Teaching › Reading Room
Selected readings on the craft of jazz singing, the great songbook composers, and the traditions that shaped this music.
Book by Maye Cavallaro
A practical guide to the craft of jazz singing — from developing your personal style and working with a band, to preparing a song, building a repertoire, and stepping into the full identity of an artist.
Read the Book →By Maye
Live performance is how artists build community, generate buzz, and open doors. This guide covers what you're responsible for as a performer — promotion, programming, and personnel — and what it takes to put on an engaging, convincing, and memorable concert.
Download PDFJazz is spontaneous and interactive — which means showing up prepared. A step-by-step guide to learning a song thoroughly before rehearsal: lyric study, storytelling, subtext, phrasing, and making the song truly your own before the band is in the room.
Download PDFWhat you need to build a professional profile — photos, sound files, video clips, and bios. Guidance on presenting yourself in a way that reflects your artistic identity and gets you taken seriously in the business.
Download PDFFour essential steps — framing, scripting, staging, and performing. From shaping your artistic story and programming a set with intention, to directing the band in rehearsal and holding focus under pressure on the night.
Download PDFArticles by Others
By bassist Dean Muench — practical guidance on bandleading and communicating musical directions clearly to instrumentalists.
Download PDFA conversation between pianists and singers about the art of accompaniment — what great support sounds like, and what gets in the way.
Download PDFBroadway legend Barbara Cook on feeling, emotional truth, and the courage it takes to be fully present on stage.
Download PDFSuzanne Vega in the New York Times — exploring how music affects listeners emotionally, and what the melody is actually doing underneath the words.
Download PDFNew York Times on what it means to have a storyteller's voice — not just a pretty sound, but the ability to make a listener feel something true.
Download PDFNew York Times on how elite athletes practice — directly applicable to musicians. How you practice determines what you become.
Download PDFBen Ratliff's profile of Dianne Reeves — on how she accesses the spiritual essence of jazz and brings it into the room with her.
Download PDFDerek Sivers — founder of CD Baby — on independent musician promotion, standing out, and getting your music heard without a label.
Download PDFAn overview of the canon — Tin Pan Alley, Broadway, and Hollywood as sources for the jazz vocal repertoire.
Read on Wikipedia ↗Ted Gioia on jazz standards — their origins, harmonic language, and why they remain the foundation of the jazz vocabulary.
Ted Gioia ↗Positive affirmations for singers and songwriters — for the practice room, the green room, and the hard days when the voice feels far away.
Download PDFPerformances, masterclasses, and demonstrations selected for what they teach. Watch with intention — pause, rewind, and ask why it works.
A masterclass in phrasing, timing, and lyric conviction. Watch for how she listens to the band and responds in real time.
Search YouTube ↗Study the slowest phrasing in jazz. Horn's economy and silence are lessons in confidence — she never rushes. A model for ballad singing.
Search YouTube ↗The most fearless vocalist in jazz. Watch how she controls a room, bends tempo to her will, and turns any song into a dramatic confrontation.
Search YouTube ↗