Tickets go on sale this Saturday at noon
Exclusive pre-sale for Spectra Newsletter subscribers: starts tomorrow!
Exclusive pre-sale for Spectra Newsletter subscribers: starts tomorrow!
Montreal,
Tuesday, April 30, 2013
— By all the evidence before us, the indoor
program of this 34th edition
of the Festival International de Jazz de
Montréal, presented for 4 years now by TD
in collaboration with Rio Tinto Alcan,
trains the brightest possible spotlight on the two principal characteristics of
our event: quality and diversity! Jazz fanatics, blues believers, world music
devotees or, quite simply, fans of music in all its forms, period will find
something to satisfy their deepest musical hunger and most discerning aural
appetite. Whether you prefer intimate clubs or the most prestigious venues, adore
jazz icons or the newest up-and-comers from near and far, or have a weakness
for vocals or a particular instrument, you’re guaranteed to find musical
happiness a hundred times over during this intense and elegant musical marathon
from June 28 to July 7. In
other words, hats off to our programming team! Tickets for these concerts go on sale this Saturday, May 4, at noon… although Spectra Newsletter subscribers can buy them starting tomorrow upon
reception of their latest issue of the newsletter, and until Friday at
6 p.m. Everyone can subscribe free
of charge by visiting infolettrespectra.ca.
Please note that this the 2013 edition
will be dedicated to great American pianist and composer Dave Brubeck,
who passed away last December on the eve of his 92nd birthday, 6 months
after having delivered his final concert, at the Festival. Mr. Brubeck was a
proud partisan, champion and habitué of
our event, which he honored with 14 concerts between 1981 and 2011, notably
with the Orchestre symphonique de Montréal and Angèle Dubeau and Pietà, and
during the 30th edition of the Festival, which coincided with the 50th
anniversary of the legendary Time Out, the first jazz album to sell over
one million copies.
A pilgrimage across the breadth of Planet Jazz
The Festival transforms Montreal into Planet Jazz for 10 days and nights,
creating the perfect musical environment for exploring every facet of your
taste to your heart’s content. It’s not just something but everything for everyone—that could be the Festival motto!—and this
is just the tip of the iceberg: the Greatest of the Great, among them Aretha Franklin, Wayne Shorter, Chucho Valdés, George Benson, Oliver Jones; the absolutely
essential Wynton Marsalis, Joshua Redman, John Abercrombie, Ravi Coltrane, Bill Frisell Holly Cole and Boz Scaggs; landmark groups including The Specials, Belle &
Sebastian, The Cat Empire; such
hot-hot-hot sensations as Trombone Shorty, Caravan Palace, Serena Ryder and Nicolas Repac;
emerging talents on the jazz scene including Jason Moran,
Thierry Maillard, Gwilym Simcock,
Thomas Enhco, Phronesis and Gregory Porter; stars of the indie scene like Austra, Leif Vollebekk, Mother
Mother, Rhye, Thus:Owls, SUUNS, Woodkid, She & Him; ambassadors of exotic rhythms
Vieux Farka Touré, Alpha Blondy, Xavier Rudd and Alex Cuba;
and because the Festival has always been utterly devoted to promoting homegrown
jazz and voices, some of the premier figures in the genre, including Alain Caron, Emilie-Claire Barlow, Vic Vogel,
Julie Lamontagne, Elizabeth Shepherd, Michel Donato, Jaques Kuba Séguin, Sienna Dahlen, André Leroux, Yannick Rieu, Nikki Yanofsky,
Joel Miller... And that’s not
to mention some very intriguing and exciting double bills and special projects—Lyle Lovett and Chris Isaak, Dr. John & The Nite Trippers and
Leon Russell, Champion and his
G-Strings with I Musici, Katia and
Marielle Labèque, and of course, the ever-dazzling Invitation TD series and a pair of
three-night runs hosted first by Charles Lloyd
at the opening of the Festival, followed by Vijay Iyer.
An opening concert
with Pink Martini
Summer means it’s time to shake up another
serving of Pink Martini, the preeminent suave multicultural, multilingual
orchestra renowned for their dexterously blended musical cocktail of swing,
jazz, classical, pop and lounge. Under the leadership of the charming
Thomas Lauderdale, the group has racked up years of sold-out shows around
the world, including numerous gigs at the Festival since 2005. Their most
recent stop in Salle Wilfrid-Pelletier, two years ago, already seems like a
distant memory… so let’s pour ourselves another musical Happy Hour! It’s the
perfect opportunity to discover their new album, and renew acquaintances with
the elegant China Forbes! June 28 at 7:30 p.m., Salle Wilfrid-Pelletier, PdA (Événements
spéciaux TD series). Presented in collaboration with CBC/Radio-Canada.
Soweto
Gospel Choir: closing the Festival on a jubilant note!
