Friday, March 1, 2013

Events : Africa : Western Cape : Cape Town : Cape Town International Jazz Festival


Events : Africa : Western Cape : Cape Town : Cape Town International Jazz Festival

When : April 5-6, 2013
Where : Coen Steytler Ave, Cape Town 8000, South Africa (Cape Town International Convention Centre)
Time : 6:00pm April 5, 2013  & 4:00pm April 6, 2013
Phone : +27 21 671 0506
Price : Day pass : R 440 (Purchase Tickets)

The Cape Town International Jazz Festival is the flagship event for the leading events management and production company espAFRIKA which has staged and produced several world-renowned events. Affectionately referred to as ‘Africa’s Grandest Gathering’ by both South African and international media, the Cape Town International Jazz Festival, is the largest music event in sub-Saharan Africa.

The Cape Town International Jazz Festival (CTIJF), now preparing for its 12th year is an annual event. It is famous for delivering a star-studded line up. This proudly South African-produced event is hosted at the Cape Town International Convention Centre (CTICC) each year on the last weekend of March or the first weekend of April.

This year, the festival will boast five stages, over 40 artists, performing over 2 nights. The programming, unique to the Cape Town International Jazz Festival is made up of a 50/50 split between South African artists and international artists respectively.

The Festival hosts in excess of 30 000 music lovers over the 2 days.

As part of the Cape Town International Jazz Festival’s commitment to the development of the music arts industry the Festival has developed a Corporate Social Investment programme. The CSI programme runs co-currently with the festival as well as throughout the year.

The South Atlantic Arts and Culture Trust was set up to run the CSI programme and to continue to bring the joy of music, as well as essential skills to more and more people in South Africa and beyond.

Cape Town International Jazz Festival Review By Evan Milton
Both nights of the Cape Town International Jazz Festival started well for the jazz purists. The intense, measured brilliance of Herbie Tsoaeli‘s Friday launch of “African Time” was a showcase of why South African jazz is a critical contributor to the global pantheon. Jazz began as a music of freedom, and has always carried that message locally, and speaking of freedom in Mzansi in 2012 means speaking of roots and traditions. It means pulling those influences into a contemporary space, and conducting journeys of interrogation without fear of returning to the simplicity of a single bass line, or a traditional chorus, delivered only by human voice.

That was your starter, or Andre Petersen‘s superb set where his US-born, Europe-based quintet included Reggie Washington who, poignantly, was playing the actual double-bass once owned by the late Cape stalwart Basil Moses. Another foreigner, Petersen’s saxophonist Marcus Strickland, channeled the spirit of Basil Coetzee in his tone and phrasing. It was sweet, sweet music for the soul After it, one could have been forgiven for wanting to leave immediately, preserving this precious sonic memory. So too, with sets like Steve Dyer‘s latest explorations that showcased a quintet of fiery young talents, including his son, Bokani Dyer. Or Cuban composer and pianist Alfredo Rodriguez, or the pairing of Puerto Rican saxophonist David Sanchez in multiple-layered conversation with the guitar of Benin’s Lionel Loueke.

Coming from such nourishment, how to appraise the Grammy stars like Marcus Miller or Dave Koz? It’s all slick pastels, sharp suits and swooping TV cameras at the Kippies stage. But there’s Miller, speed-bassing through Miles Davis‘ “Tutu” which, dammit, he recorded and played half the instruments on after Prince had said no. There’s Koz, who insisted on playing the CTIJF’s free Greenmarket Square gig, because people that can’t afford tickets also deserve to hear jazz. So, yeah, it’s smooth and theatrical and bedeviled by rousing crescendoes but it’s consummately executed, and the crowd are lapping it up: jiving, toasting with plastic cups, bopping on the cordoned-off corporate seats. It’s jazz, baby; but jazz you can dance to.

