CREATIVE MINDS COME TOGETHER
CREATIVE MINDS COME TOGETHER
LEADING CHANGE
CREATIVE MINDS COME TOGETHER
CREATIVE MINDS COME TOGETHER
CREATIVE MINDS COME TOGETHER
CREATIVE MINDS COME TOGETHER
CREATIVE MINDS COME TOGETHER
CREATIVE MINDS COME TOGETHER
Ideas Worth Spreading in Washington DC
SAVE THE DATE: November 02, 2023
Davey Yarborough
JAZZ EDUCATOR

Davey Yarborough is the president and artistic director of The Washington Jazz Arts in The District of Columbia. In 2019, Davey retired from Duke Ellington School of the Arts after 30 years of service as jazz educator. His lifelong commitment to mentoring young musicians was recognized in 2018 when he was inducted into the Downbeat Jazz Educator Hall of Fame.
Davey’s impressive musical career has taken two distinct paths – those of accomplished performer and dedicated educator. Earning bachelor and master’s degrees in education and performance, his university studies were augmented by studies on flute with the venerable Frank Wess and saxophone with the legendary Sonny Stitt.
​
As a performer, bandleader, composer and arranger, he has worked with Sir Roland Hanna, Keter Betts, Billy Eckstine, Buck Hill, Shirley Horn, Lena Horne and Joe Williams, to name a few. He has also collaborated with trumpet virtuoso Wynton Marsalis, performing on Marsalis’ Making the Music series on National Public Radio (NPR).
​
As an educator, Davey was recruited to teach saxophone and created the jazz orchestra at the Duke Ellington School of the Arts in Washington, DC, which is now an internationally recognized Jazz Studies program.
Established in 1998, The Washington Jazz Arts Institute is an extension of Washington, DC’s legacy of artistry, education and mentoring. Founders Esther Williams and Davey Yarborough with his accomplished staff, guide young musicians through instruction, lecture, professional workshops, mentor opportunities and performance with their peers for diverse audiences.
​
Davey received the coveted 1998 “Mayor’s Arts Award” in Washington, D.C., for Excellence and Dedication to the Arts. During that same year, Connie Chung featured Davey in a sensitive, insightful piece on ABC’s 20/20 chronicling his efforts on behalf of his students. In 2000, Davey received the coveted “Whitney M. Young, Jr. Community Service Award” from the Greater Washington Urban League for his work with students and within his community as a whole. He also received a “DC Emancipation Day Image Award” for 2001, and the DC Youth Orchestra “Distinguished Alumni Award” in 2006. He and his wife Esther Williams received a Community Service Award from Kids In Trouble In DC. Davey was also honored in 2004 by The Society, Inc., of DC for his dedication to the education of young people. Davey received the title of “Jazz Educator of the Year” from The Berklee Conservatory through the Jazz Education Network at their annual conference in 2013. He was also a semi-finalist in the Grammy’s “Music Educator of the Year” award the same year. Davey is a past recipient of the Music Educators National Conference (MENC) – Lowell Mason Award. Most recently, the honor of “Excellence in Teaching” was conveyed upon him by the Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority in December of 2014, and Davey received the Benny Golson Jazz Masters Award given to distinguished Howard University Jazz Alumni. Mr. Yarborough has also received the Kennedy Center’s Stephen Sondheim Inspirational Teacher award.