ABOUT US
Our Team
Board of Directors Member; Member, Mission Circle
Born and raised in San Francisco, Stella Adelman holds a B.A. in world arts and cultures and a master’s in education. She also studied at La Universidad de la Habana and at El Instituto Superior del Arte (Havana) before moving to New York to teach Middle School math. Adelman is currently the Managing Director at Dance Mission Theater, an artist driven space dedicated to equity and social justice that creates, produces, presents, and teaches feminist and multicultural dance/theater. She also works with Carnaval San Francisco, co-produced the CubaCaribe Festival of Dance and Music until 2010, and was a YBCA Fellow in 2019.
As a performer and dancer, Adelman has had the honor of working with the legendary Rhodessa Jones and Krissy Keefer, and celebrated Cuban, Haitian, and Brazilian dance companies, including Arenas Dance Company, Aguas da Bahia, Alayo Dance Company, and Las Que Son Son, among others.
Artistic Collaborator; Co-Director, Seeds Youth Program
Terrence Paschal is an originally self-taught dancer from Stockton, California. His first influences were street dance forms that originated in Oakland: Turfing and Popping.
Terrence also was inspired by Brooklyn street dance forms such as Bruk up and Flexn. It was through exposure to these forms and fascination with Michael Jackson that led him to explore Ballet and modern dance forms.
Later on, he worked with Embodiment Project where he was exposed to house dance and new methods of narrative based story telling; through movement and spoken word. Today, Terrence utilizes various different street dance modalities to find freedom in expression and through teaching he aims to help others find their own unique voice as well.
Vocalist Collaborator / Composer; Get Free MC
Vocalist, composer, lyricist and social activist Tiffany Austin combines classic jazz tradition with a deep love for blues, spirituals and contemporary soul and a storyteller’s knack for narrative.
The 2015 debut album Nothing But Soul earned her rave reviews for its bold recasting of Hoagy Carmichael standards. Her sophomore album, Unbroken (2018), was hailed by All About Jazz as a “fully formed masterpiece.” She has performed on bandstands internationally including at Birdland and Dizzy's Den in NYC, Walt Disney Concert Hall in her native Los Angeles, and the SFJAZZ Center in San Francisco.
Tiffany kept creatively active during the pandemic. In 2020, she helped titanic tenor saxophonist Pharoah Sanders celebrate his 80th birthday as part of an all-star concert at Zebulon Cafe in Los Angeles. She was organist/Black Jazz Records leader Doug Carn's special guest at the 2021 San José Jazz Summer Fest and also launched the Con Alma Music Creative Intellect Scholarship for BIPOC high school students that year.
In 2022, she was named a Yerba Buena Gardens Festival Seeds Commissions Artist and the 2022 Healdsburg Freedom Jazz Choir Arranger/Music Director.
A graduate of UC Berkeley’s Boalt School of Law, Tiffany decided to forego a career as a lawyer to focus on music – her true passion. And, she’s been raising the bar ever since.
Founding Musical Director: Vocalist Collaborator / Composer
Valerie Troutt is a Black Indigenous Womyn vocalist and composer from Oakland, CA whose art and activism are deeply intertwined.
Trained in jazz and brought up singing gospel, Valerie Troutt is an internationally-respected musical collagist, borrowing from ancestral centuries of sound, channeling spirits, and delivering the stories of our love, loss and belonging. Valerie has performed at Jazz at Lincoln Center (NY), Yoshi’s Jazz Club (Oakland), Theater Haus (Germany), the National Queer Arts Festival (SF), and at Joe Henderson Lab SFJazz.
Valerie is the founder and leader of Mooncandy Live House Music Ensemble, and Find Your Light community, where she provides workshops and platforms for Black Womyn fostering healing through the arts, within the Black Womyn community. Valerie is a music educator in the San Francisco Eastbay and a dancer at heart, some of her finest creations have been as the music director of Embodiment Project, founded by Coreopoet Nicole Klaymoon. Valerie strives to listen, stay connected to her roots, and be open to the future of love's possibilities.
The daughter and now aunt of an Oakland-based family of artists, activists, teachers and spiritualists, both by blood and by community, the melding of Troutt’s creative and spiritual life emerged early, at the age of seven with her first church solo. Children’s choirs, holiday solos, and developing skills in piano and guitar as well as voice followed at the famed Walter Hawkin’s Love Center.
By adolescence, at Berkeley High, Troutt’s world was being cracked open to the world of jazz at the same high school that produced jazz darlings Joshua Redman and Benny Green. Jazz camps, a Carmen McRae Scholarship, Stanford Jazz, Howard University Jazz program, and, ultimately, the New School Jazz Performance program with contemporaries like Bilal Oliver and Tiombe Lockhart – always surrounded by teachers and learners, both vertically and horizontally, in her musical blossoming.
After the requisite hand-to-mouth NYC grinds, lesson-rich production deals with labels like Oblique Sound (e.g., Gretchen Parlato), and a brief experience abroad as an ambassador for the International Association of Jazz Educators, Troutt ended up back in the Bay teaching music at the East Bay Center for the Performing Arts and performing for two years with the Grammy-nominated Linda Tillery and the Cultural Heritage Choir, most recently as a featured soloist on “Still We Rise, Still We Sing.”
