In the year of Americaโs 250th anniversary, DC Jazz Festival (DCJF) is showcasing the genreโs extensive impact and naming the Festivalโs 2026 Artists-in-Residence: internationally acclaimed pianist and bandleader Emmet Cohen, and distinctive DMV pianist, composer, and educator Janelle Gill.
Bridging two generations in love of music and cultivation, the dual residency aims to cement jazz as a living art form threaded into Americaโs ongoing narrative, all the while welcoming others to partake in the story.
โThe DC Jazz Festival has built something rareโa residency that truly serves the broad music community and the jazz audience,โ said National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) Jazz Master Ron Carter, who also serves on the DCJF board. โEmmet Cohen and Janelle Gill bring imagination, discipline, and spirit to that mission.โ
An alumna of Duke Ellington School of the Arts and Howard University, Gillโs deep roots in the D.C.-area jazz community encapsulate a celebrated career of lyrical touch and wide stylistic range.
Her introduction to the craft began with NEA Jazz Master Delfeayo Marsalis, before she went on to build a repertoire performing alongside Oliver Lake, The Blackbyrds, David Murray, and many leading DMV artists, while featuring on tracks with Kenny Rittenhouse, Kris Funn, and others.
Among other recent triumphs, the virtuoso composed the world premiere IN Series revival of โEthiopia,โ which brought the nationโs never-staged โfirst living newspaperโ โ originally written and banned in 1937 โ to audiences in Southwest, D.C., and Baltimore in 2025.
โThe score, it has Verdi, it has opera, but it also has reggaeโฆspirituals, jazz, more traditional African music โโ it has anthems from around the world,โ IN Series Artistic Director Timothy Nelson told The Informer, ahead of the showโs June 1, 2025 closing. โIt’s one of the richest scores, musical collages that I’ve ever experienced in my career.โ
Meanwhile, Cohen, who leads the celebrated Masters Legacy Series, brings his own class act in musical training and dynamic artistry, which has earned widespread acclaim and performances with legends such as Benny Golson, Jimmy Cobb, George Coleman, Tootie Heath, and Carter.
Together, the duo represents the ethos embedded in DCJFโs Artist-in-Residence program: to deepen connections among artists, students, and audiences while celebrating jazz as a vibrant, evolving art form.
As Festival ambassadors and guest curators, theyโll host a year of performances, master classes, and creative collaborations throughout the city, including educational workshops, artist talks, and community programs that reflect the diverse richness of D.C.โs jazz ecosystem.
โItโs a true honor to serve as Artist-in-Residence with the DC Jazz Festival,โ Cohen said in the Feb. 18 press release, โand to keep creating music that brings people together in this extraordinary community.โ

