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Lawrence

 
Artist: Arnie Lawrence
  • Born: October 07, 1938, New York, NY
  • Died: April 22, 2005, Jerusalem, Israel
  • Active: '40s, '50s, '60s, '70s, '80s, '90s, 2000s
  • Genres: Jazz
  • Instrument: Sax (Alto)
  • Representative Albums: "Renewal," "Look Toward a Dream," "And Treasure Island"

Biography

Despite a prolific recording career as both a leader and as a sideman, alto saxophonist Arnie Lawrence made his most lasting contributions to jazz as an educator, founding the jazz program at New York City's New School University and later launching the Jerusalem-based International Center for Creative Music, a program that welcomed musicians of both Jewish and Arab descent. Born in Brooklyn, NY, on July 10, 1938, Lawrence first studied clarinet. By age 12, he was playing professionally in Catskills clubs, and at 17 he was performing as part of the "Jazz Unlimited" series presented by the landmark New York City club Birdland, once splitting a double bill with the immortal John Coltrane. As word of his soulful, fiery playing grew, Lawrence was invited to sit in with the likes of Charles Mingus, Thad Jones, Maynard Ferguson, and Duke Pearson, but he did not make his recorded debut until 1966, when he appeared on Chico Hamilton's LP The Dealer. In addition to a long tenure with Hamilton, in 1967 Lawrence joined NBC's The Tonight Show with Johnny Carson as a featured soloist, a gig he would maintain until the program relocated to Los Angeles five years later.

After signing to the Project 3 label, in 1968 Lawrence issued his first headlining session, You're Gonna Hear from Me, soon followed by Look Toward a Dream, a collaboration with guitarist Larry Coryell. After releasing the 1970 Embryo label effort Inside an Hour Glass, which featured his experimental project Children of All Ages, Lawrence joined Willie Bobo's Latin Jazz Band, then in 1974 shocked purists by signing on with the jazz-rock combo Blood, Sweat & Tears. Further confounding critics, in 1978 he embarked on a 14-month world tour behind Liza Minnelli. Upon returning stateside, Lawrence formed a new group, the fusion-oriented Treasure Island, releasing an eponymous LP on Doctor Jazz in 1979. After 1981's Renewal, he again receded to the background, touring with both Louis Bellson's Big Band and Elvin Jones; he also composed a symphony, "Red, White and Blues," later premiered by the Williamsburg, VA, symphony orchestra in a performance that featured Lawrence alongside Dizzy Gillespie and Julius Hemphill as featured soloists.

Lawrence's teaching career began during the mid-'70s with artist-in-residence jobs in Kentucky and Kansas, and in 1986 he mothballed his recording and touring pursuits to create and co-found the New School for Jazz and Contemporary Music, an educational center pairing master musicians with young up-and-comers. The New School pioneered an idiosyncratic educational approach that replaced traditional classroom settings with the stages of Manhattan nightclubs. Over a decade, the list of Lawrence's students would grow to include Roy Hargrove, Brad Mehldau, Larry Goldings, John Popper, Peter Bernstein, and Jay Rodriguez. In 1997 he relocated to Israel, establishing the International Center for Creative Music in a building offered by the Jerusalem Department of Culture. Lawrence welcomed students of both Jewish and Arab backgrounds, insisting he was simply bringing like-minded musicians together regardless of their origins. In the same spirit, he often played alongside Israeli and Palestinian musicians at the West Bank club the Flamingo, and also operated his own nightspot, Arnie's Jazz Underground. After a long bout with lung and liver cancer, Lawrence died in Jerusalem on April 22, 2005. ~ Jason Ankeny, All Music Guide
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Wikipedia: Lawrence (LIRR station)
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Lawrence
Station statistics
Address Lawrence Avenue & Bayview Avenue, 2 blocks West of Central Avenue
Lawrence, New York.
Coordinates 40°36′56″N 73°44′10″W / 40.615638°N 73.736050°W / 40.615638; -73.736050Coordinates: 40°36′56″N 73°44′10″W / 40.615638°N 73.736050°W / 40.615638; -73.736050
Lines      Far Rockaway Branch
Connections Long Island Bus: N31, N32
MTA Bus: Q113
Platforms 2
Tracks 2
Parking Yes
Other information
Opened July 29, 1869[1]
Rebuilt 1905
Electrified December 11, 1905
Accessible Handicapped/disabled access
Owned by MTA
Fare zone 4
Services
Preceding station   Long Island Rail Road   Following station
toward New York terminals
Far Rockaway Branch

Lawrence is a station on the Long Island Rail Road's Far Rockaway Branch in Lawrence, in Nassau County, New York, United States. The station is located at Lawrence Avenue and Bayview Avenue, two blocks west of Central Avenue, and is 21.8 miles (35.1 km) from Penn Station in Midtown Manhattan.

Lawrence Station was originally built by the South Side Railroad of Long Island on July 29, 1869, but never had a station building until either June or July 1872. The station was rebuilt in 1905, and the original station house was moved to a private location on July 31, 1906.

Platform and track configuration

This station has two high-level side platforms each 10 cars long. The south platform, adjacent to Track 1, is generally used by northbound or inbound trains. The north platform, adjacent to Track 2, is generally used by southbound or Far Rockaway-bound trains. The Far Rockaway Branch has two tracks at this location.

References

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Artist. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
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