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  • Why a Charlotte jazz man even turned down Prince to stay here: ‘Always repping‘

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    Harvey Cummings II, seen here performing in 2018 at a Gantt Center jazz series event. He frequently has performed family-frinedly jazz workshops for the Gantt.

    Harvey Cummings II, seen here performing in 2018 at a Gantt Center jazz series event. He frequently has performed family-frinedly jazz workshops for the Gantt.

    Courtesy of the Harvey B. Gantt Center

    Local jazz musician Harvey Cummings II has thought about leaving Charlotte several times.

    Just before COVID struck, the Queen City native considered, for a moment, moving to New Orleans. “I wanted to be a small fish,” he said. “I wanted to start over in a real music market.” He stayed.

    When a major music scholarship took him to Durham, and further studies took him to Greenville, North Carolina, his next move wasn’t to New York or Los Angeles — he returned to Charlotte. And when at one point “the Purple One” himself, Prince, invited him on tour, Cummings said, regretfully, “No.”

    Like the tonic note of any musical key, Charlotte has been a stable constant in Cummings’ life and career. When you pour sweat into a place over decades, and become an integral part of its growth, it’s hard to leave.

    Harvey Cummings II, left, and Braxton Bateman on trumpet, in an outdoors performance around Charlotte.
    Harvey Cummings II, left, and Braxton Bateman on trumpet, in an outdoors performance around Charlotte. Joshua Galloway

    The early years in Charlotte

    Cummings was born in Charlotte in 1983 and grew up in the Hickory Grove area, where his parents ran an ice cream shop for a few years. “I had the Hornets Starter jacket; we got it at the Walmart off Albemarle Road,” he said. “I used to skate at Eastland Mall and go to Festival in the Park.”

    His mother played piano, and at the age of 3, he, too, started fiddling with the keys. One of his earliest music experiences was with her. “I was 5, and my mom took me to see Patti LaBelle at the Palladium at Carowinds,” he said. “It was just dope.”

    Cummings was an only child; music was a close friend. By age 9, he had picked up the saxophone, which his uncle played.

    “There’s just this cool factor,” he said. “It just resonates in a different way, and it has its own tone and timbre. It’s its own thing.”

    He attended Chantilly Visual & Performing Arts magnet program, where, in fourth grade, he wrote his first song, a blues tune he called “Harvey’s Boogie.”

    Teachers, noticing his understanding of musical theory and other techniques at an early age, flagged him as someone with the chops to make it in music. His parents agreed and always supported him.

    But after high school, Cummings almost followed another path. He recalled attending an orientation session at Florida A&M University in Tallahassee.

    “I would have been in the band, but my major would have been computer information systems, because I knew there was this computer boom and there would be jobs,” he said.

    Harvey Cummings II has played the sax since he was 9, saying, “There’s just this cool factor” with the instrument.
    Harvey Cummings II has played the sax since he was 9, saying, “There’s just this cool factor” with the instrument. Tyrus Ortega Gaines Courtesy of the Harvey B. Gantt Center

    His dad stepped in with some critical advice. “He said, ‘You are a skilled musician. Just keep doing what you’re doing,’ ” Cummings recalled. He took his father’s advice and started applying for scholarships.

    “I sent in VHS tapes. I would say, ‘My name is Harvey Cummings. I’m in the 11th grade …,” and he would riff on John Coltrane’s iconic Giant Steps.”

    He attended North Carolina Central University on a Grady Tate scholarship, in honor of the Durham native and former drummer for Quincy Jones’ band. He also earned a national scholarship paid for by Coltrane’s family.

    “I chose Central because I wanted that conservatory feel, but with the HBCU experience,” he said.

    He graduated in 2006, and spent a brief stint in Greenville continuing his studies at East Carolina University until he moved back to Charlotte.

    Harvey Cummings II has been interested in music in one form or another for practically his entire life, and loves sharing that knowledge with kids.
    Harvey Cummings II has been interested in music in one form or another for practically his entire life, and loves sharing that knowledge with kids. ©Tyrus Ortega Gaines Photography Courtesy of the Harvey B. Gantt Center

    Giving back to the Charlotte community

    In kindergarten at Piney Grove Elementary School, a Charlotte Symphony program brought musical instruments to Cummings’ class. “They were just like, ‘Hey, this is a violin, and here’s a tuba,’ and I thought, OK, cool, I could play an instrument,” he said.

    Now 42, Cummings routinely presents a family-friendly jazz workshop, “The Standard,” at the Harvey B. Gantt Center for African-American Arts + Culture. The events are geared for ages 6 and up.

    They give Cummings a chance to give back by educating about jazz through performance, demonstrations and interactive learning. “It’s part master class, but it has a petting zoo element, because I’m a firm believer in kinesthetic learning. When they feel the instruments, they’re more likely to try it or have appreciation for it,” he said. “It’s a gateway.”

