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Thursday 21 May 2026
7.30pm
Milton Court Concert Hall

Guildhall Jazz Orchestra:
Porgy and Bess

directed by Scott Stroman
featuring Ingrid Jensen

Programme

Scott Stroman

Chanobop

John Coltrane

Naima

arranged by Scott Stroman

Wayne Shorter

Go

arranged by Finn Genockey

Mark-Anthony Turnage

Needles

arranged by Scott Stroman

Marcus Miller

Tutu

arranged by Michael Philip Mossman

Christine Jensen

Fantasy on Blue

 

Interval (20 minutes)

 

George Gershwin

Suite from Porgy and Bess

arranged by Gil Evans

  1. The Buzzard Song

  2. Bess, You Is My Woman Now

  3. Gone, Gone, Gone

  4. Gone

  5. Summertime

  6. Bess, Oh Where’s My Bess

  7. Prayer

  8. Fisherman, Strawberry and Devil Crab

  9. My Man’s Gone Now

  10. It Ain’t Necessarily So

  11. The Honey Man

  12. I Loves You Porgy

  13. There’s A Boat (…That’s Leaving Soon for New York)

Guildhall Jazz Orchestra

Woodwinds

Kiera Exall

Daniel Pengelly

Harris Dakin

Kassa Green-Jakcsi

Emma Foulds

Alex Wardill

Charles Curtin

 

French Horn

Thomas Pinnell

Ima Kirkwood

Sinead McEvoy

Trumpet/Flugel Horn

Luke Lane

Sandy Watkin

Benny Tayler

Daniel Hammond

Max Gerrard

 

Trombone

Angus Grierson

Anna Bailey

Tom Hornby

Jamie Cadden (bass)

 

Tuba

George Good

Guitar

Jake Heron

 

Piano

Sara Dhillon

 

Bass

Eliot Whitehouse

James Leaver-Whitfield

 

Drums

David Harkness

Luke Brueck Seeley

Scott Stroman
director

image of Scott

Scott has been a Professor in the Jazz Department at Guildhall School of Music & Drama since 1983 and was made a Fellow of Guildhall School in 1988. US-born but long based in London, he is a composer, conductor, singer, trombonist and educator, and Director of the London Jazz Orchestra, Eclectic Voices and Artistic Director of Highbury Opera Theatre (HOT). As a trombonist, singer and conductor he has performed with numerous jazz and world music artists including Youssou N’Dour, Goran Bregovich, Ramamani, Phil Collins, Billy Cobham, Dizzy Gillespie, Kenny Wheeler, Dave Liebman, Norma Winstone, Bobby Wellins and Rufus Reid. He conducts baroque to contemporary music with orchestras, choirs and opera in the UK and Europe and directed the London Philharmonic Orchestra’s innovative cross-genre Renga and Hit Squad ensembles.

​​

With the Guildhall Jazz Orchestra he directed the first European performances of all of the Gil Evans – Miles Davis collaborations, created and directed new versions of Coltrane’s Africa/Brass, Ellington’s Second Sacred Concert and Art Blakey and the Jazz Messengers’ Moanin’, George Russell’s New York, and the first live performance, since Miles Davis recorded it with the Danish Radio Orchestra in 1989, of Palle Mikkelborg’s Aura.

​​

A prolific composer, he has written numerous works for jazz ensemble, choir, orchestra and the stage and recently premiered his second opera, The Weekend, based on the book by Michael Palin. He received a BASCA gold badge award for services to music from the Ivors Academy in 2018.

Ingrid Jensen
trumpet

image of Ingrid holding a trumpet

Ingrid Jensen has been hailed as one of the most gifted trumpeters of her generation. As a sought-out teacher, collaborator, and soloist, it is easy to see why the New York Times calls her “as versatile as she is vigorous.”

After graduating from Berklee College of Music in 1989, Jensen was offered a position at the prestigious Bruckner Conservatory in Linz, Austria. In the 1990s, she recorded three highly acclaimed CDs for the ENJA record label, becoming one of the most in demand trumpet players on the global jazz scene.

