14 posts categorized "RIJF 2024"

JazzRochester at the 2024 RIJF: That's a wrap!

RIJFMediaPassNow that I've recovered from the nine days of the 2024 Rochester International Jazz Festival, and gained a bit of distance, I thought it was high time for me to out a wrapup post. I'm very happy with how the RIJF turned out, both for me and my listening and for JazzRochester. As I anticipated, the fact that I had heard a number of the artists in this year's lineup in past RIJFs and there were few "bucket lists" artists/groups this year freed me up to stretch my ears to new sounds. My picks for the festival did not fail me once (I made a choice not to hear one of them, but heard all the rest), and the timing occasionally let me slip in something from my "also check out" picks.

People kept asking me during the festival, "which show did you like the most"?  Can't pick one.  The standouts for me in this year's RIJF truly show the eclectic nature of the festival for those of us willing to try out new things. while also providing an opportunity to hear some of jazz music's major players, including:

  • Bill Charlap Trio is who I hear in my head when I think "piano trio". Charlap's selection of music was eclectic and their playing was sublime.
  • I had wanted to hear Edmar Casteneda play since I saw the YouTube video of his NPR "Tiny Desk Concert" in 2010. Castaneda's music, his lightning fast hands and his personality made the next hour a delight.
  • Although he has played in ROC before, I had not heard Joe Lovano's Trio Tapestry project so this was one of my "must hears". Lovano played with a rich and soul filled tone, always taking the music in unexpected directions. Pianist Marilyn Crispell’s playing was stunningly beautiful.
  • One unanticipated delight was the Jonathan Scales Fourchestra. I recounted in my post a steel drum band that played at the San Diego Wild Animal Park in my pick post, but their music was far from Trinidad or Mr. Buffet, and the band played a burning jazz set with Scales' pans that singing in and merging with drums and bass until it was like one sound. 
  • One thing this year was that the RIJF programming included some jazz players who are more "out" than the standard RIJF band. There have always been some, but this year it just appeared to be more than usual and I welcomed the opportunity to stretch my ears. One standout on this was East Axis. Their music had a lot going on if you listened closely or just let it wash over you in waves. I was entranced as the sounds cascaded around the space in Christ Church.
  • I was up on my feet with the rest of the crowd at Montage for Harold López-Nussa: Timba a la Americana after a burning set of this quartet with the piano of Lopez-Nussa and harmonica of Gregoire Maret.
  • Although I was familiar with Steve Bernstein and some of his players individually, he promised the second set of Steve Bernstein's Millennial Territory Orchestra was going to be more "dangerous" than the first, but the only danger was what music lay around the corner with Bernstein playing circus master and a slide trumpet as he and the MTO blew through their set that included originals and a triptych of Armstrong followed by the Grateful Dead, followed by Mingus, forming a "perfect Pythagorean balance."
  • Ghanaian drummer Paa Kow's Afro-Fusion Orchestra made it impossible to not move in my seat during their explosive, joyous and infectious 2 set. Sounded like a number of folks in the SRO crowd were also at the early set (and possibly the next day's sets as well).

In addition to hearing some great music and finding some new artists to check out more deeply, JazzRochester got some great exposure during this year's festival. The RIJF's social channels were sharing JazzRochester and during the festival I was interviewed by Dan Kushner of City Magazine for a online profile of me and JazzRochester in City News, The Jazz Concierge, which was published on July 2nd. Given that our purpose is to help build the community around jazz music the other 356 days of the year, that's a good thing and I hope that the support continues to guide jazz listeners (and musicians) to JazzRochester and live jazz around Rochester.

This post was originally published on JazzRochester.

For your listening pleasure, a playlist of JazzRochester picks for the 2024 RIJF....

For your listening pleasure, here's a Spotify playlist I put together of the artists and groups I've picked to hear at the 2024 Rochester International Jazz Festival, both those I heard and those I also noted in the Pick posts.  I tried to look for cuts from their most recent album to make sure it's more likely that what you hear here will be similar to what you'll hear (or have heard) at the RIJF.  They are basically nearly in date order for their appearances at the RIJF (or when I heard them, or will as the festival is just half over).  Once you get hooked, please give'em some love...

