PRESS RELEASES
American Pianists Awards Announces Jazz on the Ave, a Free Concert in Indianapolis on September 18
A First in the History of the American Pianists Awards,
the American Pianists Association Announces a
Free Community Concert to Kick Off the
Competition Season in Indianapolis
Jazz on the Ave at Madam Walker Legacy Center
Sunday, September 18, 3:30 p.m.
Register Online Now
Featuring Five Finalists Caelan Cardello,
Esteban Castro, Paul Cornish,
Thomas Linger and Isaiah J. Thompson
A first in the history of the American Pianists Awards, the American Pianists Association has announced a free community concert to kick off the competition season in Indianapolis. Jazz on the Ave takes place at 3:30 p.m. on Sunday, September 18 at the iconic Madam Walker Legacy Center, a National Historic Landmark. All five finalists of the world’s biggest jazz competition will give short performances at the event, to be emceed by community leader Katasha Butler and WFYI radio personality Matthey Socey.
Madam C.J. Walker envisioned her namesake building as a center “of entertainment, business and pride” for the Black community in Indianapolis in the 1920s. Over the years, the theater hosted national stars including Duke Ellington, Ella Fitzgerald, Louis Armstrong and Count Basie, and cultivated local talent including Wes Montgomery and Jimmy Coe.
Next month, the five finalists of the 2023 American Pianists Awards—Caelan Cardello, Esteban Castro, Paul Cornish, Thomas Linger and Isaiah J Thompson begin their pursuit of the prestigious Cole Porter Fellowship, given every four years to an American jazz pianist at the conclusion of the organization’s unique 13-month competition process.
FREE registration here: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/jazz-on-the-ave-kicking-off-the-2023-american-pianists-awards-tickets-388145061327
By virtue of their selection, each of the five finalists has already won a cash prize of $25,000, exceptional performance opportunities and the publicity gained from advancing in the world’s largest jazz competition. Further, the winner of the 2023 American Pianists Awards will receive a prize valued over $200,000, including: cash; two years of career assistance; a winner’s media and performance tour; the opportunity to work with Mack Avenue Records; the opportunity to work with B Natural—a New York-based artist booking agency; publicity support through DL Media and Bucklesweet; and other opportunities worldwide.
Following Jazz on the Ave, each finalist will be invited to Indianapolis for the Premiere Series–the first live-juried performances of the Awards, consisting of solo and trio sets at the Jazz Kitchen. While in town, the finalists will also participate in outreach and community events. Premiere Series dates:
All five finalists return to Indianapolis for more solo and trio performances at the Club Finals at The Cabaret on April 21, 2023. The next evening, April 22, 2023, the Gala Finals at Hilbert Circle Theatre include original arrangements performed with the Buselli-Wallarab Jazz Orchestra and duo performances with three-time Grammy® Award-winning vocalist Cécile McLorin Salvant. The winner of the 2023 American Pianists Awards will be announced on stage at the conclusion of the evening.
All juried performances will be livestreamed at americanpianists.org/live and on APA’s YouTube (youtube.com/apapanists) and Facebook (facebook.com/apapianists).
The Five Finalists (more at americanpianists.org/jazz/finalists):
Caelan Cardello, 22
Born into a musical household in Teaneck, NJ, Caelan Cardello began playing piano at the age of five. By the age of ten he was studying both jazz and classical separately with jazz pianist/arranger Allen Farnham and Juilliard alum, Steven Masi. Throughout his middle and high school years, Caelan had the opportunity to perform for or play with jazz idols such as Christian McBride, Jimmy Cobb, Ravi Coltrane, Ingrid Jensen, Dee Dee Bridgewater, Brad Mehldau, Wynton Marsalis, and Teanecks own Jon Faddis and Freddie Hendrix. He was a part of the organization Jazz House Kids for seven years, where he learned from the greatest jazz masters and perform at venues such as Dizzy’s Club and the Montclair Jazz Festival. Caelan has also performed at venues in NYC such as Smoke Jazz Club and The Jazz Standard, as well as the Detroit Jazz Festival, Bahrain Jazz Festival and Montclair Jazz Festival. Other accolades include 2021 winner of the BMI Foundation’s Future Jazz Master award, 2018 recipient of the prestigious James Moody Scholarship, winner for regional National YoungArts, and 2016–17 All State Jazz Band pianist.
Caelan recently graduated from William Paterson University, majoring in Jazz Performance. He studies privately with saxophonist Vincent Herring, guitarist Russell Malone and pianists David Kikoski and Bill Charlap, and has previously studied with Mike Ledonne, Geoff Keezer, Harold Mabern and Kevin Hays.
Esteban Castro, 19
Esteban is a pianist and composer from New York who captivates audiences and critics with performances that are intimate and sophisticated beyond his years. He attends the Juilliard School on a full-tuition Thomas Dubois Hormel Memorial Scholarship, studying with Ted Rosenthal, and he also studies privately with Fred Hersch. Esteban is a Young Steinway Artist.