Assembling some thirty members, the Soweto
Gospel Choir was born 11 years ago in South Africa. Adored for their
irresistible repertoire melding gospel, soul, reggae, pop and religious hymns,
the vocal ensemble vocal has won an array of international awards—including two
Grammys. They’ve collaborated with Céline, Robert Plant and Bono, and in their
first Festival visit, they offer us music both poignant and jubilant. July 6, 7 p.m. (also at 3 p.m.), Maison symphonique de Montréal (Le Festival à la Maison symphonique
series). Presented in
collaboration with CBC/Radio-Canada.
The program,
series by series
Événements spéciaux TD series,
7:30 p.m., Salle Wilfrid-Pelletier, PdA
presented in collaboration with CBC/Radio-Canada, La Presse+, Rouge FM, CHOM and Virgin 96
presented in collaboration with CBC/Radio-Canada, La Presse+, Rouge FM, CHOM and Virgin 96
♫ Pink Martini kicks off the party June 27, before the
official launch of festivities the following day (June 28). ♫ On June 29, “Queen of Soul” Aretha Franklin
returns to Montreal, 5 years after her sole Festival appearance. She
offers us the rare privilege of a performance bringing us such immortal titles
as Respect, Chain of Fools and (You Make
Me Feel Like) A Natural Woman. ♫ The following evening (June 30), Festival fans can expect a formidable
program featuring The Hits by George
Benson (opening act: Morgan James):
two years after his tribute to Nat King Cole, the gifted jazz guitarist and
admired R&B singer is back with his smash songbook.
♫ On July 3, we welcome Zooey Deschanel,
star of TV series New Girl and such
films as (500) Days of Summer, and M.
Ward, heard on dreamy folk-rock albums, united here as irresistible retro-pop duo
She & Him (opening act: Camera Obscura).
♫ They turn over the stage July 4 to a double bill starring two artists making Festival debuts: Texas
singer-guitarist Lyle Lovett,
legendary cult figure of the alt-country scene, rides through his eclectic repertoire with an acoustic combo. Then,
crooner-rocker Chris Isaak
and his musicians make us swoon with such unforgettable tracks of oneiric
Americana as Blue Hotel and Wicked Game. ♫ On July 5, it’s the very first Festival visit by Scottish cult stars Belle & Sebastian. Their leader,
Stuart Murdoch, has spent over 15 years crafting a literate and tuneful
songbook, with the added bonus of a melodic sensibility that recalls the pop
goldsmiths of the ’60s (opening act:
Here We Go Magic). ♫ The
following night (July 6), Champion tunes up his G-Strings and invites in I Musici
de Montréal conducted by Jean-Marie Zeitouni for the premiere of his new electro-lounge
spectacle, °1, featuring arrangements by Jean-Nicolas Trottier.
Grands concerts Rio Tinto Alcan series, 8 p.m.,
Théâtre Maisonneuve, PdA
presented in collaboration with CBC/Radio-Canada, CJAD 800 AM, CHOM and 98,5 FM
presented in collaboration with CBC/Radio-Canada, CJAD 800 AM, CHOM and 98,5 FM
♫ In his first visit in 4 years, Chucho Valdés, a master among masters,
hailed as “the most complete pianist in the world” by Jazz Magazine, rolls in June 28 with the album Border Free, with his superb quintet Afro-Cuban Messengers. ♫ Then, get set for a concert-event that
promises to make history June 29 with the Wayne Shorter
Quartet with Danilo Perez,
John Patitucci and Brian Blade and their 80th Birthday Celebration:
they’ll herald the 80th birthday of the legendary saxophonist with over 3 hours
of music and a stage shared with some illustrious friends—quintet Sound Prints headed by Joe Lovano and Dave Douglas (with
Lawrence Field, Linda
Oh and Joey Baron) and star
trio ACS featuring Geri Allen, Terri Lyne Carrington and Esperanza Spalding.
♫ The following evening (June 30), rock legend
Boz Scaggs, the man behind the
timeless Silk Degrees and Grammy winner
for Lowdown, pulls in with his new
album Memphis. ♫ On July 3, an incredible double bill transports us to roots heaven, starring New
Orleans singer-pianist Mac Rebennack, alias Dr. John (with The Nite
Trippers), armed with a recent supercharged R&B-blues-rock-funk album
entitled Locked Down, and then
another living legend, singer/multi-instrumentalist Leon Russell, who made his legendary name as a solo artist
with his amalgam of blues and southern rock in the ’70s. ♫ On July 4, Martha Wainwright takes on her first headline Festival gig
since 2006 to present pieces from her excellent new album, Come Home to Mama, some tracks from the soundtrack to TV show Trauma, and perhaps even a little Piaf!
(opening act: Dear Criminals). ♫ Then, July 5, rising
Canadian jazz star Emilie-Claire Barlow
unveils songs from her charming all-French album Seule ce soir,
as well as other tracks from her rich jazz vocal repertoire (opening act:
Michael Kaeshammer). ♫ Finally, suave-voiced singer Madeleine Peyroux (July 6) presents her latest, The Blue Room, marrying country and jazz with sensitivity and subtlety
(opening act: Kat Edmonson).
