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Thu, Nov 16, 2023
7:30 pm
- 9:00 pm

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 JAZZ VOCAL COLLECTIVE (JVC) is a small jazz ensemble that features solo voice and a rhythm section (e.g. piano, guitar, bass, and drums) and horns to create a collaborative musical experience. Under the direction of Dr. Trineice Robinson-Martin, the Jazz Vocal Collective’s fall concert will celebrate life, love, and culture through diverse musical styles and composers. The concert will feature compositions by Dizzy Gillespie, Rogers & Hart, Gigi Gryce, Mongo Santamaria, Esperanza Spalding, Laufey Lin, Toby Fox, and much more.

Join us for a wonderful night of music.

 

Toby Fox arr. Carlos Eiene It's A Beautiful Day Outside

Soloist: Alessandro & Marcello Troncoso

John Klenner & Sam Lewis Just Friends

Soloist: Sirfraz Shah

Richard Rodgers and Lorenz Hart I Didn't Know What Time It Was

Soloist: Claire Dignazio

Walter Gross and Jack Lawrence Tenderly

Soloist: Vincent Gerardi

Laufey Lin Like The Movies

Soloist: Isabella Checa

Mongo Santamaria and Oscar Brown arr. Robert Glasper Afro Blue

Soloist: Adia Allison

Dizzy Gillespie and Raymond Leveen Night in Tunisia

Soloist: Laura Robertson

Vincent Youmans and Irving Casesar Sometime I'm Happy

Soloist: Vincent Gerardi

Herb Ellis, Johnny Frigo, Lou Carter Detour Ahead

Soloist: Sirfraz Shah

Hoagy Carmichael & Ned Washington The Nearness of you

Soloist: Claire Dignazio

Bobby Cappó Piel Canela

Soloists: Isabella Checa & Sirfraz Shah

Gigi Gryce and Jon Hendricks Social Call

Soloist: Adia Allison

Burton Lane and Yip Harburg Old Devil Moon

Soloist: Laura Robertson

Esperanza Spalding I Adore You

Soloist: Isabella Checa

Download PDF Program

JAZZ AT PRINCETON UNIVERSITY serves to promote this uniquely American music as a contemporary and relevant art form. Its goals are to convey the vast musical and social history of jazz, establish a strong theoretical and stylistic foundation with regard to improvisation and composition, and emphasize the development of individual expression and creativity. Offerings of this program include academic course work, performing ensembles, master classes, private study, and independent projects. Jazz at Princeton
University thanks you for joining them on this evening’s journey of beauty, exploration, discovery, and hope.

JAZZ VOCAL COLLECTIVE is a small jazz ensemble that features solo voice and a rhythm section (i.e. piano, guitar, bass, and drums) to create a collaborative musical experience. In JVC, vocalists are responsible for selecting repertoire, creating, and notating their own musical arrangements of jazz standards and popular songs, and developing and performing those arrangements in class throughout the semester. JVC meets on Thursday nights from 7-9PM in the Jazz Studio of the Effron Music Building, and holds auditions during the first week of the fall semester. If you are interested in auditioning for next year for JVC or any other of the ensembles offered in the jazz program, please contact the Jazz program director, Rudresh Mahanthappa at

Dr. Trineice Robinson-Martin serves as the private voice instructor in jazz and the JazzVocal Collective  ensemble director. In addition to working at Princeton University, Dr. Robinson-Martin holds Artist-in-residencies at Yale and Berklee School of Music, the founder of Soul Ingredients® Voice Studio, Soul Ingredients® Voice Teacher Training Academy, and performs regularly in the tri-state area.

As an internationally recognized voice pedagogue in contemporary music, Dr. Robinson- Martin has dedicated her career to performing and developing resources for teaching jazz, gospel, and R&B singing styles. She completed her doctoral work at Teachers College Columbia University. Her research focused on vocal pedagogy for Contemporary Commercial Music (e.g., R&B, jazz, rock, music theater, etc.), applied pedagogy, and gospel music performance practices. Dr. Robinson-Martin holds master’s degrees in music education and jazz studies from Teachers College and Indiana University-Bloomington. Dr. Robinson-Martin is also a certified instructor in Somatic Voicework™ The Lovetri Method, a national faculty member of the Gospel Music Workshop of America, Inc., the executive director of the African American Jazz Caucus, Inc., a founding and executive board member of the Donald Meade Legacy Jazz Griot Award, and board of director of the Jazz Education Network, on the editorial board of the Journal of Singing, and is a member of the distinguished American Academy of Teachers of Singing. Based on her graduate research, Dr. Robinson-Martin designed Soul Ingredients® , a teaching methodology for developing a singer’s musical style/interpretation in African American folk-based music styles (i.e., jazz, gospel, R&B, blues, etc.). This methodology shows students how to take their personal experiences, musical influences, and models, and execute the various components in a personal manner to the singer/performer’s unique expression. In addition to her book “So You Want to Singing Gospel, ” she has contributed chapters to several textbooks and scholarly writings on the tops of voice and Black music history. In addition to books, Robinson-Martin’s published work can also be found in Downbeat Magazine, New York Times, Journal of Singing, Journal of Voice, and Voice and Speech.

As a performer, Dr. Trineice Robinson-Martin maintains a diverse performance schedule. New York Music Daily praised Robinson as “an individualist who defies categorization: there’s the immediacy of classic soul music here, coupled to jazz sophistication, gospel rapture and fervor. ” Whether touring with Peabo Bryson and Leela James in the Standing in Shadows of Motown Live, being a featured soloist with Erie Philharmonic Orchestra, creating vocal tracks for Nnenna Freelon’s Grammy Nominated Album “Time Traveler, ” or performing with her jazz quartet, Dr. Trineice loves to perform good music. As evident in her 2021 debut album, which features Cyrus Chestnut and Don Braden, “All Or Nothing” reflects the whole-hearted spirit with which she’s approached every facet of her wide- ranging career. It captures the passion, confidence and dazzling scope of her rich, expressive voice, which DownBeat Magazine hails as “redolent with power… stunning.” But it also represents the dedication and commitment that she’s brought to an impressive career as a renowned educator, researcher, scholar, and clinician.