    Early exposure certainly was a gateway for Cummings, now a pillar of Charlotte’s music scene.

    “There’s a joy and satisfaction of getting a note out, as a 3- or 4-year-old. It’s a sense of accomplishment. I always encourage them and make them believe that they can do it, which they can,” he said. “The biggest thing they need is influence. If they see it, they know it’s obtainable.”

    Local jazz musician Harvey Cummings II is a frequent visitor to the Gantt Center for his “Family First: The Standard Jazz Workshop.”
    Local jazz musician Harvey Cummings II is a frequent visitor to the Gantt Center for his “Family First: The Standard Jazz Workshop.” ©️Tyrus Ortega Gaines Photography Courtesy of the Harvey B. Gantt Center

    ‘I said no to Prince’

    In 2012, Cummings formed his first band, The Groove Supreme, a play on Coltrane’s “A Love Supreme.”

    At the time, he was teaching music in Charlotte and had just been offered a job to lead the music program at KIPP Academy.

    “I had an income and benefits, and I was the most stable at that point.” He also had a medical scare that sent him to the hospital and kept him from performing for a while. In 1998, Cummings had been diagnosed with Crohn’s disease. He needed medical benefits.

    “In my last year of teaching, the day after I signed my contract, I got the call to tour with Prince,” he said. “It was a hard decision. I was at a new school, making probably the most money I had made, and I was already with a successful band from East Coast Entertainment.

    “But I signed that contract, that was the big thing. I had signed that contract. I chose teaching. I said no to Prince.”

    LOS ANGELES - FEBRUARY 8:  Grammy and Oscar-winning recording artist Prince performs the song "Purple Rain" at the 46th Annual Grammy Awards held at the Staples Center on February 8, 2004 in Los Angeles, California.  (Photo by Frank Micelotta/Getty Images)
    Not many people would turn down the chance to tour with Prince, seen here in LA at the 2004 Grammy Awards. But Harvey Cummings II did. He had his reasons. Frank Micelotta Getty Images

    Cummings admits that the experience would have changed the trajectory of his career.

    “But I felt like I was making my name in Charlotte,” he said. “It let me know the caliber of musician I was, it was affirmation, and it put a spark in my step.”

    Vibin’ around town

    These days, Cummings is busy performing throughout the city and beyond.

    Often performing in slick suits, his eyes covered in wild, patterned sunglasses, his band, The Harvey Cummings Experience, blends jazz, hip-hop and soul genres.

    On his business card, he coined the title Chief Vibe Curator. He has collaborated with Blumenthal Performing Arts, the Charlotte Regional Visitors Authority, the Carolina Panthers, the Atlantic Coast Conference and major nonprofits, like the American Heart Association, on events.

    He’s also involved with Music Everywhere CLT, an initiative geared at enhancing Charlotte’s music scene.

    Most recently, he teamed up with the Crohn’s and Colitis Foundation, an organization that works to find a cure for Crohn’s disease and ulcerative colitis.

    As for collaborations he’s enjoyed most, Cummings points to projects he’s worked on with local rapper Elevator Jay, including the song “Ain’t Nothin’ Finer.”

    “He’s a phenomenal rap artist based in Charlotte who’s done great things. He was one of my first collaborators, and we always have chemistry.” He has also worked with local rapper Lute, “American Idol” winner Fantasia and another Charlotte native, Anthony Hamilton.

    Locally, he has a standing gig at Eighty Eights coffee and cocktail lounge, and plays other local venues, from Lorem Ipsum listening bar to Middle C, the Evening Muse and Knight Theater.

    His work also takes him around the country. On a Tuesday morning in early November, he was in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, with a crew working in collaboration with the August Wilson House. His music was also featured on the animated TV show “The Boondocks.”

    The Gantt Center’s Gospel Brunch with Harvey Cummings II
    The Gantt Center’s Gospel Brunch with Harvey Cummings II TYRUS ORTEGA GAINES

    What’s next for Harvey Cummings II?

    His first album, “The Chicken Day EP” was released in 2017 and featured seven songs. “That was just something for people to get familiar with what I did,” he said.

    Next year, he will launch his new album, “The Only Child.” “This album is the scaling of the first album, showcasing me as a producer and saxophonist,” he said.

    Listeners can expect Cummings’ usual blend of styles.

    “I’ve got a jazz and hip-hop track, an Afro-Caribbean Latin vibe, and I’ve got a house track,” he said. “So I got different flavors, man. I’m always repping jazz, but my sound has jazz undertones. I put in that jazz flavor where it needs to be.”

    As for his ultimate goal, Cummings said, “I’ve been incubating for 20 years, and I want to break out on the national level,” he said. “I want to get a Grammy for Charlotte.”