Le Festival à la Maison symphonique
series, 7 p.m., Maison symphonique de Montréal
presented in collaboration with The Gazette and CJAD 800 AM
presented in collaboration with The Gazette and CJAD 800 AM
♫ The series opens June 28 with the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra, one
of the most respected Big Bands on the planet, marrying tradition and modernity
under the leadership of supremely gifted American trumpeter and composer Wynton Marsalis and spreading the
gospel of jazz since the late ’80s. ♫ The festivities continue June 29 with a 20-year friend of the
Festival, charismatic saxophonist Joshua Redman, who dazzles us with every
visit. This year, the Joshua Redman
Quartet will showcase songs from Walking Shadows (expected in May)
accompanied by Aaron Goldberg, Reuben Rogers and Gregory Hutchinson and an 18-piece string orchestra. ♫ On July 4, sister-pianists Katia
and Marielle Labèque deliver the magnificent West Side Story + suite based on the
Leonard Bernstein masterpiece, in a special arrangement for two pianos and
percussion. ♫ The following day, they soar through Minimalist Dream House and a program
presenting works by Erik Satie, John Cage, Steve Reich,
Terry Riley, William Duckworth, La Monte Young, Arvo Pärt,
Brian Eno, Radiohead, Sonic Youth, Suicide, Glenn Branca,
Laurie Anderson and many others. ♫ And
before presenting the closing Festival concert on July 6 at 7 p.m., the Soweto Gospel Choir deliver an early hallelujah! at 3 p.m.
Tout en voix series, 8 p.m., Théâtre du Nouveau Monde
presented in collaboration with Rouge FM, MusiMax and The Gazette
presented in collaboration with Rouge FM, MusiMax and The Gazette
♫ Two stars of Canadian jazz vocals take turns in the spotlight
during this series. Talented Nova Scotia native Holly Cole, passionate purveyor of jazz and pop, returns to us
June 27, 28 and 29 with her new album, a genuine masterpiece entitled Nights, in her 25th visit to the
Festival. ♫ On July 4, 5 and 6, Quincy Jones presents Nikki Yanofsky, the darling of
Montreal jazz, who’s been heralded in the Olympia in Paris, the Blue Note Jazz
Club in New York, at the Vancouver Winter Olympic Games and, in her most recent
Festival stop, in Place des Arts with the Orchestre Métropolitain. She’ll
present a new album due in June.
Rythmes series, 8:30 p.m., Métropolis
presented in collaboration with MusiquePlus, CKOI 96,9 and Virgin 96
presented in collaboration with MusiquePlus, CKOI 96,9 and Virgin 96
♫ In his first Festival concert in 15 years (June 28),
Garou gathers special guests to reconnect with his first love, Rhythm and Blues, a song catalogue
including Otis Redding, Nina Simone, Gilbert Bécaud,
Joe Dassin, the Black Keys and Alicia Keys, and an album that sold
over 200,000 copies. ♫ On June
30, duo Rhye—a collaboration of two
leading lights on the electro scene, Denmark’s Robin Hannibal and Canadian
Mike Milosh, seduce us with the romantic electro-pop of their debut album Woman. ♫ Versatile
French artiste Woodkid—all the rage
buzz overseas with a video, Iron,
that’s been seen over 20 million times on YouTube!—heads in July 1 with
the tunes from a debut album, The Golden
Age (opening act: Mozart’s Sister).
♫ Sharon Jones,
passionate female reincarnation of the immortal James Brown, brings in her
loyal Dap-Kings (July 3), an old-style
soul-funk-R&B revue combo, with special guests James Hunter and his
musicians. ♫ Next comes a female
double bill to die for on July 4 starring a grand
dame of soul, Bettye LaVette,
who celebrated her 50th year as a singer with the extraordinary Thankful N’ Thoughtful, and Wanda Jackson, considered THE
first female rock’n’roll singer, inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in
2009. ♫ Stage demolishers The Cat
Empire, known worldwide as the Party Band to watch, arrive July 5 in better form than ever with a
collection of their classics and new ones from their 5th studio album (opening
act: Colin Moore). ♫ Canadian-Australian
multi-instrumentalist Xavier Rudd comes July 6 with his debut album Spirit Bird (2012), in which the Ohnia:kara
Singers and the Perpetual Peace Project invoke traditional Amerindian music and
dance (opening act: Jon and
Roy) ♫ The spearhead of the ska
revival that swept over the UK in the ’70s, The Specials, reformed in 2009, crank out the same energy they
cranked in their glory days and roll into the Festival for the first time July 7
(opening act: Little Hurricane).
