Terri Lyne Carrington
Celebrating 40 years in music, NEA Jazz Master and four-time GRAMMY Award-winning drummer, producer, and educator Terri Lyne Carrington started her professional career in Massachusetts at 10 years old, becoming the youngest person to receive a union card in Boston. She was featured as a “kid wonder” in many publications and on local and national TV shows. After studying under a full scholarship at Berklee College of Music, Carrington worked as an in-demand musician in New York City, and later moved to Los Angeles, where she gained recognition on late-night TV as the house drummer for both The Arsenio Hall Show and Quincy Jones’ VIBE TV show, hosted by Sinbad.
While still in her 20s, Carrington toured extensively with Wayne Shorter and Herbie Hancock, among others. In 2011, she released the GRAMMY Award-winning album The Mosaic Project, featuring a cast of all-star women instrumentalists and vocalists, and in 2013 she released Money Jungle: Provocative in Blue, which also earned a GRAMMY Award, establishing her as the first woman ever to win in the Best Jazz Instrumental Album category.
To date, Carrington has performed on over 100 recordings and has been a role model and advocate for young women and men internationally through her teaching and touring careers. She has toured or recorded with luminary artists such as Al Jarreau, Stan Getz, Woody Shaw, Clark Terry, Diana Krall, Cassandra Wilson, Dianne Reeves, James Moody, Yellowjackets, Esperanza Spalding, Kris Davis, Chaka Khan, Natalie Cole, and Nancy Wilson.
In 2019, Carrington was granted The Doris Duke Artist Award, a prestigious acknowledgment in recognition of her past and ongoing contributions to jazz music. Also in 2019, her collaborative project, Terri Lyne Carrington and Social Science (formed with Aaron Parks and Matthew Stevens), released the album Waiting Game, inspired by the seismic changes in the ever-evolving social and political landscape. The double album expresses an unflinching, inclusive, and compassionate view of humanity’s breaks and bonds through an eclectic program melding jazz, R&B, indie rock, contemporary improvisation, and hip-hop. Waiting Game was nominated for a 2021 GRAMMY® Award and was celebrated as one of the year’s best jazz releases by Rolling Stone, DownBeat, The Boston Globe, and PopMatters. DownBeat described the album as “a two-disc masterstroke on par with Kendrick Lamar’s 2015 hip-hop classic, To Pimp a Butterfly,” and it garnered three of their Critics Poll awards: Album of the Year, Group of the Year, and Artist of the Year. Carrington was also named Artist of the Year by JazzTimes Critics Polls, The Boston Globe, and the Jazz Journalists Association.
Carrington has received honorary doctorates from Manhattan School of Music, York University, and Berklee College of Music, where she currently serves as the Founder and Artistic Director of the Berklee Institute of Jazz and Gender Justice, which recruits, teaches, mentors, and advocates for musicians seeking to study jazz with racial justice and gender justice as guiding principles.
She has curated musical presentations at Harvard University, the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture, and the John F. Kennedy Center, and has enjoyed multi-disciplinary collaborations with esteemed visual artists Mickalene Thomas and Carrie Mae Weems. She is also the Artistic Director for Detroit’s multi-disciplinary arts organization, The Carr Center.
In 2022, Carrington authored two books: a children’s book entitled Three of a Kind, on the making of the Allen Carrington Spalding Trio, and the seminal collection New Standards: 101 Lead Sheets by Women Composers, another illustration of how she has worked tirelessly to fight for inclusivity and raise the voice of women, trans, and non-binary jazz musicians. Accompanying the book is her album new STANDARDS vol. 1, featuring 11 selections from the songbook with an all-star band.
The album, which ranges from ballads to experimental compositions, is timely and adventurous, exploring the multiverse of jazz. Carrington (drums and percussion) is joined by Kris Davis (piano), Linda May Han Oh (bass), Matthew Stevens (guitar), and Nicholas Payton (trumpet), and welcomes special guests trumpeter Ambrose Akinmusire, vocalists Melanie Charles, saxophonist Ravi Coltrane, electronic artist Val Jeanty, guitarist Julian Lage, flutist Elena Pinderhughes, percussionist Negah Santos, and vocalists Melanie Charles, Samara Joy, Michael Mayo, Dianne Reeves, and Somi. In 2023, the album won a GRAMMY Award for Best Jazz Instrumental Album.
Carrington also curated a multimedia installation to accompany and expand on the message of the New Standards book and new STANDARDS vol. 1 album. The installation premiered at Detroit’s Carr Center, and was later featured at the Emerson Contemporary Media Art Gallery in Boston. This ambitious series of projects was created to shine a light on women composers in historic new ways.
Carrington serves as co-executive producer and musical director for the newly formed Jazz Music Awards, and is a 2022 inductee into the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.