Jazz combos are the core of the ASU Jazz Studies program. These exciting small jazz groups allow students to showcase their improvisational skills in a variety of styles including bebop, fusion and avant-garde, while offering a creative outlet for student composers and arrangers. Come see the jazz stars of tomorrow today!

 

For a full listing of all School of Music, Dance and Theatre events visit https://musicdancetheatre.asu.edu/events

Jazz combos are the core of the ASU Jazz Studies program. These exciting small jazz groups allow students to showcase their improvisational skills in a variety of styles including bebop, fusion and avant-garde, while offering a creative outlet for student composers and arrangers. Come see the jazz stars of tomorrow today!

 

For a full listing of all School of Music, Dance and Theatre events visit https://musicdancetheatre.asu.edu/events

The ASU Jazz Combos lead off with contemporary small group selections as well as vintage classics. The ASU Latin Jazz Band will follow with a program of the here and now as well as the best of African-Cuban roots.

 

No flash photography, food or drink in the auditorium.

The Performing Arts Center is located on the southeast side of campus just south of Southern Avenue on Longmore. Parking is free.

 

Theatrical, whimsical, metaphysical, and theoretical percussion music about coming together, having joyful experiences, and parting ways from percussionists Mike Truesdell and Compitello.

All ticket sales are ONLINE ONLY and open three weeks prior to event dates. There will be no in-person sales at the event. Please purchase tickets in advance. Guests who do not have a ticket at the door will be directed to purchase them online. Additional ticket service fees apply to every purchase. 

 

Led by Gary A. Rendsburg (Rutgers University).

About the series: From the destruction of the First Temple (586 B.C.E.) and the growing Diaspora in the centuries that followed the destruction of the Second Temple (70 C.E.), unprecedented archaeological discoveries have illuminated and brought to life the historical development of Judaism and Jewish society during this period. The evidence stems from synagogues, burial sites, archival material and more, stretching from Yemen in the southeast to Cologne in the northwest and all points in between.

The Office for Veteran and Military Academic Engagement (OVMAE) is seeking talented individuals to join our upcoming World War II love story play, to be performed during the OVMAE's Salute to Service event. This poignant production tells the heartwarming and compelling story of a World War II soldier and his love, a dedicated nursing student. We are particularly interested in casting student veterans for these roles. 

About the interviewee: Annabel Herzog is Professor of Political Theory at the School of Political Science at the University of Haifa, Israel. Her research focuses on 20th-century continental philosophy, exploring the connections between ethics and politics and between philosophy and literature.  She has contributed numerous essays on ethics, politics, and hermeneutics in journals such as Theory, Culture & Society, Political Theory, Philosophy and Social Criticism, and others.

Alexander Yakobson (The Hebrew University of Jerusalem)

About the series: Nadav S. Berman (University of Haifa) will interview leading Israeli scholars who will reflect on “the state of the State of Israel.” These interviews will explore profound questions on Israel’s current political and spiritual crisis, including: Is Israel interested in peace with the Palestinians and Arab nations, and if so, what kind of peace could this be? What does the Jewishness of the State of Israel mean, and how does it relate to democracy?

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