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29th Annual Detroit International Jazz
Festival
Announces 2008 Lineup
** Labor Day Weekend Classic to
Celebrate the Rich
Musical Heritage
of Detroit and Philadelphia **
** Philly Bassist Christian McBride to
Serve As Guest Artist
in Residence **
** MIAJE / MSBOA student scholarships to be awarded during jazzfest **
DETROIT –
Festival organizers have announced the lineup for the 29th Annual
Detroit International Jazz Festival, Friday, August 29 through Monday,
September 1, at Hart Plaza on the Detroit River waterfront and along
Woodward Avenue ending at Campus Martius.
Billed as A
Love Supreme: The Philly/Detroit Summit, the 2008 festival will
celebrate the storied jazz and soul traditions of these two great
American cities. The Michigan Association for Jazz Education
(MIAJE) and
the Michigan School Band and Orchestra Association (MSBOA) will once
again team
up to adjudicate and award scholarship money to top high school and
college music students performing at jazzfest. The awards
ceremony will take place Monday on the Campus Martius (jazz education)
stage on Woodward Avenue in downtown Detroit. View the jazzfest
performance schedule at www.detroitjazzfest.com.
“I enjoy the challenge of designing the festival
lineup around a theme,” says executive and artistic director Terri
Pontremoli. Philly/Detroit, jazz, and soul will be represented on
opening night, which features Dianne Reeves, whose new Blue Note
Records CD When You Know gives a nod to Motown’s
Temptations. A Philly/Detroit jazz tribute to Marvin Gaye,
curated and arranged by Christian McBride, will also bow that
evening. McBride will present his own unique takes on Gaye’s
material with a big band of stellar Detroit-based musicians backing
R&B vocalists Lalah Hathaway and Rahsaan Patterson. Joining
the two veteran singers will be up-and-coming jazz vocalist Jose James.
Throughout
the weekend, legendary artists from Detroit and Philly will include
Hank Jones, Gerald Wilson (both turning 90 this year), Barry Harris,
Benny Golson and Jimmy Heath. A gamut of guitar stylists will be
showcased over three days with appearances by Stanley Jordan, Jim Hall,
Pat Martino, Derek Trucks, Calvin Cooke, Grant Green Jr., and Mike
Stern. But guitars won’t be the only things that slide –
trombones will also take center stage with appearances by Robin
Eubanks, Slide Hampton, Bonerama, Trombone Shorty and the University of
Michigan Jazz Trombone Choir.
A battle of
the bands between the Count Basie and Gerald Wilson Orchestras promises
to leave the audience breathless by the end of the night. Both
bands will be on stage at the same time, along with GRAMMY
Award-winning singer Nnenna Freelon, Detroit legend Kenny Burrell, and
other special guests (to be announced). The Dizzy Gillespie TM
All-Star Jazz Band, with James Moody, Jimmy Heath, and Slide Hampton,
will close out the festival on Labor Day, along with sensational
vocalist Roberta Gambarini. A Saturday Night Fish Fry will
feature masters of the Hammond B-3 with Reuben Wilson’s Godfathers of
Groove, Robin Eubanks + EB3, and Joey DeFrancesco with Karriem Riggins
and Christian McBride. A tribute to Alice Coltrane, led by her
son Ravi, will feature jazz giants Charlie Haden, Jack DeJohnette, and
Detroit’s own Geri Allen.
Classic
jazz will be served up by Kenny Barron, Ted Nash, Roy Hargrove and a
myriad of regional artists, while new music offerings include ICP
Orchestra, Cyro Baptista & Beat the Donkey and Matt Wilson’s Arts
& Crafts. Alexander Zonjic will cross over Philly and Detroit
with native Philly artists Jeff Lorber and Doc Gibbs and special guest
Maysa and the Motor City Horns. GRAMMY-nominated Artistry
Music/Mack
Avenue Records bassist Brian Bromberg will be joined by Philly
trumpeter Randy
Brecker. Col. Bruce Hampton & The Quark Alliance will boast
their brand of surreal funk. Dee Dee Sharpe will perform in a
tribute to the Philly Sound and the achievements of R&B pioneers
Kenny Gamble & Leon Huff, who are celebrating five decades in the
music industry, along with their recent induction into the Rock and
Roll Hall of Fame.