Dorothy Masuka vs Miriam Makeba. Really?!
Any festival with multiple stages will have timetable clashes. It was a particularly poignant sadness, though, that saw the 77-year-old living legend Dorothy Masuka,  scheduled to perform precisely when her teenage friend, the late MiriamMakeba was being honoured in a start-studded tribute led by Hugh Masekela. Organisers ESP Afrika are to be lauded for including veteran singer-activists like Masuka, but a broader view should have been taken here. Masuka’s set was sublime, a multi-language presentation of songs and pithy recollections that underscored the deeply important musical heritage she embodies. That some seats in the Rosies auditorium were empty – casting an additionally poignant resonance on the cheap plastic chair Masuka used to rest her injured hip between songs – was criminally sad. Also unfortunate was that visiting diva Patti Austin played over her allotted time, forcing the local songstress to cut short a set, practically midway through a solo by burning guitar southpaw Bheki Khoza (billed fully as Bhekisana Makhosonke).

Before the festival, Zakes Bantwini said he planned to woo the jazz-loving crowd with some standards, and then drop in his million-selling Afro-house hits. His vocal showcasing on a a funked-up “Take Five“, and the skills of his eleven-piece band did precisely that. Loyal fans got their ears opened, subliminally, to jazz classics, and jazz-heads found themselves enticed into getting down to Durban’s finest steamy rhythms.

Before the festival, Lindiwe Suttle said she planned to showcase her melding of neo-soul, rock and African influences with the ’80s avant-club sound of her Berlin-based producer Florian Hirche. The set was a stylised performance, complete with haute couture costume changes and interpretive dance that struggled on an outdoor stage but was a grand stepping stone for the release of the singer’s debut.

Before the festival, Ms Lauryn Hill said… nothing. Because Her Royal Hillness does not deign to speak to the press, or meet with fans. Elsewhere, her set has been criticised as scattered, and the singer as being “under the influence”. Neither are entirely accurate, although most listeners voted with their feet. She came across as an artist playing with a band that’s not played together on big stages before, or recently. Which we all know is true, since the singer more-or-less retired from public performance. Instead of spending much of the show micro-managing her evidently talented musicians, though, Hill ought to have led from the front and just plain delivered on her songs.

With 20/20 hindsight vision, the “Mama Afrika” tribute to Miriam Makeba, helmed by Hugh Masekela - which saw a jam-packed Kippies stage bouncing to every note, and utterly enthralled by guests Thandiswa Mazwai, Zolani Mahola and Vusi Mahlasela - could have been swapped with Hill’s “comeback” show. Punters would have stayed to the last drop of sound from Masekela and, perhaps, without the pressure of being billed as the show-closer, Hill could have relaxed into playing the songs she’s famous for and her fans were there to see.

This review by Evan Milton was written as part of a joint three-way review for Rolling Stone South Africa, written with Miles Keylock and Anton Marshall: three intrepid pairs of ears jostling independently between the five stages over the two nights of Cape Town International Jazz Festival 2012. (Read More)

2013 Line-up
Orquesta Buena Vista Social Club feat. Omara Portuondo (Cuba) | BWB's Norman Brown, Kirk Whalum, Rick Braun (USA) | Zonke Dikana (South Africa) | Jill Scott (USA) | Thandiswa Mazwai (South Africa) | Jimmy Dludlu (South Africa) | Brand New Heavies (UK) | CéU (Brazil) | Cheikh Lô (Senegal) | Errol Dyers (South Africa) | Pu2ma (South Africa) | Claire Phillips (South Africa) | Mi Casa “My House” (South Africa) | Khuli Chana and AKA (South Africa) | Dubmarine (Australia) | Trenton and Free Radical (South Africa) | Brother Ali (USA) | Mafikizolo (South Africa) | Ben Sharpa and Pure Solid (South Africa) | Chef'Special (Netherlands) | Victor Ntoni (South Africa) | Jack DeJohnette, Ravi Coltrane, Matt Garrison trio (USA) | Reza Khota Quartet (South Africa) | Jean-Luc Ponty (FRANCE) | Sonti (South Africa) | Kirk Whalum – Romance Language (USA) | Chano Domínguez (Spain) | Louis Moholo presents 4 Blokes & 1 Doll (South Africa) | Ibrahim Khalil Shihab (South Africa) | Robert Glasper Experiment (USA) | Gregory Porter (USA) | Auriol Hays (South Africa) | Ronin (Switzerland) | Jonathan Rubain and Don Vino (South Africa) | Afrika Mkhize (South Africa) | Steve Turre (USA) |  | 


Contact Cape Town International Jazz Festival
Address  | Phone +27 21 671 0506 

Contact Evan Milton 

Contact Capetown Magazine 


0 comments: