Jazz series provides local music flavor By Melanie Mensch Staffwriter Crowds of concert-goers armed with pic nic baskets, blankets and lawn chairs will make a pilgrimage to the Sheldon Memorial Art Gallery and Sculpture Garden to sit amid shady trees and metal sculptures and listen to the cool sounds of jazz in the summer breeze. This was the vision of the Nebraska Art Association when Jazz in June began nine years ago. The NAA created the free weekly con certs to entice a younger audience to the Sheldon Memorial Art Museum. Jazz in June became a success. Not only did the series attract 200 people in its first year, it has drawn thousands since then with its successful combination of music and art “We had no way of knowing whether people would come when we first started,” said Nancy Piper, executive director of the NAA. This year’s concert series kicked off on June 6 and featured the UNL Jazz Quintet. New to Jazz in June, this group features four professors from UNLs music department. Members are Tom Larson, piano; Darryl White, trumpet Peter Bouffhrd, guitar, Rusty White, bass; and Siguard “Fig” Lyles, drums. The group will play original compositions and familiar mainstream jazz works. White, who has played with the quintet for three years, said die public’s appreciation for jazz has grown. “Jazz in particular is one of die only true American art forms,” he said. “Jazz in June is a great combination of two great forms of art. People who are not necessarily artists begin to appreciate other forms of art” Other featured acts include the Nebraska Jazz Orchestra, which will play traditional big band favorites on June 13. On June 20, The Matt Wallace Group will dabble in every jazz style from mainstream to pop, funk and fusion. The Angela Hagenbach Sextet, influ enced by the zesty Latin rhythms of the hand Musa Nova, will treat crowds to the sounds of TOM LARSON, Of the UNI. Jazz Quartet plays the piaao Tuesday daring the groep’s concert outside the Sheldon Memorial hitlialienN The geaitet kicked iff the anneal Jazz hi Jim eerie* this week. The eerie* will ran through Jeea. salsa jazz on June 27. Daniel Siedell, curator for the Sheldon, said Jazz in June offered a unique venue to see and hear local jazz acts. “It brings people to the Sculpture Garden,” he said. “They’re sitting around art, only a few feet away, the gallery as a back drop. It helps people become more familiar and comfortable being around museums.” And with a crowd of music enthusiasts within eye-shot of the Sheldon, more folks may stroll inside the gallery to look at exhibi tions. Throughout June, the Gallery will fea ture “The Perpetual Well: Contemporary Art from the Jewish Museum in New York.” This exhibit features a kaleidoscopic collection of paintings, sculptures, prints and photography by both Jewish and non-Jewish artists, including Richard Avedon and Annie Leibovitz. Please see JAZZ on 4 Market adds to UNL’s summer events slate MARKET from page 2 dors such as the East Campus Dairy Store and the Department of Horticulture. “We feel it will be really suc cessful,” Waite said. “It is intended to bring together folks interested in fine arts and fine food.” The Mid-Week Haymarket Farmer’s Market will stretch • from Q to R streets in front of the Lied Center for Performing Arts and extend eastward to 13th Street. It will be held for seven weeks, except for July 4, begin ning June 6. The market will last from 4:30 p.m. to 7:30 ^.m. dailyneb. com ^Doors open at 7:30^ W-esson begin at 8:(X)V Frhe PLA MOrI 6600 WO St. . EARN UP TO $990 Call 474-PAYS ASSIST MEDICAL RESEARCH —