The newly
located Here & Now Stage will again feature emerging talents such
as pianist Gerald Clayton, bassist Esperanza Spalding, The Hot Club of
Detroit, and the surprisingly six-foot Trombone Shorty.
Detroit
International Jazz Festival will continue to encourage young talent not
only by inviting college and high school ensembles to showcase, but by
giving them opportunities to perform with jazz veterans. The
Wayne State University Big Band will perform the “Book of Heath” with
Jimmy Heath; Temple University Big Band will perform with Benny Golson;
Michigan State University will perform the works of Thad Jones with
trumpet legend Jon Faddis. Other visiting schools include the
Berklee (Boston) Jazz Ensemble, the Juilliard Jazz Quintet, and the
Brubeck Institute Jazz Quartet. And back by popular demand are
the KidBop area and Arts & Scraps for the wee-boppers.
The Jazz
Talk Tent will be full of stories, with Christian McBride, Jimmy Heath,
Benny Golson, Barry Harris, Hank Jones, Jim Hall, Kenny Burrell, James
Moody and Slide Hampton. Topics will range from the B3’s role in
blues to Detroit/Philly histories, the impact of John Coltrane and
Dizzy Gillespie, discussions of Marvin Gaye, Gamble & Huff, Motown,
and yes, sports.
“Detroit
International Jazz Festival was voted one of the top five festivals in
the U.S. in the January 2008 JazzTimes Reader’s Poll,” says
Pontremoli. “The musicians will be having wonderful reunions, and the
great Detroit audience, which always amazes me, will play a huge role
in the brotherly love vibe.”
Detroit
International Jazz Festival is now the largest, free jazz festival in
North America, attracting upwards of 750,000 people. It has become a
major tourist attraction, with 25% of its audience coming from out of
state. The festival has a significant economic impact on Detroit
and showcases the city in the most positive light. The festival
has received support from the National Endowment for the Arts, the NEA
Jazz Masters, Michigan Council for Arts and Cultural Affairs (MCACA),
and the Kresge Foundation. Major corporate sponsors include
Chase, MGM Casino, Motor City Casino, Carhartt and Absopure. The
Detroit Marriott at the Renaissance Center is the official hotel of the
29th Annual Detroit International Jazz Festival.
For more information,
including festival
updates and details on how to become a member, visit www.detroitjazzfest.com.
Celebrating the Sounds of
Detroit
Staying true to its roots, the 2008 Detroit Jazz Fest will feature more
than 160 of the Detroit area’s finest jazz, blues, fusion and gospel
musicians.
The groove starts with a Pre-Fest series that also pays tribute to some
of Detroit’s premier jazz clubs.
July 22
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Christian
McBride/ Perry Hughes/Dwight
Adams at Baker’s Keyboard Lounge |
August 1
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Johnnie Bassett at the
Music Hall Jazz Café |
| August 8 |
GEQ at Bert’s
Marketplace (Detroit)
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| August 15 |
Steve Nardella at
Memphis Smoke (Royal Oak)
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August 22
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Randy Napoleon Sextet at
Cliff Bells (Detroit)
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August 22
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Sheila Landis at the
Dirty Dog Jazz Café (Dearborn)
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The
Detroit influence continues on Labor Day weekend with scheduled
performances by Pat Prouty Quintet, Ellen Rowe Quartet, Naima
Shamborguer, Sean Dobbins Quintet, Mikhal Caldwell Project, Shahida
Nurullah and Good Company, bugs Beddow Band, Johnny Allen Trio, DeSean
Jones Quintet, Chris Collins’ Detroit-Torino Project, Jahra Michelle
McKinney, Marion Hayden and many more.
DJF
has also commissioned a special tribute to Detroit
saxophonist/composer Donald Walden. As jazz critic Mark Stryker
recently noted, “Few musicians have embodied the soul of the Detroit
jazz scene as powerfully in recent decades as Donald Walden.” The
performance will feature Detroit bassist Marion Hayden and the Free
Radicals (Rick Roe, Thaddeus Dixon, Cassius Richmond, and Diego Rivera).
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