Couleurs
SAQ series,
7 p.m., Club Soda
presented in collaboration with Rouge FM, CJAD 800 AM and CIBL 101,5 Radio-Montréal
presented in collaboration with Rouge FM, CJAD 800 AM and CIBL 101,5 Radio-Montréal
♫ The series kicks off in fine fettle June 28 with the super-celebratory
musical cocktail shaken up by joyous
Parisian troupe Caravan Palace, here to unleash the electro-gypsy jazz-swing
of their excellent album Panic. ♫ In
Sarah Slean
with Strings June 29, the Toronto singer revisits her refined pop repertoire
with inventive arrangements, including her latest album, Land & Sea, accompanied by a string quartet. ♫ Charismatic and brilliant young New Orleans
trombonist Trombone Shorty takes
command June 30, flanked by his explosive combo Orleans Avenue, rolling out his latest For True, a contagious blend of funk, rock, R&B and hip-hop. ♫ The following evening (July 1), welcome the
American singer who proudly holds aloft the torch handed down from the great
Afro-American singers of the ’60s and ’70s: Gregory Porter. ♫ Next, on
July 2, talented Toronto singer Serena Ryder builds on the success of her new album Harmony and hit Stompa, a powerhouse female country-pop-folk-rock blend. ♫ On July 3, the “Hendrix of the Sahara,” Vieux Farka Touré, visits with a new solo album, masterfully
collapsing the boundaries between Malian blues, rock, reggae and soul. ♫ Also from Africa, legendarily committed pacifist reggaeman Alpha Blondy and The Solar System stop in
on July 4 to unfurl the
standard-bearing songs from a new album,
Mystic Power, released this past
spring. ♫ The party rolls on July 5 with the Montreal premiere of new album Ruido
En El Sistema/Noise in the System by Cuban native and adoptive
Canadian Alex Cuba, cruising
between Latino soul and pop-rock, and nominated for the JUNO for Best World
Music Album! ♫ The following night
(July 6), actress Molly Ringwald,
discovered and beloved by a billion boys in the ’80s for her roles in Pretty in Pink and Breakfast Club, reveals the songs from her debut, Except… Sometimes, including such
standards as I’ll Take Romance and I Get Along Without You Very Well ♫ Closing the series out with a burst of energy July
7, Vancouver quintet Mother Mother break
out their latest—and catchiest—album, The
Sticks.
Jazz Beat Hyatt Regency Montréal series, 9:30 p.m.,
Théâtre
Jean-Duceppe, PdA
presented in collaboration with CBCMusic.ca
presented in collaboration with CBCMusic.ca
♫ Returning after a 5-year absence, brilliant saxophonist and iconic
New York jazz figure Ravi Coltrane
is back June 28 with his Quartet and
a new album hailed by the experts, Spirit
Fiction, his first for Blue Note. ♫ Considered
one of the most enlightened jazzmen of his generation, pianist-composer Jason Moran returns June 29 with
his Fats
Waller Dance Party, a tribute to the legend accompanied by exceptional collaborators
(including Meshell Ndegeocello). ♫ The
following evening (June 30), returning after a 22-year absence, crack British saxman
Courtney Pine brings in his
virtuosity and a quintet to present House of Legends, an Afro-Caribbean-inflected
album shaking up calypso, ska, mento and merengue with passion and imagination.
♫ Then, the lights blaze in an
incandescent concert July 1 starring Macy Gray
(making her Festival debut), joined by the renowned David Murray Infinity Quartet in a show firing up funk, blues and
alternative pop. ♫ High-octane combo the Kurt Rosenwinkel New Quartet with Aaron
Parks, Eric Revis and Justin Faulkner take charge July 2 with
a program based on the daring young jazz guitarist’s recent album Star of Jupiter.
♫ On July 4, Benoît Charest
et le Terrible Orchestre de Belleville present the 10th anniversary of Triplettes de Belleville in a show
combining jazz, cabaret ambience and diabolically swinging rhythms, with a
remarkable array of collaborators (Dan Thouin, Jim and Chet Doxas,
Dany Roy, Dave Martin and Simon Meilleur) and a rear projection
of the film itself! ♫ In another historic
rendezvous July 5, legendary ensemble the Preservation
Hall Jazz Band return 25 years after their sole Festival visit to
transport us to the deepest roots of jazz. ♫ With their mandate to herald the global jazz
repertoire, the Orchestre national de jazz de Montréal make a first
Festival appearance July 6 playing pieces by Christine Jensen, Marianne
Trudel and Jean-Nicolas Trottier, a tribute to Joni Mitchell with Karen Young, and
excerpts from the Africa/Brass Sessions
by John Coltrane, starring André Leroux on tenor saxophone. ♫ Finally,
July 7, The Brubeck Brothers Quartet pay homage to a late, lamented
legend with their Tribute to Dave Brubeck with guests Lorraine Desmarais, Adrian
Vedady and Chet Doxas, celebrating a repertoire that is quite simply the
living memory of jazz.