Sirfraz Shah ’24, voice
Laura Robertson ‘24 voice
Isabella Checa ’25, voice
Claire Dignazio ‘25, voice
Adia Allison ’25, voice
Vincent Gerardi ‘25, voice
Alessandro Troncoso ‘25 Saxes and Flute
Marcello Troncoso ‘27 alto sax
Samuel Gerhard ’25 piano
Alexander Theodore ‘27, piano
Ian Kenselaar, bass (Special Guest)
Dominic Palombi, drums (Special Guest)
Dr. Trineice Robinson-Martin, percussions


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JAZZ AT PRINCETON UNIVERSITY serves to promote this uniquely American music as a contemporary and relevant art form. Its goals are to convey the vast musical and social history of jazz, establish a strong theoretical and stylistic foundation with regard to improvisation and composition, and emphasize the development of individual expression and creativity. Offerings of this program include academic course work, performing ensembles, master classes, private study, and independent projects. Jazz at Princeton
University thanks you for joining them on this evening’s journey of beauty, exploration, discovery, and hope.

JAZZ VOCAL COLLECTIVE is a small jazz ensemble that features solo voice and a rhythm section (i.e. piano, guitar, bass, and drums) to create a collaborative musical experience. In JVC, vocalists are responsible for selecting repertoire, creating, and notating their own musical arrangements of jazz standards and popular songs, and developing and performing those arrangements in class throughout the semester. JVC meets on Thursday nights from 7-9PM in the Jazz Studio of the Effron Music Building, and holds auditions during the first week of the fall semester. If you are interested in auditioning for next year for JVC or any other of the ensembles offered in the jazz program, please contact the Jazz program director, Rudresh Mahanthappa at

Dr. Trineice Robinson-Martin serves as the private voice instructor in jazz and the JazzVocal Collective  ensemble director. In addition to working at Princeton University, Dr. Robinson-Martin holds Artist-in-residencies at Yale and Berklee School of Music, the founder of Soul Ingredients® Voice Studio, Soul Ingredients® Voice Teacher Training Academy, and performs regularly in the tri-state area.

As an internationally recognized voice pedagogue in contemporary music, Dr. Robinson- Martin has dedicated her career to performing and developing resources for teaching jazz, gospel, and R&B singing styles. She completed her doctoral work at Teachers College Columbia University. Her research focused on vocal pedagogy for Contemporary Commercial Music (e.g., R&B, jazz, rock, music theater, etc.), applied pedagogy, and gospel music performance practices. Dr. Robinson-Martin holds master’s degrees in music education and jazz studies from Teachers College and Indiana University-Bloomington. Dr. Robinson-Martin is also a certified instructor in Somatic Voicework™ The Lovetri Method, a national faculty member of the Gospel Music Workshop of America, Inc., the executive director of the African American Jazz Caucus, Inc., a founding and executive board member of the Donald Meade Legacy Jazz Griot Award, and board of director of the Jazz Education Network, on the editorial board of the Journal of Singing, and is a member of the distinguished American Academy of Teachers of Singing. Based on her graduate research, Dr. Robinson-Martin designed Soul Ingredients® , a teaching methodology for developing a singer’s musical style/interpretation in African American folk-based music styles (i.e., jazz, gospel, R&B, blues, etc.). This methodology shows students how to take their personal experiences, musical influences, and models, and execute the various components in a personal manner to the singer/performer’s unique expression. In addition to her book “So You Want to Singing Gospel, ” she has contributed chapters to several textbooks and scholarly writings on the tops of voice and Black music history. In addition to books, Robinson-Martin’s published work can also be found in Downbeat Magazine, New York Times, Journal of Singing, Journal of Voice, and Voice and Speech.

As a performer, Dr. Trineice Robinson-Martin maintains a diverse performance schedule. New York Music Daily praised Robinson as “an individualist who defies categorization: there’s the immediacy of classic soul music here, coupled to jazz sophistication, gospel rapture and fervor. ” Whether touring with Peabo Bryson and Leela James in the Standing in Shadows of Motown Live, being a featured soloist with Erie Philharmonic Orchestra, creating vocal tracks for Nnenna Freelon’s Grammy Nominated Album “Time Traveler, ” or performing with her jazz quartet, Dr. Trineice loves to perform good music. As evident in her 2021 debut album, which features Cyrus Chestnut and Don Braden, “All Or Nothing” reflects the whole-hearted spirit with which she’s approached every facet of her wide- ranging career. It captures the passion, confidence and dazzling scope of her rich, expressive voice, which DownBeat Magazine hails as “redolent with power… stunning.” But it also represents the dedication and commitment that she’s brought to an impressive career as a renowned educator, researcher, scholar, and clinician.


Sirfraz Shah ’24, voice
Laura Robertson ‘24 voice
Isabella Checa ’25, voice
Claire Dignazio ‘25, voice
Adia Allison ’25, voice
Vincent Gerardi ‘25, voice
Alessandro Troncoso ‘25 Saxes and Flute
Marcello Troncoso ‘27 alto sax
Samuel Gerhard ’25 piano
Alexander Theodore ‘27, piano
Ian Kenselaar, bass (Special Guest)
Dominic Palombi, drums (Special Guest)
Dr. Trineice Robinson-Martin, percussions


back to events calendar