Mark Laver
Director of Jazz Ensemble
Saxophonist and ethnomusicologist Mark Laver is an Associate Professor of Music at 51²è¹İapp College, where he directs the jazz band and teaches classes on jazz and popular music. As a performer, Professor Laver has shared the stage with such leading jazz and improvising artists as Lee Konitz, William Parker, Dong-Won Kim, Seamus Blake, NEXUS, Kurt Elling, Eddie Prévost, Hugh Fraser, and Phil Nimmons. He has also been a featured soloist with the Kingston Symphony Orchestra, the Guelph Symphony Orchestra, the Royal Conservatory Orchestra, and the University of Toronto Wind Ensemble. He was profiled in the “Canadian Rising Stars†issue of The Music Scene/La Scena Musicale in 2005.
Laver’s current research focuses on the intersections between jazz, improvisation, and neoliberal capitalism. His book, (Routledge, 2015), explores the use of jazz music in advertising, marketing, and branding. Other publications include “Freedom of Choice: Jazz, Neoliberalism, and the Lincoln Center†(Popular Music and Society 38), “Rebels and Volkswagens: Advertising, Charles Mingus, and the Commodification of Dissent†(Black Music Research Journal, 2014) “†(Critical Studies in Improvisation, 2013), and “’†(Popular Music 30). He is currently working on a new collection of essays, co-edited with Dr. Ajay Heble, called (Routledge, forthcoming in 2016). Laver is a Research Associate with the . He completed his PhD in Ethnomusicology at the University of Toronto in 2011.
Education and Degrees
PhD, Ethnomusicology, University of Toronto (2011)
In the News
USA Today College / March 30, 2017
Fortune / April 6, 2017
Times Higher Education / April 30, 2017