Invitation TD series, 6 p.m.,
Théâtre Jean-Duceppe, PdA and Gesù — Centre de créativité
presented in collaboration with The Gazette
presented in collaboration with The Gazette
♫ All genuine, full-blooded music fans, take heart: the Invitation TD series returns with
concept-concerts spanning several evenings. In the first series, famed American
reedman Charles Lloyd celebrates
his 75th birthday starting June 28 in Théâtre Jean-Duceppe in a Quartet with Jason Moran,
Reuben Rogers and Eric Harland. ♫ For
his second performance, Sangam, Charles Lloyd teams up with Zakir
Hussain and Eric Harland to revisit the subtlety and refinement of the major
concert presented at the Festival in 2005, inspired by a tribute to drummer
Billy Higgins. ♫ To close out his series
in perfect form June 30, Charles Lloyd
delves into musical conversations in duos
and trios with Jason Moran and Bill Frisell, who channel their respectively
remarkable improvisational sensibilities. ♫ On
July 4, genius-level New York pianist Vijay
Iyer settles into the Gesù in a Trio
with Justin Brown and Stephan Crump,
performing the acclaimed Accelerando, 2012 Jazz Album of the Year according
to the International Critics Poll in DownBeat Magazine. ♫ In his second concert July 5, Vijay Iyer shakes up the formula masterfully in a duo
with another keyboard magician: Craig Taborn ♫ Finally, piano master Vijay Iyer, universally celebrated for his creativity and
named Pianist of the Year at the 2012 Jazz Awards, rewards us with Vijay Iyer
solo, a format in which he excels—witness his album Solo, released in 2010. Do not miss this!
Pianissimo series, 7 p.m., Cinquième Salle
de la PdA
presented
in collaboration with Radio-Classique 99,5
♫ Celebrating the brilliance of the world’s pianists, this series
opens with the virtuosity and passion of France’s Thierry Maillard, launching us June 28 in two very promising
formats: solo and trio, accompanied by drummer Yoann Schmidt
and double bassist Matyas Szandaï, with whom he recorded the dazzling Beyond the Ocean released this past
winter. ♫ Montreal’s Alexandra Stréliski follows June 29 with pieces from her
album Pianoscope, a combo of
melancholy and lighthearted music, accompanied by a string ensemble and
projections. ♫ She cedes the
spotlight to brilliant English pianist Gwilym Simcock,
who showcases the full range of his jazz and classical affinities solo on June 30. ♫ Cuban
prodigy Harold López-Nussa takes over July 1 with two versions of
his artistry, armed with a new album: solo to open, then in a trio
featuring Felipe Cabrera on double bass and his brother Ruy López-Nussa
on drums. ♫ Young French pianist and
violinist Thomas Enhco performs
in the same format July 2 to present his latest, Fireflies, first solo, then
in a trio accompanied by Chris Jennings on double bass and Nicolas Charlier on drums. ♫ A
number of solo concerts follow,
starting July 4. First, Festival fans can enjoy the brilliance of Italian pianist
and composer Enrico Pieranunzi,
who has wonderfully interpreted the music of Morricone and Fellini films
alongside his own pieces. ♫ The venerable Oliver Jones next takes the stage solo on July
5 and 6 with a blend of compositions and standards. ♫ Finally, after over 30 Festival concerts in
our history in every configuration
imaginable, Montreal pianist,
composer, trombonist and bandleader Vic Vogel closes us out solo on
July 7.
TD Jazz d’ici La Presse+ series, 6 p.m., L’Astral
presented in collaboration with Espace.mu
presented in collaboration with Espace.mu
♫ Lean into this series June 28 with music oscillating between
modernity and tradition, courtesy of the 2012 Radio‑Canada Discovery, versatile
trumpeter and composer Jacques Kuba Séguin:
ODD
LOT, fusing Eastern European music, jazz harmony and electronica. ♫ He hands the baton over on June 29 to the André Leroux Quartet, led by one
of our most eminent saxophonists, accompanied by friends Ben Charest, Fred Alarie
and Christian Lajoie, and delivering his brilliant debut album as a bandleader,
Corpus Callosum. ♫ Then,
get ready for a summit meeting of Montreal’s highest-profile musicians, from
the indie-rock, jazz and folk scenes (June 30): Muse Hill with Chet Doxas,
Brad Barr, Andrew Barr, Joe Grass and Morgan Moore. ♫ Montreal saxophonist and composer Christine Jensen is next on July 1
with guests Ingrid Jensen and Gary Versace,
weaving an evening of refined melodies and daring improv. ♫ Next (July 2), welcome two jazz masters, one on double bass, the other on drums, Michel Donato
and Pierre Tanguay, as they fuse their talents in a duo for a jazzy exploration
of the Bach repertoire: Groove en Bach.
♫ The series powers forth July 3 with Joel Miller (2013 JUNO for Best Jazz Album) and Honeycomb, here to spellbind us
with the world-infused jazz of their latest album released this past winter, alongside
Kiko Osorio, Rémi-Jean Leblanc and John Roney. ♫ On
July 4, enjoy a trio pulsing with life
in Trifolia starring the Marianne Trudel
Trio, uniting Marianne Trudel on piano, Wurlitzer, accordion and
vocals, Étienne Lafrance on double bass and Patrick Graham on percussion; we
all dug their album Le refuge in
2013. ♫ Then, July 5, the legendary Guy Nadon,
a one-man chapter in the history of this Festival, celebrates 60 years behind the skins and his 30th visit to the event
with a Big Band. ♫ Pianist Julie Lamontagne follows July 6 with Opus jazz orchestra, reconnecting with the classical repertoire—Rachmaninov,
Debussy, Bach, Ravel, Chopin, Haendel, Brahms, Fauré and André Mathieu—she
explored on the album Opus jazz, Album
Jazz Création award winner at the 2012 ADISQ Gala. ♫ Closing out the series, three-time Félix winner for Jazz Album of the Year (1996, 2000 and 2006) and 2006
Oscar Peterson Award honoree, saxophonist Yannick Rieu returns July
7 with the new music of Spectrum 4,
accompanied by Jean-Sébastien Williams, Samuel Joly and
Rémi-Jean Leblanc.
