Austin Jazz Hero

Austin’s population has skyrocketed from 475,000 to over a million over the last 35 years, and the rapid growth has sparked numerous challenges. Longstanding institutions have shuttered as rents surged, with music venues hit particularly hard. So the idea that a small, dimly lit basement space Downtown could survive entirely by presenting local jazz acts sounds far-fetched. The fact that the Elephant Room, a bastion of local improvisational creativity, has not only endured but flourished is a testament to Michael Mordecai’s sweat and vision.
In spirit and intent, the Elephant Room represents the old underground Austin that has otherwise been swept away. It preserves that aesthetic largely by putting the music first. Through his company BBA Management & Booking, Mordecai has been the club’s primary booking agent since it opened in 1991. His curatorial skills have consistently showcased local musicians, a policy that has greatly enriched the Austin jazz scene.
His success has been duly noted. DownBeat has recognized the Elephant Room as one of the top 100 jazz venues worldwide. That’s a testament to Mordecai programming artists who make enthralling music and draw appreciative audiences. He’s applied these skills throughout the city to contract pit orchestra musicians for the Paramount Theater, Bass Concert Hall, the Long Center, and the Moody Theater.
Success in such a role reflects music biz acumen, which Mordecai developed through his business studies at the University of Texas. He’s also served in prominent industry roles on the board of directors of the Austin Federation of Musicians, the Recording Academy, the Austin Music Commission, and as President of the Austin Jazz Society.
A skilled trombonist himself, he’s recorded and performed with major figures including the Thad Jones-Mel Lewis Band, Maynard Ferguson, Ray Charles, and jazz-adjacent hometown icon Willie Nelson. But even with such experiences, his focus has remained local. He was a founding member of the Austin bands Beto and the Fairlanes and John Mills Times Ten, while mentoring colleagues and younger artists through his long-running weekly jam sessions. Over the last five decades, he has also run the independent Fable Records, which releases albums by Austin-based jazz and blues artists.
Like the Elephant Room’s concrete columns, Mordecai is an indispensable pillar of the Austin music community and an overdue recipient of Austin’s 2026 JJA Jazz Hero Award.
—Rob Shepherd









