4- e a m Swing Time Upcoming concert at the Sound Board features saxophonist Dave Koz. Suzanne Chessler Special to the Jewish News T he summer tour "Side by Side" aptly describes the jazz event Dave Koz and Brian Culbertson bring Thursday, Aug. 6, to the Sound Board at the Motor City Casino. Koz, both a sax musician and composer, will be sharing the stage with the keyboard- ist-trombonist as well as with singer Peabo Bryson. "This really is a collaboration because Brian and I put our music and bands togeth- er and crafted a show," says Koz, 44, whose radio program runs 2 7 p.m. Mondays- Fridays on Smooth Jazz V98.7-FM. "It's not like one opens for the other. It's three artists who have a lot to say and jam-packed it all in one concert." Koz fans will hear "All I See Is You" and You Make Me Smile." A Koz-Culbertson duo will perform Koz's "Faces of the Heart:' the theme from General Hospital. There also will be many Culbertson and Bryson hits. "We're doing some music that's never been heard before," says Koz, changing from the Capitol to Concord record label. "I'm work- ing on a new recording project that will be - coming out early next year so we're debuting a brand new song that Brian and I wrote." Traveling to concerts and recording stu- dios does not interfere with Koz's radio com- mitment. "Because the way technology is now, I don't have to be at the studio to host the show',' explains the instrumentalist, who started playing sax in seventh grade, joined a teen band and fully launched his concert and recording career right after college. "I can do it wherever I am via the Internet." Koz, who wrote a religious song and has played it at one California synagogue for 12 successive Yom Kippur services, had a memorable stage experience in Tel Aviv last November. "I was invited to perform at the 10th anniversary of the Shimon Peres Peace Center," he says. "I played 'Over the Rainbow' from my At the Movies album, and [Israeli President] Shimon Peres was in the front row. It was an extreme honor to play in Israel and for him." Four years ago, Koz decided to reveal that he is gay. "I'm very inspired by young people who know who they are and say who they are he explains. "At a certain point, I was not willing to not be the full person that God made me." Dave Koz Koz considers charity work important to being a full person. He has joined the Los Angeles Jewish Symphony in a program raising funds to feed the hungry. In the fall, with the help of Whole Foods, he is debut- ing a Koz wine with proceeds going to the Starlight Children's Foundation. "I have a real passion for wine says Koz, who enjoys cooking and lists his favorite recipes on his Web site, www.davekoz.com . "Being able to combine my love of wine with philanthropic work is very special." ❑ Dave Koz will appear 8 p.m. Thursday, Aug. 6, at the Sound Board in the Motor City Casino, 2901 Grand River, in Detroit. $49.50-$55.50. (313) 309-4595; www. motorcitycasino/Sound-board.aspx. In another jazz concert, "Big Band Bash," 8 p.m. Friday, July 31, at the Meadow Brook Music Festival on the grounds of Oakland University in Rochester, Thomas Wilkins leads the Detroit Symphony Orchestra in a tribute mark- ing the 100th birthday year of the iconic Jewish clarinetist Benny Goodman. The program features the Dave Bennett Sextet — with Michigan clari- netist Bennett, Tad Weed on piano, Paul Keller on bass, Pete Siers on drums, Hugh Leal on rhythm guitar and vocalist Carol McCartney — along with arrangements of Goodman material by Paul Keller for the full orchestra. "I have often said that the best era in American jazz was the Big Band era," says conductor Wilkins. "Unashamedly, it gave our toes permission to tap and made our bodies a vehicle for Swing. And if that was not enough, this was one of those magical times when melody was singable, memorable and just plain lovely." Tickets are $15-$30. (313) 576-5111; www.palacenet.com . J ews Nate Bloom Special to the Jewish News Nuptial Notes On July 16, the engagement of Ivanka Trump, 27, to New York Observer newspaper publisher Jared Kushner, 28, was announced. Kushner comes from a prominent New Jersey Orthodox family active in real estate. His father, Charles Kushner, is a major philanthro- pist whose proj- ects include two Jewish day schools named after his late parents, both Holocaust survivors. Trump and Ivanka, as most Kushner people know, is the daughter of real estate mogul Donald Trump and his ex-wife, Ivana Trump (neither of whom is Jewish). Beautiful and smart (she's a graduate of the Wharton School at the University of B8 July 30 - 2009 Pennsylvania), Ivanka currently is vice president of real estate develop- ment and acquisitions at the Trump Organization. New York magazine released a recent interview with the couple right after the engagement was made pub- lic. Here's an excerpt: "Jared's Orthodox Jewish back- ground presented a challenge to the relationship, but Ivanka has worked hard to show Jared's parents that she embraces Judaism. This week, she completed her conversion after study- ing under [Modern Orthodox] Rabbi Hillel Lookstein on New York's Upper East Side. This spring, for instance, Ivanka attended a benefit for the mik- vah (ritual bath) in Jared's hometown of Livingston, N.J., with his mom, Seryl, and his two sisters ..." On June 27, Zoe Winkler, 28, the daughter of actor Henry Winkler, 63, and his wife, Stacey, 61, married actor Robert Reinis, 35. The Jewish wedding was held in the backyard of the Winkler's Los Angeles home. Zoe is a nursery school teacher who was introduced to her new husband by the mother of one of her students. It was a long court- ship with many ups-and-downs. Robert's kind- ness to Zoe dur- ing Stacey's long battle with breast Zoe and Henry cancer helped Winkler bond the couple together. New Flicks Judd Apatow co-wrote and directed the comedy-drama Funny People, opening Friday, July 31, and starring Adam Sandler, who plays a famous comedian diagnosed with an incurable blood disease and told he has a year to live. He decides to use his time to help the career of a struggling young standup comedian (Seth Rogen). Rogen's character lives with two other young comics, played by Jonah Hill and Jason Schwartzman. The plot thickens when Sandler runs into his old girlfriend (Leslie Mann, Apatow's real-life wife) who's married to a macho Australian (Eric Bana). When Sandler's disease goes into remission — he has critical life Judd Apatow choices to make. Aliens in the Attic, which also opens Friday, is an about a family on vaca- tion in Maine. The four kids become aware that their house is under attack by space aliens while their parents are clueless. Playing the two older kids are Ashley Tisdale (High School Musical), 24, and Carter Jenkins (Keeping Up with the Steins),17. Doris Roberts, 78, plays their grandmother. ❑ Contact Nate Bloom at middleoftheroadl@aol.com