New jazz fellowship honors the genre's elders and gives them each an unrestricted $100,000 grant

In this photo provided by Jazz Foundation of America, jazz pianist Bertha Hope, who is a member of The Mellon Foundation and Jazz Foundation of America's inaugural class of Jazz Legacies Fellows, poses for a photo in January 2025, in New York. (Steven Baboun/NativRoots courtesy of Jazz Foundation of America via AP)

NEW YORK (AP) — Bertha Hope was only three years old when she started playing Brahms’ “Lullaby†on the piano just from hearing it on the radio.

“How did you do that?†asked her shocked parents, both entertainers. “That’s when they really started paying attention to the fact that I had some talent that needed to be nurtured,†recalled Hope, who has used that talent to become a jazz pianist, composer and bandleader for decades.

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