Strategic Communications and Marketing News Bureau

Illinois music school, Krannert Center celebrating Thelonious Monk

CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — Thelonious Monk was a “musician’s musician,” a jazz composer whose music is central to the repertoire of jazz musicians today. To celebrate the 100th anniversary of Monk’s birth, the University of Illinois School of Music and Krannert Center for the Performing Arts are staging performances of Monk’s music and looking at his impact through a graduate seminar.

“He is viewed as one of the most significant jazz musicians of all time,” said Gabriel Solis, a professor of musicology who has written two books about Monk’s music, “Thelonious Monk Quartet with John Coltrane at Carnegie Hall” and “Monk’s Music: Thelonious Monk and Jazz History in the Making.”

“He’s someone who created a whole language that everyone in jazz has had to reckon with,” Solis said.

The 100th anniversary of Monk’s birth on Oct. 10, 1917, is being celebrated at various jazz venues, most notably a recent 10-day festival in Durham, N.C., called “Monk@100.”

Krannert Center for the Performing Arts is presenting “In My Mind,” by Jason Moran and the Big Bandwagon, on Nov. 14. Moran is a pianist, the Kennedy Center Artistic Director for Jazz and the winner of a MacArthur “Genius Grant” Fellowship who has been heavily influenced by Monk. “In My Mind” was inspired by a 1959 concert by the Thelonious Monk Orchestra at New York City’s Town Hall. It explores Monk’s influence through live music interspersed with spoken word, archival audio recordings and photographs, and video.

“(Moran) is really one of the major interpreters of Monk’s music,” Solis said.

The anniversary celebration includes a Nov. 12 performance, “Dizzy and Monk at 100: Celebrating the Music of Dizzy Gillespie and Thelonious Monk,” by jazz trumpeter Tito Carrillo, a U. of I. professor of jazz, and six members of the jazz faculty.

Professor of musicology Gabriel Solis is teaching a graduate seminar on Thelonius Monk’s music and his place in American culture.

Solis is teaching a graduate seminar for music students this semester that is examining Monk’s music, his life and his place in American culture. His students are creating new arrangements and writing new pieces based on Monk’s work, as well as playing his music.

Monk began working in jazz as the house pianist at Minton’s Playhouse in New York City at the time the bebop style was being developed.

“Musicians were starting to play very challenging music,” Solis said. “Monk was at the center of that. He was really the one coming up with a new musical language people would use to improvise.”

A lot of his work is very difficult, Solis said, but it continues to be played.

“Everybody does Monk tunes,” he said, adding that Monk’s most well-known works, such as “Round Midnight” and “Straight No Chaser,” were the basis for the “highly virtuostic, improvisational language associated with bebop.”

Although Monk was a prestigious jazz artist, he was not embraced by audiences as a popular musician during his lifetime, Solis said. But he became a cult idol, with his quirky personality and outlandish hats. He was recognized as a cutting-edge artist by other artists as well as by musicians.

“Monk really did craft an endlessly fascinating persona,” Solis said.

“He’s a larger cultural figure than just jazz. He was so interesting to a broader array of artists. There’s a ton of poetry written about Monk. There is visual art created with him in mind. There are films about Monk. There is a lot of cultural production around him,” he said.

 

Editor’s notes: To reach Gabriel Solis, email gpsolis@illinois.edu. For more information about the performances “In My Mind” and “Dizzy and Monk at 100: Celebrating the Music of Dizzy Gillespie and Thelonious Monk,” go to https://krannertcenter.com/.

 

Read Next

Health and medicine Dr. Timothy Fan, left, sits in a consulting room with the pet owner. Between them stands the dog, who is looking off toward Fan.

How are veterinarians advancing cancer research in dogs, people?

CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — People are beginning to realize that dogs share a lot more with humans than just their homes and habits. Some spontaneously occurring cancers in dogs are genetically very similar to those in people and respond to treatment in similar ways. This means inventive new treatments in dogs, when effective, may also be […]

Honors From left, individuals awarded the 2025 Campus Awards for Excellence in Public Engagement are Antoinette Burton, director of the Humanities Research Institute; Ariana Mizan, undergraduate student in strategy, innovation and entrepreneurship; Lee Ragsdale, the reentry resource program director for the Education Justice Project; and Ananya Yammanuru, a graduate student in computer science. Photos provided.

Awards recognize excellence in public engagement

The 2025 Campus Awards for Excellence in Public Engagement were recently awarded to faculty, staff and community members who address critical societal issues.

Uncategorized Portrait of the researchers standing outside in front of a grove of trees.

Study links influenza A viral infection to microbiome, brain gene expression changes

CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — In a study of newborn piglets, infection with influenza A was associated with disruptions in the piglets’ nasal and gut microbiomes and with potentially detrimental changes in gene activity in the hippocampus, a brain structure that plays a central role in learning and memory. Maternal vaccination against the virus during pregnancy appeared […]

Strategic Communications and Marketing News Bureau

507 E. Green St
MC-426
Champaign, IL 61820

Email: stratcom@illinois.edu

Phone (217) 333-5010