Le Club series, 9 p.m., L’Astral
presented in collaboration with Galaxie and CIBL101,5 Radio-Montréal
presented in collaboration with Galaxie and CIBL101,5 Radio-Montréal
♫ Brilliant American saxophonist
Tia Fuller kicks off this series June 28 with her first
headline performance at the Festival, following the 2012 release of a 4th solo
album, Angelic Warriors. ♫ Next (June
29), renowned, exquisite jazz guitarist Bill Frisell makes his 10th
Festival visit in a 40+ year career with a solo performance of selections from
his vast repertoire. ♫ The grand
dame of Korean jazz, Youn Sun Nah (June 30) serenades with
her sumptuous voice and takes Festival fans beyond the boundaries of jazz vocal,
armed with her dazzling recent album, Lento.
♫ Another rising star on the international
jazz scene jazz, trio-with-piano Phronesis
featuring Danish double bassist Jasper Høiby, British pianist
Ivo Neame and Swedish drummer Anton Eger, return July 1 after a
2-year absence with their latest, Walking
Dark. ♫ The musical voyage continues July
2 with globetrotting Frenchman
Titi Robin, making a debut
Festival visit in a trio with a musical style that soars beyond borders
on guitar, oud and bouzouki, and some 15 albums including Les Rives, released in 2011. ♫ Then,
French guitarist Nicolas Repac
invites Festival fans on a trip to the very roots of the blues with The Black Box July 3, melding grooves
and electric guitar to recordings of black prisoners’ work songs recorded in
the ’30s by Alan Lomax, a shaman’s chants, and the voices of Bo Diddley, a
gypsy singer, Haitian storytellers... ♫ In
her first Festival stopover, young
Brazilian cellist and singer Dom La Nena
(July 4) spellbinds in Portuguese and Spanish with songs from her gorgeous,
melancholy debut album recorded with Piers Faccini. ♫ Next
(July 5), the Lionel Loueke Trio, led by the exquisite Benin guitarist, present a new album released on
Blue Note, Heritage, featuring
vibrant jazz accented by West African sounds, melodic grooves and daring improv.
♫ Jazz-rooted pianist Laurent de Wilde, who
distinguished himself at the Festival a decade ago with electronic adventures, takes
over July 6 to unveil Over the Clouds,
an all-jazz album recorded with a trio. ♫ The
series closes out on July 7 with the Festival baptism of a young
singer-guitarist gifted with a retro soul, JD McPherson,
captaining a captivating trip through time shaking up old-skool rockabilly and
R&B as brilliantly represented on his sizzling debut album, Signs & Signifiers.
Jazz dans la nuit series, 10:30 p.m., Gesù
— Centre de créativité
presented in collaboration with Espace.mu and CBCMusic.ca
presented in collaboration with Espace.mu and CBCMusic.ca
♫ Two virtuoso
guitarists take turns solo on June 28 to lead into this series with an
all-guitar double bill, specially scheduled for 7 p.m.: Peppino D’Agostino
takes us on a melodic voyage accented with jazz, flamenco, pop and folk rock,
and Martin Taylor unfurls his new album, The
Colonel & The Governor.
♫ The following evening (June 29), the Festival is delighted to
welcome Larry Goldings, Peter Bernstein
and Bill Stewart, hailed by the New
York Times in the ’90s as the best organ trio of the decade, now armed with
8 albums and a peerless creative chemistry. ♫ On June 30, another trio rolls in, this
one led by brilliant Franco-American pianist Jacky Terrasson, celebrating
a 20-year career with Gouache, combining
original compositions with covers of pop and jazz-funk hits. ♫ Maintaining
the trio formula, The Bad Plus, Ethan Iverson
(piano), Reid Anderson (double bass) and Dave King (drums), with
a 10-year history of burning down Festival stages, barrel in July 1 with their
latest album, Made Possible. ♫ Next, the Steve Kuhn Trio visit July 2 with material from Wisteria, their solid album released on
ECM last year, featuring the wonderful playing of Steve Swallow and Joey Baron. ♫ Legendary bassist and former member of
jazz fusion
masters UZEB Alain Caron takes over July 3, accompanied by his six-string
bass and his latest album, Multiple Faces.
