
Violinist Regina Carter receives NEA Jazz Masters Award
Clip: Season 7 Episode 44 | 6m 16sVideo has Closed Captions
Violinist Regina Carter on receiving the NEA Jazz Masters Fellowship Award.
Detroit-born violinist extraordinaire Regina Carter has racked up another prestigious musical honor: The NEA Jazz Masters Award. In recognition of Women’s History Month, Detroit-born violinist Regina Carter talks with Linda Yohn of 90.9 WRCJ about being awarded the NEA Jazz Masters Fellowship Award for jazz advocacy alongside fellow Detroit saxophonist Kenny Garrett and drummer Louis Hayes.
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One Detroit is a local public television program presented by Detroit PBS

Violinist Regina Carter receives NEA Jazz Masters Award
Clip: Season 7 Episode 44 | 6m 16sVideo has Closed Captions
Detroit-born violinist extraordinaire Regina Carter has racked up another prestigious musical honor: The NEA Jazz Masters Award. In recognition of Women’s History Month, Detroit-born violinist Regina Carter talks with Linda Yohn of 90.9 WRCJ about being awarded the NEA Jazz Masters Fellowship Award for jazz advocacy alongside fellow Detroit saxophonist Kenny Garrett and drummer Louis Hayes.
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Learn Moreabout PBS online sponsorship(intro music) (jazz music) - [Speaker] To kick off jazz appreciation Month 2023 at the Kennedy Center in Washington DC, You, Kenny Garrett and and Louis Hayes will be featured in concert to receive your NEA Jazz Master Awards.
This is a banner day for jazz in general.
And for Detroit Jazz specifically - I'm over the moon as the old people would say, I'm still in disbelief, you know, I, you know, I know it's happening.
I do these interviews and I I I'm in touch, you know, making all the arrangements.
And then I say, really, this is really happening?
And I, and I'm really excited, I'm so honored.
And the fact that it's three Detroiters, I couldn't be more proud of my city.
It's amazing on one hand that the three of us are from Detroit but it's not amazing, you know, it's just the city.
Detroit is extremely unique and special.
- It sure is.
And, but see, the thing is is that this is not your first rodeo.
This is not your first major award.
I mean, you are a MacArthur genius grantee.
So what does the, what is the difference between, say the NEA Jazz Master Award and some of the many other awards and accolades all deserved I might add, that have come your way?
- You know, every award is very special.
It's, they're like green lights, if you will.
I call them to say you're on the right path.
And everyone has their own path, their own journey.
And so sometimes it feels like when you're out here doing this, doing this, doing music, being self-employed, sometimes it's like what am what am I doing?
And I think that's probably everyone.
At certain points in our lives we question what we're doing.
But any award that I've received I feel like it's a green light.
Like, yes, keep going, you're on the right track.
And of course, winning the MacArthur was probably that was so huge for me in my, in my life.
And then being a Doris Duke artist as well after that.
And then on top of it, this, it's, I'm blown away.
(jazz music) I know that the music comes through me, not from me.
And just having life experiences and allowing those experiences to help guide me and to guide my music.
And I've had some opportunities that I never even thought about early on in my, in my career or in my life.
There's so many ways in which to use music and the the longer I live, you know, I can, I can serve I love playing for audiences and touring but I can also play for people in nursing homes, hospitals, I do hospice work and end of life work.
And so all of that feeds feeds my soul and helps and yeah it just helps me to stay humble.
- Other aspect of Regina Carter, that's just super important is the variety in your recordings.
Of course, we, I go back all the way to the straight ahead days, but then when you started out and you were doing your own sessions, you decided or I don't know if, if you decided it, but someone decided that there should be variety in the presentations.
- Well, you know, it's interesting.
I I was, I recorded with Atlantic two solo records and those records were considered smooth jazz whatever that means.
So, and when I, when I signed with Verb they wanted more of a straight ahead.
And I remember turning in my first record and the A&R Artist and repertoire person assigned to me said, well, your, your music is all over the place.
People won't know how to, how to categorize you or what.
And I said, I'm, I'm not gonna pick one thing.
I love all of this music.
It's just music.
And growing up in Detroit and listening to the radio stations, we heard such a wide variety of music under that umbrella of jazz.
On the stations there was Motown and then of course you drive anywhere in the city you might hear, if you go to Greektown you'd hear some Greek classical music, or Mexican Village you'd hear authentic Mexican folk music Mariachi you might hear you go, there was the the Chaldean section of town.
So there was all of this music from all these different ethnic groups that were living in and around Detroit.
So all of those sounds were in my head.
And when the A&R Guy said, well, you have to pick one.
I said, I can't, you know, all these sounds are there.
So I, I have, I need to be able to express music.
(jazz music)
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Henry Ford, WSU create transfer pathway to 4-year degree
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One Detroit Weekend: March 31, 2023
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The state of Black real estate development in Detroit
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