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Duke Jazz Ensemble with guest artist Conrad Herwig, trombone

"Conrad is the best trombonist on the planet!" - Eddie Palmieri.

Join the Duke Jazz Ensemble, John V. Brown, director, and Evan Roberson, associate director, as they welcome trombonist Conrad Herwig to the Baldwin stage.

$10 general admission/$5 senior citizens/free for students. Tickets: https://tickets.duke.edu.

If you are unable to attend this concert in person, livestream it at: https://youtube.com/live/shUgZInjgN8.

New York jazz artist Conrad Herwig has recorded 26 albums as a leader, receiving four GRAMMY®-nominations for his own projects. His latest CD release is The Latin Side of Mingus (Savant; 2022). This albums marks 25+ years of the "Latin Side . . ." series. These exciting and individualized projects feature an array of special guests including Randy Brecker, Ruben Blades, Michel Camilo, Joe Lovano, Eddie Palmieri, Paquito D'Rivera, Dave Valentin and many of the hottest players on the international scene.

Herwig is equally facile in a non-Latin arena. He has been voted #1 Jazz Trombonist in DownBeat Magazine "Jazz Critic's Poll" and nominated for "Trombonist of the Year" by the Jazz Journalists Association on numerous occasions. In constant demand as a sideman, Herwig has performed with Joe Henderson, Horace Silver, McCoy Tyner, and Joe Lovano (featured as a soloist on Lovano's GRAMMY® Award winning 52nd St. Themes CD).

In the Afro-Caribbean genre he has toured with legends such as Eddie Palmieri, Tito Puente, Paquito D'Rivera, and Michel Camilo. He is a longtime member of the the Mingus Big Band (where he has served as musical director and arranger including on the 2011 GRAMMY- winning "Live at the Jazz Standard"). In other big band settings Herwig has also performed and recorded with Clark Terry, Buddy Rich, Frank Sinatra, Miles Davis & Quincy Jones, and the Gil Evans Orchestra. Herwig has appeared on more than 200+ albums in what is now a 40 year career.

Herwig is a recipient of the Paul Acket Award (formerly the "Bird Award"), as well as performance and teaching grants from the National Endowment for the Arts. He was elected to the Board of Advisors of the International Trombone Association and has taught at Mason Gross School of the Arts in the prestigious jazz program at Rutgers University in New Brunswick, N.J. where he currently serves as Artistic Director and Chair of Jazz Studies.