♫ Super American guitarist
Charlie Hunter, devotee of
blues and soul, thrills us July 4 in a
duo with an old compadre, drummer Scott Amendola,
who accompanied him on the recent album Not
Getting Behind Is the New Getting Ahead. ♫ They’re followed July 5 by American
saxophonist Tim Berne, presenting his scintillating Snakeoil, a gem of contemporary
jazz unanimously hailed by critics, benefiting from the unbridled creativity of
a quartet completed by Oscar Noriega, Matt Mitchell and Ches Smith. ♫ Drummer and composer Antonio Sanchez, leader of solid combo Migration with Dave Binney, John Escreet and Matt Brewer, comes in July 6 to reveal a new album, New Life, fusing tradition and
innovation. ♫ And finally, jazz guitar virtuoso John
Abercrombie has the last word on July
7,
accompanied by a remarkable Quartet featuring Joey Baron, Billy Drewes
and Drew Gress.
Musique au MAC series, 8 p.m., Musée
d’art contemporain de Montréal
presented in collaboration with CISM 89,3 FM
presented in collaboration with CISM 89,3 FM
♫ Chassol opens the
series June 28, 29 and 30 with a genuine film/music hybrid: Indiamore,
the film of a voyage of discovery in India, in which Chassol
replicates images, playing with the montage to create a rhythmic and visual
motif. ♫ Swedish
singer Erika Angell and Montreal
guitarist Simon Angell, united as Thus:Owls, take over July 2, 3 and 4 with the dark,
cinematographic folk of their fascinating 2nd album, Harbours. ♫ Finally, July 5, 6 and 7, adoptive Montrealer
Leif Vollebekk delivers the piercing ballads and delicate and vibrant
blues-laced folk of his new album North
Americana, released in March.
Concerts
intimes series,
7 p.m., Savoy du Métropolis
♫ In her first Festival visit, Canadian artist Sienna Dahlen, heralded for her spellbinding voice and magnetic
presence, comes in June 28 and 29 to present a 5th album, Verglas, delving into the roots of jazz,
folk and country. ♫ Toronto’s Elizabeth Shepherd, who pushes jazz vocal
beyond its usual boundaries, invites us in June 30 and July 1 to discover Rewind, a remarkable album of standards
(Poinciana, Prelude to a Kiss…) featuring her own arrangements and production. ♫ The only man among an array of Canadian female
vocalists, Italian composer-guitarist-accordionist
Peppe Voltarelli arrives solo July 3 and 4, with customary humour
and ironic sensibility and a repertoire of songs crossing traditional Italian music,
ska, onomatopoeia and festive rhythms. ♫ On July 5 and 6, Toronto jazz vocalist jazz Daniela Nardi
brings in 4 musicians to plunge into pieces from her recent album Espresso Manifesto—The Songs of Paolo Conte, in which she brings
her own slant to classics by the Piedmontean master. ♫ Closing the series July 7, supertalented Nova Scotian Mo Kenney, armed with her acoustic guitar, shines with
the luminous pop-folk blend of his debut album, released last year.
Nuits Heineken series, 11 p.m., Club Soda
presented in collaboration with CISM 89,3 FM and NIGHTLIFE.CA
presented in collaboration with CISM 89,3 FM and NIGHTLIFE.CA
♫ An evening
of Kannibalen [Live] with
Black Tiger Sex Machine, Dabin, Apashe and Snails (June 28) promises decadence and contagious fun, with raw
funk-disco-house that may unleash the animal within and transport everyone into
a collective trance-state. ♫ The Herbaliser, the Brit
group led by Jake Wherry and Ollie Teeba, continue the assault June
29 with a savvy blend of hip-hop, soul and jazz, brilliantly immortalized on
albums Very Mercenary and Something Wicked This Way Comes, along
with songs from the excellent There Were
Seven released last year. ♫ The next evening (June 30), it’s New York group The Virgins, who mine the motherlode
of ’70s and ’80s rock on a 2nd album, Strike Gently,
five years after they got jiggy and funky on their debut. ♫ Next, we
usher in A Tribe Called Red, led by Ottawa
Amerindian DJs Shub, Bear Witness and NDN, here to kick off a party July
2 with an “Electric Pow Wow” of pulsing sounds mixing reggae, hip-hop, electronica
and dub with First Nations music. ♫ They cede the stage July 3 to the head-turning voice of Torontonian Katie Stelmanis
and collaborators Dorian Wolf and Maya Postepski, united as the New Wave
group Austra, whose
highly-anticipated 2nd album, Olympia,
is due in June. ♫ The following day, July 4, party animals Fitz and the Tantrums land with a new album, More Than
Just a Dream, fusing electronica, hip-hop and ’80s influences. ♫ On July 5, David Lynch presents his newest muse, Chrysta Bell,
in a nocturnal rendezvous with a dream-turned-reality (or vice-versa), courtesy
of the 11 tracks of This Train. Take a trip into a
spellbinding Twin Peaks ambience
guided by an otherworldly, captivating and sexy feminine presence. ♫ The power-party
element returns July 6 in the
presence of Marseille trio Chinese Man,
consisting of DJs Zé Mateo and High Ku and beatmaker Sly, disciples of
abstract hip-hop with the most
diverse possible influences and samples (heavy rock, soul, funk, electronica,
swing and… Chinese pop). ♫ Finally, Montreal band of the moment, SUUNS, zoom in from the zenith of indie rock stardom with a 2nd album, Images
du futur, to close the series out
with perfect cool and energy July 7.
