns from the Long Island High School of the Arts.
These 3 mentors encouraged Haneef to apply for and attend the African-American Music
Department at the Hartt School to be taught by its founder Jackie McLean. Along with Jackie
McLean, Haneef studied with Steve Davis, Nat Reeves, Raymond Williams, Chris Casey, Mary
DiPaola, and Roger Murtha. Years later he went on to study Jazz Composition and Arranging at
UMASS Amherst where he studied with Jeff Holmes, Felipe Salles, Sal Macchia, Eric Berlin,
and Fumi Tomita.
He’s been fortunate enough to perform with the likes of Yoron Israel, Avery Sharpe, Brandee
Younger, Stacy Dillard, George Cables, Craig Handy, Bill Saxton, Paul Brown, Feya Faku, Joe
Ford, Charles Tolliver, Valery Ponomarev, Jesse Hameen, Wayne Escoffrey, Bill Lowe, Joe
Ford, Chembo Corniel, The Curtis Brothers, Ricky Ford, Musiq Soulchild, Doobie Powell, and
several others. His original music and Big Band arrangements have been featured around the
world and on the records of the New London Big Band as well as Dr. Emmett Goods’ album
Another Level. His debut album will be released later this year.
Haneef holds a Bachelor of Music in African-American Music Study from the University of
Hartford, a master’s degree in jazz composition and Arranging from UMASS Amherst and will
receive his Doctor of Musical Arts Degree in Composition from the Hartt School in 2026. In
addition Haneef is on the faculty of Western Connecticut State University, UMass Amherst, and
the University of Rhode Island where he teaches Jazz Trumpet, Jazz Ensemble, Jazz History,
Hip Hop History, Composition, Private Lesson Pedagogy and Jazz Pedagogy.
Donny Time Band

Personnel
- Matt Dwonszyk, Bass
- Linda Ransom, Vocals
- Steve Davis, Trombone
- Rosemarie Roy, Trombone
- Kris Jensen, Saxophone
- Josh Bruneau, Trumpet
- Curtis Torian, Drums
- Tony Davis, Guitar
- Nelson Bello, Percussion
- Alexis Roy, Spoken Word
“Donny Time" is a tribute band to the late great Don DePalma, a legendary pianist from Hartford, Connecticut. Don passed away in May of 2021 due to Covid but his legacy lives on. In 2024, the band released "Donny Time: The Music of Don DePalma” shining light on the pianist's life and career as a musician in the Hartford area. It features an all-star lineup, all former band mates of Don, playing their hearts out on Don’s original compositions and arrangements.
The world-renowned trombonist Steve Davis, the magnificent vocalist Linda Ransom and saxophone extraordinaire Kris Jensen all tip their hats to the maestro on “Donny Time”. There are also a handful of young lions featured on this album including drummer Jonathan Barber, trumpet player Joshua Bruneua and guitarist Tony Davis, all of whom were mentored by Don. For extra flavor, percussionist Nelson Bello, drummer Curtis Torian and spoken word artist Alexis Roy, give the album a unique sound that stands strong. Don even crashes the party himself on a few tracks salvaged from a stellar performance at the 2011 Paul Brown Monday Night Jazz Series in Bushnell Park.
It is important to mention the producers of this beautiful album, trombonist Rosie Roy and bassist Matt Dwonszyk. They made it so all of the proceeds of “Donny Time: The Music of Don DePalma” goes to the DePalma Roy Scholarship Fund set up in Don’s memory. This scholarship is awarded annually to a music student attending music college. One hundred percent of the proceeds from the album go to the DePalma Roy Scholarship Fund keeping Don’s music and spirit alive for generations to come. For more information or to make a donation, please visit thedepalmaroyscholarship
Matthew Pearl, Ben Simmons Quintet

Personel