    “It’s a booming time, and I’m trying to be the one who makes it out of Charlotte without leaving Charlotte,” Cummings said. “A lot of cats have to go to L.A., New York or Atlanta to get some shine,” he said. “But I just want to keep building our community.”

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    Virginia Brown

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  • Ella Fitzgerald, Miles Davis + other jazz icons light up Gantt Center exhibit

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    There’s a Gordon Parks photo called “Music-That Lordly Power” that exemplifies what visitors can expect when they visit the latest exhibition at the Gantt Center, “Jazz Greats: Classic Photographs from the Bank of America Collection.”

    That photo titled “Music-That Lordly Power” also happens to be the favorite photograph in the exhibit for Anita Bateman, vice president of creative direction at the Harvey B. Gantt Center for African-American Arts + Culture.

    “It’s an image of a seated couple. There’s a cello in the foreground, and it’s just a very tender image,” she said. “You can almost sense the instrument being activated in the scene while these very two contemplative people are sort of intertwined.”

    The exhibition opens Friday, Nov. 7. It features 33 black-and-white images by 15 photographers dating primarily from the 1920s to the 1980s, and will be on view through April 26, 2026.

    Almost all the photographs in the show are gelatin silver prints made from negative film, the standard of 20th century classical photography. The collection features many luminaries from the worlds of jazz and modern dance but also features casual gatherings at neighborhood venues.

    Among the artists captured in the images are Miles Davis, Duke Ellington, Ella Fitzgerald, Billie Holiday, Louis Armstrong, Thelonious Monk and Charlie Parker.

    “Apollo,” c. 1950, Gelatin silver print, Bank of America Collection. This is one of the featured photographs at the Harvey B. Gantt Center for African-American Arts + Culture in uptown Charlotte.
    “Apollo,” c. 1950, Gelatin silver print, Bank of America Collection. This is one of the featured photographs at the Harvey B. Gantt Center for African-American Arts + Culture in uptown Charlotte. William Gottlieb (American, 1917–2006)

    The photographers include William Gottlieb, whose historic jazz photo collection is now at the Library of Congress; Chuck Stewart, a prolific jazz photographer; Milt Hinton, a jazz bassist who documented jazz culture from the inside; and Parks, whose work appears throughout the exhibition.

    Referring to her favorite photo, Bateman added, “Gordon Parks – talk about a masterclass of just showing the intricacies of not only Black American life, but in this case, people who are engaged in this particular industry. It’s a very compelling image.”

    Photographer Gordon Parks, seen here in his New York City apartment in 2004, two years before he died at age 93. His pictures are among the works at the “Jazz Greats: Classic Photographs from the Bank of America Collection” exhibit at the Gantt Center.
    Photographer Gordon Parks, seen here in his New York City apartment in 2004, two years before he died at age 93. His pictures are among the works at the “Jazz Greats: Classic Photographs from the Bank of America Collection” exhibit at the Gantt Center. Delores Johnson The Kansas City Star

    Elevating jazz’s Southern roots

    For Mark Anthony Neal, professor of African and African American Studies at Duke University, the exhibition’s location in Charlotte carries particular significance.

    “When we think about jazz, we think about cosmopolitan spaces. So we think about every place but the South,” Neal said. “The irony though is that there are so many of the icons of the genre who were born in the South —Coltrane and Thelonious Monk, Nina Simone, just to talk about in North Carolina.”

    Neal will be in conversation with Bank of America Curator Jennifer Brown at an opening celebration Friday for the show.

    Mark Anthony Neal
    Mark Anthony Neal Duke University

    He sees the exhibition as offering “a wonderful opportunity to talk about Black Southern culture, not just in the context of what we recognize Black Southern culture is … but also to think about what the Black South exported throughout the country. And jazz being one of the great examples of that.”

    Bateman echoed this sentiment, noting that while Charlotte isn’t typically considered a “jazz capital,” the city always has been part of the conversation.

    “When you think about this idea of sort of Southern vernacular traditions with jazz, with bebop, with even situating it in the Carolinas with Gullah Geechee sort of ring shouts — all of it’s connected,” she said. “I don’t see Charlotte as separate from that conversation.”

    The power of photographs

    What makes these photographs particularly powerful, according to Neal, is their ability to capture what he calls “a snapshot of what we think about as Black modern culture in a particular moment.

    “The attentiveness to style, the attentiveness to beauty — despite all the rhetoric and the stereotypes about jazz as kind of a drug culture, it was … so much more than that,” Neal said. “The photographs capture the sense of improvisation that’s so deeply embedded in jazz culture.”

    One image that particularly struck Neal is William Gottlieb’s 1947 photograph of Ella Fitzgerald with Dizzy Gillespie, Ray Brown, and Milt Jackson at Downbeat in New York. Fitzgerald stands at the center while Gillespie gazes at her, flanked by other musicians.