The Croisière Jazz, 6:30 p.m.,
Bateau-Mouche,
Jacques-Cartier Quay, Old Port of Montreal
Jacques-Cartier Quay, Old Port of Montreal
♫ Christine Tassan et les Imposteures
have carved out a well-earned niche in gypsy jazz, now ranking among the most
respected in the genre. While excelling in the studio, these veteran musicians
are particularly comfortable onstage: for proof, look no further than their
Festival appearance in 2010, when they reeled out the joyous album Pas manouche, c'est louche. Renowned for
their enthusiasm and contagious good vibe, this unstoppable swing quartet takes
to the waves to helm the jazz cruise with C’est
l’heure de l’apéro. It’s Happy Hour! June
29 and 30, July 2, 3 and 4. Boarding at 6:15 p.m. from Jacques-Cartier
Quay in the Old Port of Montréal, returning at 10:30 p.m. Reservations
required: 514 849-9952, 1 800 361-9952 or bateaumouche.ca.
Don’t miss the Soirées
jazz Upstairs at Upstairs
Jazz Bar & Grill (1254 MacKay St.), at 7 p.m. and 9:45 p.m., with The Barry Harris Trio with Ray Drummond and Leroy Williams
(June 28 and 29), Bebop Band : Nir Felder,
Greg Osby, Orlando le Fleming and Terri Lyne Carrington
play Dexter Gordon (June 30), Nir Felder
4 with Aaron Parks,
Orlando le Fleming and Mark Guiliana
(July 1), Mark Guiliana’s Beat
Music (July 2), Helen Merrill (July
3 and 4), Bill Charlap (July 5),
Stranahan/Zaleski/Rosato (July 6) and
Ranee Lee (July 7).
Finally, the Le Dièse Onze au Festival will be presented
at 9:30 p.m. at Dièse Onze (4115-A,
St. Denis Street), with Benoît Charest
Trio (June 28), Matt Herskowitz
Trio (June 29), Kalmunity, Jazz
Project (June 30), Trabuco Habanero,
Cuban Jazz
(July 1), Alex Bellegarde Trio with
Al McLean (July 2), Daphne Cattellat Trio (July 3), Paulo Ramos Trio and guests (July 4), Rafael Zaldivar Trio (July 5), Montreal Hard Bop Four (July 6) and Kalmunity, Jazz Project (July 7).
The Festival, 24/7, thanks to
Bell
For all true fans, the
Festival is a year-round experience, thanks to Bell. With montrealjazzfest.com, everyone can stay constantly connected to the passion
of the music, whether before, during or after events. Video excerpts,
information on the artists, access to archives from previous editions of the
Festival, video channel (montrealjazzfest.TV, etc.—in short, it’s
the ideal online destination for every music fan. We remind you that the
Festival is on Facebook (facebook.com/montrealjazzfest) and Twitter (@mtljazzfestival) and that you can follow and experience every aspect of
it using mobile applications for iPhone
and, new this year, an Android version (montrealjazzfest.com/mobile).
Tickets
go on sale this Saturday, May 4 at noon
Exclusive pre-sale for Spectra Newsletter subscribers: starts tomorrow!
Exclusive pre-sale for Spectra Newsletter subscribers: starts tomorrow!
·
Place des Arts and Maison
symphonique de Montréal: 175 Ste. Catherine Street West; 514 842-2112,
1 866 842‑2112 or laplacedesarts.com
·
Métropolis and Savoy: 59
Ste. Catherine Street East; ticketmaster.ca, admission.com or 1 855 790-1245 — metropolismontreal.ca
·
L’Astral
(Maison du Festival Rio Tinto Alcan): 305 Ste. Catherine Street West; ticketmaster.ca, admission.com or 1 855 790-1245 — sallelastral.com
·
Gesù — Centre de créativité:
1200 De Bleury Street;
514 861-4036; admission.com or
1 855 790-1245 — legesu.com
·
Bateau-Mouche au Vieux-Port de Montréal: 55 St. Paul Street West; 514 849-9952 or
1 800 361-9952 — bateaumouche.ca
· Musée d’art contemporain de
Montréal: 185 Ste. Catherine Street West; ticketmaster.ca, admission.com or 1 855 790-1245 — macm.org
Get the jump on the crowd with the Infolettre Spectra and have the scoop on everything about the Festival
emailed right to your inbox. All the latest news, exclusive pre-sales,
discounts… and it’s all free when you simply subscribe by visiting infolettrespectra.ca.
Info-Jazz: indispensible
information tools
You can pick up the official free brochure Info-Jazz
Indoor Concert Schedule right now in concert venues, in most CD and bookstores,
in public spaces, major downtown businesses, Montreal tourist information centres,
and SAQ locations in Greater Montreal.
You can also call the Info-Jazz La Presse+
Line at 514-871-1881 or, toll
free, at 1 85JAZZFEST, or visit
montrealjazzfest.com.
Complete programming for free outdoor
concerts and activities at the 34th edition
of the Festival International de Jazz de Montréal will be
announced this coming June 4.
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