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Elayne Jones

Elayne Viola Jones was an American timpanist. An African American woman, born in NYC to Barbadian immigrants, she overcame challenges. From learning piano to excelling in timpani, she graduated from Juilliard, her mentors being Saul Goodman and Morris "Moe" Goldenberg. Jones's career was marked by remarkable firsts. She became the first Black opera orchestra member in 1949, played with esteemed ensembles, and won a blind audition to join the San Francisco Symphony in 1972, becoming the first black principal in a major American orchestra. Also, Jones was the first documented African American to play with the New York Philharmonic. In 2019 she became the fourth female member of the Percussive Arts Society Hall of Fame.

Early life
Elayne Viola Jones was born in New York City on January 30, 1928, the only child of immigrants Cecil and Ometa Jones from Barbados. She began learning piano at the age of six from her mother who had originally come to New York with the promise of a career as a concert pianist, but ended up as a cleaner due to her color. With this, she became her daughter's first piano teacher and motivated her with words such as "Laynie, you're going to do something respectable. You're not going to clean White people's floors!" With time, she joined the choir at St. Luke's Episcopal Church where she preferred to sing harmony and was soon exposed to the music of Duke Ellington, Count Basie, and Frank Sinatra. == Education ==
Education
Jones attended an all-girls junior high school in Harlem and due to her piano skills, she was accepted into Music and Art High School, an elite school that was attended by students from all the five boroughs of New York. In the musical school, all piano students were expected to also practice an orchestra instrument. According to Local 802 that hosted Jones as a member for over sixty years, she fell in love with violin in musical school but her teacher Isadore Russ told her she was too skinny, instead handing her a pair of drumsticks, based on the notion that "Negroes have rhythm". Therefore, she combined piano, timpani and singing together in high school. In June 1945, Jones graduated from the High School of Music & Art (now the Fiorello H. LaGuardia High School of Music & Art and Performing Arts). Sponsored by Duke Ellington, she was awarded a scholarship to the Juilliard School of Music. == Career ==
Career
At the early part of her career, she was faced with racism and gender discrimination. Activisms In 1965, Jones, along with other Black musicians, and Benjamin Steinberg founded the Symphony of the New World. It is the first racially integrated orchestra in the United States that give Black musicians the opportunity to play orchestral repertoire. Also, they introduced blind auditions to eliminate racial prejudice. The San Francisco Symphony accepted the advice and in 1972 Jones blindly beat forty people to land herself a job at the company. The blind audition is a tradition that is used up till today. == Racism and gender discrimination ==
Racism and gender discrimination
Jones encountered racial and gender segregation during her career because the profession (classical music) at that time was mainly dominated by males. For instance, in 1950 during the tour by New York City Opera, Jones and her colleague Blanche Birdsong went to the Chicago Opera House for early preparation for the concert but the doorman refused to let her in with the expression: We don't let Negress in the theater. Why don't you go to the South Side where you belong? Also, at the beginning part of her career, she was forced to sleep in accommodations meant for African American while her colleagues slept in luxurious hotel. Tenure controversy In 1974 a seven-man committee voted against her and Ryohei Nakagawa. Jones sued the Orchestra and musician's union on the bases of racial and gender discrimination. However, she was allowed to play for another year but she was fired when the court ordered another supervised vote in August 1975 and she was also turned down. She continued to perform tenure with San Francisco Opera till 1998 but According to New York Times her "effective firing at the symphony stayed with her" == Personal life and death ==
Personal life and death
Jones met George Kaufman at Adirondacks when she was playing a drum set at a jazz gig in 1952. They remained married for over ten years. At the time of their divorce in 1964, they had three children Stephen, Harriett, and Cheryl. Jones died from the effects of dementia on December 17, 2022, at the age of 94. == Legacy ==
Legacy
According the Rick Kvistad, the principal percussionist of the San Francisco Opera Orchestra, he believed that Jones contributions was the changes she made to the music narratives by encouraging women and people of color in classical music. He remarked, "I think that her greatest contribution to percussion was that she paved the way for women and non-white players in the mostly-white world of classical music." In 2019, Jones became the fourth female member of the Percussive Arts Society Hall of Fame and in the same year her autobiography titled Little Lady with a Big Drum was published. == References ==
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