    “It does highlight particularly for that generation of vocalists — folks like Abbey Lincoln and Sarah Vaughan who saw themselves and demanded that band leaders saw them as musicians,” Neal said.

    “They weren’t just pretty faces. And that particularly works with someone like Ella Fitzgerald because, not that she wasn’t attractive and beautiful, but that she wasn’t the idealized image of the jazz singer. They were in awe of her in that photo because of her musicianship.

    “She held their attention because of her musicianship.”

    The Gantt Center will feature “Jazz Greats: Classic Photographs from the Bank of America Collection,” Nov. 7-April 26, 2026, with 33 black-and-white photos of jazz legends from the 1940s-‘60s. Seen here: Ella Fitzgerald, Dizzy Gillespie, Ray Brown, Milt (Milton) Jackson, and Timmie Rosenkrantz, Downbeat, New York, N.Y., 1947, Gelatin silver print, Bank of America Collection.
    The Gantt Center will feature “Jazz Greats: Classic Photographs from the Bank of America Collection,” Nov. 7-April 26, 2026, with 33 black-and-white photos of jazz legends from the 1940s-‘60s. Seen here: Ella Fitzgerald, Dizzy Gillespie, Ray Brown, Milt (Milton) Jackson, and Timmie Rosenkrantz, Downbeat, New York, N.Y., 1947, Gelatin silver print, Bank of America Collection. William Gottlieb (American, 1917–2006)

    A refuge from information overload

    In an era of constant digital stimulation and fractured attention, Bateman hopes the exhibition will offer visitors something increasingly rare: stillness.

    “I feel like there is somatic overload in terms of the information we’re being subjected to on a daily basis, and that’s voluntary and involuntary,” she said. “With art, there’s always a choice. You choose to come through the doors, you choose to have this experience, you choose to be in the presence of these works.”

    The exhibition will also feature a curated soundtrack created by ethnomusicologist Flash Gordon Parks (a fitting name given Gordon Parks’ work in the show), featuring music by the artists in the photographs. Visitors might see a Gillespie photograph while hearing him play, or view an image of Monk while hearing his piano work.

    “Having that stillness be not only conveyed, but sort of expected when you walk into the space is something that’s really powerful,” Bateman said. “Especially because people theoretically haven’t seen any of the works in the show.

    “So they would be having this new experience and then in real time being implicitly asked to reflect on what they’re seeing — but only to the extent in which they want to. You don’t necessarily have to take a picture of an image you find compelling.

    “Just entering into the space and appreciating what you’re seeing is something that I think is sorely needed.”

    Anita Bateman, the Gantt Center’s vice president of creative direction., said she hopes the new photo exhibit will offer visitors something increasingly rare in these peripatetic times: stillness.
    Anita Bateman, the Gantt Center’s vice president of creative direction., said she hopes the new photo exhibit will offer visitors something increasingly rare in these peripatetic times: stillness. Jakalya Monay

    For Neal, whose scholarship explores Black cultural memory and ephemera, the exhibition also raises important questions about preservation and access to Black cultural artifacts.

    “I think local Black communities, artists, institutions, folks who have personal art collections — I think we on a local level have to commit to curating the archives that we have access to … and making sure they’re available to the widest public possible.”

    “Dizzy Gillespie, 52nd St., New York, N.Y.,” c. 1948, Gelatin silver print, Bank of America Collection
    “Dizzy Gillespie, 52nd St., New York, N.Y.,” c. 1948, Gelatin silver print, Bank of America Collection William Gottlieb (American, 1917–2006)

    Bank of America and art

    This exhibition is presented through Bank of America’s Art in Our Communities program, which loans complete exhibitions at no cost to museums and nonprofit galleries. Since launching in 2008, Charlotte-based Bank of America has loaned its exhibitions over 175 times to cultural institutions around the world.

    Throughout the exhibition’s run, the Gantt Center will present public programs, educational initiatives, school partnerships, and live music performances.

    At the Gantt Center

    Jazz Greats: Classic Photographs from the Bank of America Collection will be on view at the Harvey B. Gantt Center for African-American Arts + Culture, 551 South Tryon St., Charlotte, from Nov. 7 through April 26, 2026.

    Opening celebration Friday, Nov. 7, from 6:30-9:30 p.m. featuring music from Braxton Bateman and a panel discussion beginning at 7 p.m. Free and open to the public with an RSVP.

    More arts coverage

    Want to see more stories like this? Sign up here for our free, award-winning “Inside Charlotte Arts” newsletter: charlotteobserver.com/newsletters. You can join our Facebook group, “Inside Charlotte Arts,” by going here: facebook.com/groups/insidecharlottearts. And all of our 2025-26 Fall Arts Guide story can be found here: charlotteobserver.com/topics/charlotte-fall-arts-guide.

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    Amy Carleton

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