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New Jersey Hospital Treats Jazz Musicians for Free
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NPR Morning Edition
04-21-1994
BOB EDWARDS, Host: Over the years many great jazz musicians have died untreated and without health insurance. Saxophone player C. Sharp died of cancer in his 40s, receiving medical attention when it was too late. Papa Joe Louis [sp], the original drummer for Count Basie, was treated for cancer only after a wealthy musician picked up the tab. And composer Carter Jefferson died without the money to cover his medical bills or funeral cost...
Related newspaper, magazine, and journal articles from HighBeam Research
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Keeping Jazz Musicians Alive
The Village Voice
; MANY WORLD-RENOWNED JAZZ MUSICIANS HAVE NO PENSIONS, NO MEDICAL PLANS, NO HOPE He played with Harry fames and Sinatra and now was traveling 76 miles each way, four nights a week, with stage-four cancer just to make $100 a gig to support himself and his 92-year-old mother. After five operations,
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Profile: What some organizations are doing to help aging jazz musicians who lack health insurance or Medicare
All Things Considered (NPR)
; ... musicians who lack health insurance or Medicare Host: ROBERT SIEGEL, MELISSA BLOCK Time: 9:00-10:00 PM ROBERT SIEGEL, host: From NPR News, this is ALL THINGS CONSIDERED. I'm Robert Siegel. MELISSA BLOCK, host: And I'm Melissa Block. We're going to continue now with ...
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Remembering forgotten jazz musicians
New York Beacon, The
; Rahman, Ali New York Beacon, The 10-23-2002 It was "A Great Night in Harlem" as jazz greats recently took to the stage at the Apollo Theater in a benefit concert sponsored by the Jazz Foundation of America which honored legendary jazz musicians for the jazz musicians emergency fund. Dr. Billy
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Jazz Foundation benefit & Brooklyn Jazz Consortium
New York Amsterdam News
; Scott, Ron New York Amsterdam News 11-03-2004 During the recent presidential debates Senator John Kerry made note of the fact that ... Ellington. Tickets are $20. For information call (718) 467-1527. Article copyright The Amsterdam News. V.95;
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Jazz musicians: the cost of the beat.
Journal of Arts Management, Law and Society
; In the marketplace, jazz is acknowledged as responsible for less than 4 percent of total annual recordings sales in the United States. Since the emergence of compact disks in 1984, reissues of jazz records have far outsold recordings by all but the most popular currently active jazz musicians.
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