While New York offered dream actualizing experiences like performing at SOBs and The Knitting Factory, sharing stages with major recording artists like Les Nubians, and honoring legends such as Bobby McFerrin at tributes, it was in California that Troutt found herself most in-demand and coming into her own. Innumerable venues and festivals presented the unique Valerie Troutt experience including: Yoshi’s Jazz Club; Laurel Street Fair; The Mint L.A.; CODA Jazz Supper Club; and the Art ‘n’ Soul Festival; among others. Troutt further found herself collaborating with singer-songwriters like Jennifer Johns, Maria Muldaur, Kimiko Joy, and Sister Monica Parker, and recording with modern composers like Gregory Del Piero, Emanuel Ruffler, Howard Wiley and Jaz Sawyer. For nearly two years, she also served as a principle singer in La Pena – Ayer, Hoy y Pa’Lante, an original suite of music by three-time Grammy nominee, Wayne Wallace with libretto by Aya de Leon.
In the East Bay, Troutt established herself as more than an artist, but as a leader in the area’s famed creative community. Partnering on Bay area projects with Oakland Public Conservatory, the Museum of African Diaspora, Higher Ground Neighborhood Corp. and the Embodiment Project (where Troutt is music director). The latter project served as the genesis for MoonCandy, a band Valerie Troutt composes for while still gigging with another band, trumpeter Marcus Poland’s fronted group, The Congress. Collectively, these varied and disparate influences informs her recordings as much as Bjork, Dianne Reeves, Carmen McRae, Joni Mitchell, Walter Hawkins and Cassandra Wilson.
The keeper and expander of a rich cultural legacy in music and consciousness-raising, Troutt’s latest project, The Sound of Peace, borrows from the past and gives to the future. Half jazz standards innovatively reimagined for contemporary audiences and half truth-telling originals penned by the lady herself, the Troutt produced project is an overture to her fans for not only social change, but also their own self-acceptance. Recorded at Project West and engineered by Dion Decibal, the project was recorded with trios and quintets of musicians, including Garian Gray and Jazz Sawyer on drums, Raoul Paralez on electric bass, and David Yule on upright bass. Accordingly, this project has a live music feel absent Troutt’s more electronic 2008 debut EP, Prepare for a Future.
With live studio recording also comes more of the unexpected and unplanned dynamic moments that hallmark Troutt’s signature sound. Whether Troutt is tackling an innovative arrangement of the classic “I Didn’t Know What Time It Was” or sharing her own hybrid blend with “Rise,” what is consistent is a jazz vocalist’s skill with a soul stirrer’s heart, making the genre-labeling of Troutt’s music unnecessary and impossible. Like that of her equally liberated contemporaries, Lizz Wright and Gregory Porter, this is just honest music.
Thematically, Troutt’s two projects differ, too, illustrating where she is now as a woman and artist in her musings and priorities. At the eve of Obama’s election, Prepare for a Future spoke of intergenerational relationships, forgiveness, shifting in and out of the illusion and reality of love, vulnerability and emergency preparedness as a way of securing one’s future. The Sound of Peace is about stepping out of cycles that fail to serve personal evolution and liberation, to embrace the self, and rise above self-pity and self-cruelty – the rich themes of a philosophically reflective artist. The common thread weaving these two sides of Troutt is an understanding of music as survival, as a spiritual and wellness tool for growth, both personal and communal. It is after all, what time and again saved her own life and gave her the faith and strength to believe in herself and persevere in an industry disdainful of difference, and everything about Valerie Troutt is wholly, unapologetically, and powerfully different. With The Sound of Peace, Valerie Troutt hopes listeners welcome their own difference, freeing it into the world as a light all their own.
By L. Michael Gipson
Board of Directors Member; Member, Mission Circle
Yoana (formally “Ioana”) (she/they) is a civil rights attorney and restorative justice circle keeper, committed to advancing a community-led vision for justice that is based on healing and transformation, not punishment and incarceration. She is a white queer woman immigrant from Bulgaria, living on unceded Ohlone land in Oakland, California.
She currently serves as Assistant District Attorney in the Restorative Justice Unit of the San Francisco District Attorney’s Office, focusing on expanding access to Restorative Justice diversion and building a Restorative Justice ecosystem in San Francisco that serves to end cycles of harm and violence.
Previously, she worked as the Judge Constance Baker Motley Civil Rights Fellow at Equal Justice Society where she successfully advocated for legislation mandating implicit bias training for all judges, attorneys and medical professionals in California. Before that, Yoana clerked for Judge Thelton E. Henderson of the Northern District of California, worked on civil rights cases at the ACLU, sought resentencing for individuals serving juvenile life without parole, and held reentry and community healing circles.
In addition to serving on the Embodiment Project Board of Directors, Yoana is an Institute Advisor for New Leaders Council Oakland and a facilitator with YES!
When not working, you can find her dancing or dreaming up ways of bringing people together.