Multi-Grammy prizewinner Terence Blanchard receives Gutenberg Teaching Award
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Multi-Grammy prizewinner Terence Blanchard receives Gutenberg Teaching Award


One of the currently most influential jazz musicians and teachers wins JGU's highest endowed teaching award / Visit to Mainz on July 16 and 17

The 2025 Gutenberg Teaching Award has been conferred on American Terence Blanchard, who is among the world's most authoritative jazz musicians and teachers. He will be visiting Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz (JGU) tomorrow and the day after tomorrow to accept the award and to participate in various events. The award ceremony was originally scheduled for last November but had to be postponed due to an illness in Blanchard's family. The Gutenberg Teaching Award, worth EUR 10,000, is the highest endowed teaching award bestowed by JGU. It is presented every two years to notable individuals who are not members of the university by the Gutenberg Teaching Council (GTC), an institution established to promote teaching at JGU. "Terence Blanchard is receiving the Gutenberg Teaching Award in recognition of his outstanding work as a musician, composer and, specifically, as a teacher and mentor," pointed out JGU President Professor Georg Krausch. "He has already won seven Grammys and has been twice nominated for an Oscar for best original film score. We are delighted that he will be our guest."

Terence Blanchard was born in New Orleans in 1962 and already learned to play piano and trumpet as a child. At the age of 15, he was accepted by the eminent New Orleans Center of Creative Arts to study composition. He was a member of drummer Art Blakey's The Jazz Messengers from 1982 to 1986 and has since been considered to be among the world's leading jazz trumpeters. He subsequently began to compose music for films and operas. He was nominated for an Academy Award for his scores for the films BlacKkKlansman (2018) and Da 5 Bloods (2020), which were directed by Spike Lee. He has released more than 20 music albums. "In addition, Terence Blanchard is also one of the most influential teachers of jazz of our time," added the Director of the GTC, Prof. Andrej Gill. "Among other things, he was Artistic Director at the then Thelonious Monk Institute of Jazz in Washington (now the Herbie Hancock Institute of Jazz) and from 2023 became Executive Artistic Director of the SFJAZZ Center in San Francisco. He is celebrated for his promotion of an experimental and egalitarian teaching environment. His work represents a prime example of what can be achieved by a combination of artistic and educational excellence."

Concert and film review with Terence Blanchard at JGU

On Thursday, July 16, there will be the presentation ceremony for the Gutenberg Teaching Award and Terence Blanchard will be invited to sign the university's Golden Book. He will then give a concert together with the Gutenberg Jazz Collective led by Professor Sebastian Sternal. The concert is a facet of the Jazz Campus Mainz excellence program and will be staged in cooperation with the Villa Musica foundation of the State of Rhineland-Palatinate. Then, on Friday, July 17, at noon, there will be the opportunity to be present during a masterclass at the Mainz School of Music given by Blanchard. In the afternoon, there will be a discussion with Blanchard on social justice and culture in the United States. This event is organized by the Obama Institute for Transnational American Studies at JGU. In the evening, in cooperation with the FILMZ film festival and the Institute for Film, Theater, Media, and Cultural Studies at JGU, the film “BlacKkKLansman” will be screened, followed by a discussion with Blanchard. The discussion will also cover general topics such as film music, civil rights, and the current cultural situation in the U.S. Students and staff at JGU, as well as the general public, are cordially invited to the events on July 17. The awards ceremony and concert on Thursday, July 16, are already sold out.

The Gutenberg Teaching Council: a constituent part of the innovative Mainz model of university governance

Together with the Gutenberg Research College (GRC) and the Gutenberg Council for Academic Careers (GCC), the Gutenberg Teaching Council is at the heart of the innovative Mainz model of university governance that involves the participation of outstanding academics. Its executive committee consists of teaching staff at JGU who have distinguished themselves by their exceptional work together with students. It contributes to the strategic development of learning and teaching at JGU by advising the Executive University Board. In addition, the GTC has various financial instruments at its disposal and contributes in the form of white papers and events to the dialogue across disciplines and faculties. The GTC has been presenting the Gutenberg Teaching Award to eminent individuals who have distinguished themselves in the field of teaching since 2014. Prior to Terence Blanchard, former winners of the award include Professor John Hattie, the New Zealand-born leading researcher in the field of education, the Botswana theologian and HIV/AIDS commissioner to the World Council of Churches, Professor Musa Dube, the American physicist and Nobel laureate Professor Carl Wieman and also the Japanese conductor and founder of the Bach Collegium Japan, Professor Masaaki Suzuki.
Archivos adjuntos
  • Terence Blanchard, American jazz trumpeter, jazz teacher and composer (photo/©: Cedric Angeles)
Regions: Europe, Germany, United Kingdom, Africa, Botswana, Asia, Japan, Oceania, New Zealand, North America, United States
Keywords: Arts, Performing arts

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