 

Settling in New York City, she joined the innovative jazz orchestras of Maria Schneider (1994–2012) and Darcy James Argue (2002–present). She has performed with a multigenerational cast of jazz legends ranging from Clark Terry to Esperanza Spalding. Jensen has also performed alongside British R&B artist Corinne Bailey Rae on Saturday Night Live and recorded with Canadian pop icon Sarah McLachlan. Jensen is prominently featured on the Grammy Award winning Mosaic Project, led by drummer Terri-Lyne Carrington.

 

One of Jensen’s most frequent and closest collaborators is her sister, the saxophonist and composer Christine Jensen. She is a featured soloist on the Christine Jensen Jazz Orchestra’s Juno award-winning album, Treelines (2011), and its successor, Habitat (2013). The sisters released a highly regarded small group recording entitled Infinitude (2016) on the Whirlwind label featuring the brilliant guitarist Ben Monder, and have further collaborated with Nordic Connect, an international band featuring pianist and composer Maggi Olin.

 

A dedicated jazz educator, Jensen has resided on the jazz trumpet faculties at the University of Michigan, Peabody Conservatory and Manhattan School of Music. She also served on the jazz faculty, teaching composition and arranging at Purchase College and the New School for Jazz in NYC.

 

She performed and lectured as a guest artist with the Thelonious Monk Institute High School group featuring Herbie Hancock, and performed and taught regularly at the Centrum Jazz Workshop, the Brubeck Institute, the Banff Center for Jazz and Creative Music, the Stanford Jazz Camp, the Geri Allen Jazz Camp for Young Women and the Betty Carter Institute under the direction of Jason Moran. She is currently on the faculty of Jazz Arts at the prestigious Manhattan School of Music.

 

Since her victory at the Carmine Caruso Trumpet Competition in 1995, Jensen has sat on the judges’ panel twice. She is regularly invited to trumpet festivals around the world and recently served as artist-in-residence with Tia Fuller at the prestigious Monterey Jazz Festival, where she also performed with her own quintet.

 

Her second project on the Whirlwind label honouring the late great Kenny Wheeler, Invisible Sounds (2018), was featured on NPR’s Jazz Night in America hosted by Christian McBride, receiving critical acclaim both in the US and abroad. Glowing reviews have earned her a loyal fan base around the globe, and she was hailed by the JJA as 2019’s Trumpeter of the Year. She is also consistently listed in the top 5 in the Trumpet category of the DownBeat critics poll.

 

Ingrid records often as a guest on scores of side projects, appearing at major venues around the world both as a performer and an educator. She is an integral member of the highly acclaimed Blue Note recording band Artemis and continues to write for and perform with her own projects both in New York and beyond.

 

Ingrid plays a custom Monette trumpet, built personally by the master builder Dave Monette.

Forthcoming Events

The Bauhaus Festival 2026
22 May 2026
Silk Street Music Hall

An evening of twenty short films by Guildhall students, with live scores performed by the Bauhaus Band, alongside music inspired by Stravinsky’s The Rite of Spring

 

Making It Festival
8–26 June 2026
Silk Street Theatre & Milton Court

Join us for the 2026 Making It Festival: a celebration of new, original work made by Guildhall School’s vibrant and multi-skilled community. 

Clarinet and Bassoon Concert
23 June 2026
Silk Street Music Hall

Curated by Kathryn Titcomb and Thaïs Bordes this concert showcases the rich tonal palette of the clarinet and bassoon families in chamber and larger ensemble settings. 

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Photo © David Monteith-Hodge

Guildhall School of Music & Drama

Founded in 1880 by the City of London Corporation

Chair of the Board of Governors

The Hon. Emily Benn

Principal

Professor Jonathan Vaughan FGS

Vice-Principal & Director of Music

Armin Zanner​ FGS

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