...was pivotal in my development as a musician. | arrived in Boston to attend Berklee as a student in the fall of 1967. Most of the things that | wanted to learn and accomplish have a connection to my time at Berklee. The Berklee teachers were exactly what | needed to develop as a player and thinker. My fellow students and friends were the support group that sustained me during my times of lll BERKLEE COLLEGE OF MUSIC... introspection and self-doubt. My musical journey would have been very different had | not attended and graduated from Berklee. | would like to give a special thanks to Joe Viola, Andy McGhee, Larry Monroe, Alan Dawson, Matt Marvuglio, and James Williams. These gentlemen were my mentors and earthly angels... Bill Pierce The Art of the Tenor: Celebrating Bill Pierce In honor of renowned saxophonist and educator Bill Pierce, this celebratory concert features former students Javon Jackson, Mark Turner, Antonio Hart, and Melissa Aldana. Pierce, chair emeritus of Berklee's Woodwinds Department, is a 1972 Berklee graduate who has performed with some of the indisputable masters of music—Freddie Hubbard, Marvin Gaye, Tony Williams, Art Farmer, Hank Jones, Stevie Wonder, and Art Blakey, to name a few. Producing the concert is Grammy- winning drummer, composer, and bandleader Terri Lyne Carrington and will feature music from the songbooks of Art Blakey, Tony Williams, Pierce originals, and more. The concert will be divided into two sections. Jackson, Turner, Hart, and Aldana will perform the first half with Lawrence Fields on piano, John Lockwood on bass, David Gilmore on guitar, and Ron Savage on drums. Pierce will lead the second half of the concert with long-time collaborators, including guitarist Kevin Eubanks, organist Jake Sherman, drummer Carrington, along with a host of special guests to help further pay tribute to Pierce’s significant contribution to music.