At age thirteen, Esteban was the First Prize Winner in the Montreux Jazz Piano Solo Competition in 2016, making him the youngest ever to receive this prestigious award. At fourteen, he was the youngest First Prize recipient at the 2017 Jacksonville Jazz Piano Competition.
With over forty compositions to his name, Esteban has garnered three ASCAP Foundation Young Jazz Composer Awards and has won fifteen Downbeat Student Music Awards. He was selected as a pianist for the Grammy Band in 2017 and 2018, as a 2019 YoungArts Finalist, and as a member of the 2019 Next Generation Jazz Orchestra. He has won a variety of classical piano competitions, including the 2019 MSM Precollege Philharmonic Concerto Competition, playing Prokofiev’s First Piano Concerto. Esteban was commissioned for a big band arrangement by the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra for the Thelonious Monk 100th Birthday Celebration in 2018.
Esteban routinely donates his time and performances to charitable causes such as the Jazz Ambassadors, the American Cancer Society, Haiti Disaster Relief, Aid to Victims of Hurricane Maria, and to provide musical instruments for needs-based students.
Paul Cornish, 25
Los Angeles-based pianist and composer Paul Cornish strives to inspire freedom and collaboration in his music and community. Hailing from Houston where he was a student at the prestigious High School for the Performing and Visual Arts, Cornish was one of seven jazz prodigies worldwide selected to be awarded a full fellowship to attend the esteemed Herbie Hancock Institute of Jazz at UCLA. Here, he completed his master’s degree and studied and performed with such renowned artists as Carl Allen, Jerry Bergonzi, Billy Childs, Herbie Hancock, Bob Hurst, Geoffrey Keezer, Dick Oatts, Chris Potter, Walter Smith and Terell Stafford.
Cornish received the Los Angeles Jazz Society’s 2020 New Note Commission and recently was awarded First Place in the Jacksonville Jazz Piano Competition and the 18th Street Arts Center’s 2021 Make Jazz Fellowship. Cornish was also awarded the Grand Prize in the 2018 American Jazz Piano Competition. Currently residing in Los Angeles, Cornish has performed extensively across the globe with such notable artists as Herbie Hancock, Louis Cole, Theo Croker, Snoh Aalegra, Terrace Martin and Kanye West.
Thomas Linger, 29
Thomas Linger, New York-based pianist, originally hails from Waynesville, North Carolina. Winner of the American Jazz Pianist Competition, he is a primarily self-taught performer, composer, and teacher, having performed in some of the most prestigious venues such as the Village Vanguard, Jazz at Lincoln Center, Dizzy’s Club, Smalls, Mezzrow and many more.
Thomas leads his own trio in addition to engagements alongside current luminaries such as Peter Bernstein, Francisco Mela, Joe Farnsworth, Yasushi Nakamura, Stacy Dillard, Sylvia Cuenca, Brandon Lee, and many others. Thomas’s debut album featuring many of his original compositions will be released on Cellar Live in 2022.
Isaiah J. Thompson, 25
Isaiah J. Thompson is a jazz pianist, composer and bandleader from West Orange, New Jersey. He began studying at The Calderone School of Music at an early age, and soon after continued his studies with Jazz House Kids and NJPAC Jazz For Teens. He received both his bachelor’s and master’s from The Juilliard School, was awarded the 2018 Lincoln Center Emerging Artist Award and earned Second Place in the 2018 Thelonious Monk (now Herbie Hancock) Institute of Jazz International Piano Competition. Isaiah has since performed with major artists including Ron Carter, John Pizzarelli, Christian McBride, Steve Turre and Buster Williams. He was featured on the Golden Globe-nominated soundtrack for Motherless Brooklyn and was named a Steinway Artist. Isaiah made his recording debut on Jazz at Lincoln Center’s Blue Engine Records’ release, “Handful of Keys” with the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra with Wynton Marsalis, and he released his debut album as a leader, Isaiah J. Thompson Plays the Music of Buddy Montgomery in 2020.
About American Pianists Association
The American Pianists Association has been supporting aspiring young artists for over 40 years and has been based in Indianapolis since 1982. It has a professional staff of seven, headed by Mr. Peter Mraz. The American Pianists Awards, held for both classical and jazz artists, offer significant opportunities for American pianists, ages 18–30, to advance their careers. Each winner receives a two–year fellowship, valued at over $200,000 including cash awards, fees, publicity and recording opportunities. The organization greatly values the individual artistic sensibilities of each pianist, nurtures such individuality and does not impose any repertoire requirements during the competitions other than those necessary for the different genres. It is the intent of the American Pianists Awards to focus on artistic expression and not on competitive prowess. Further, the organization tailors its career assistance to suit the particular needs of the winner, offering an array of opportunities appropriate to the winner’s current career development and status. American Pianists Association strives to be the bridge between professional training and a full–fledged professional career. For more information on the American Pianists Association visit www.americanpianists.org.
For more information on American Pianists Association,
please visit: americanpianists.org/
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Lee Clifford · American Pianists Association
Director of Marketing & Communications
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