 

This post was originally published on JazzRochester.

JazzRochester at the RIJF: My picks for June 29, 2024

JUNE29.ONEFORALL_jrOn the last night of the CGI Rochester International Jazz Festival, I'll be taking a different path, both music-wise and venue-wise.  While you may want to try something different, here's where I'll be on June 29th, the last night of the RIJF:

  • Starting out with some straightahead for my first stop of the night and this is the group for that. Allstar leaders in their own right and young lions when this group formed, this "supergroup" One for All includes Jim Rotondi on trumpet, Eric Alexander on saxophone, David Hazeltine on piano, Steve Davis on trombone, John Webber on bass and Joe Farnsworth on drums. These guys recall the sounds of the 1960s jazz sextets on Blue Note Records that Art Blakey pioneered. One for All will be playing at the Theater at Innovation Square at 6:30 and 8:30 pm. 
  • My next stop will be "and now for something completely different" moment, like many I have at the RIJF, for Swedish trumpeter Oskar Stenmark Sextet-45 Riots.  The collective and record label 45 Riots serves NYC in performing and recording in many genres and has worked with Stenmark in bringing ancient traditional Swedish melodies to the light in new ways in his latest record (there's a track from that album on my playlist linked to below).  Oskar Stenmark Sextet will be playing in the Global Jazz Now series at the Christ Church at 7:30 and 9:30 pm.

This year I'm departing my usual approach of "sticking with the jazz" for a funkier end to the festival  You may believe or not, but I listen to a lot of different kinds of music and am not just a jazzhead. In fact, you might be surprised that my ringtone is The Meters' "Cissy Strut."   Because it is the 50 year anniversary of The Meters and two of the originals will be playing, I plan on joining the festival of funk that will be beginning at Parcel 5 for Rejuvenation 50! Celebrating The Meters With George Porter Jr., Leo Nocentelli, Ivan Neville & Dumpstaphunk, at the Wegmans Stage at Parcel 5 at 9:00 pm.  However, if there's rain or if my mind changes (or I'm not in the mood of hanging out with 1000s of my fellow Rochesterians), my enthusiasm may wane and I may avail myself of one of the alternatives below, which you may also choose to hit:

  • If I decide to come back to the jazz fold (or just leave early), I'll likely end un Max's of Eastman Place, as I often do by spending my last show of the last night of RIJF, to hear the Jorge Luis Pacheco Trio. While born in Cuba, his music is a "confluence of Cuban jazz, Cuban and Afro-Cuban music, American jazz, and classical music with a measure of contemporary pop and soul," which sounds like a great way to end the RIJF if this is the place I end up.  Pacheco's trio will be playing at Max's at 6:15 and 10:00 pm.
  • Sons of the great Dave Brubeck, the Chris and Dan Brubeck have been making music together since their childhood and have forged careers in jazz. While The Brubeck Brothers  hew to a straightahead approach to the music, like their father they explore different time signatures and integrating the music from their own times. Their reimagine of their father's tune "Take Five" on my playlist is an example of not just playing it "straight."  The Brubeck Brothers will be at Kilbourn Hall at 6:00 and 9:00 pm.
  • Others have told me I should check out the Doxas Brothers, but alas it will likely have to wait for the next time (hopefully).  They will be appearing at the Inn on Broadway at 5:30 and 7:30 pm.

I've included links to the RIJF page for each artist where you can check out the links to their websites and to their music on Spotify. I'm currently building an RIJF 2024 Spotify playlist with a track from recent albums that I could find for all of the picks I've made my picks (and others listed). Go give it a listen!

 

This post was originally published on JazzRochester.

JazzRochester at the RIJF: My picks for June 28, 2024

Smulyan_Oatts_Quartet_jrDuring night 8 of the CGI Rochester International Jazz Festival I'll be taking a bit of an unusual path of venues and music. While you may want to try something different, here's the path I'll be traveling on June 28th of the RIJF:

  • I'm going to start the night out with Cuban-born pianist and composer Harold López-Nussa: Timba a la Americana. I have always loved this music but am intrigued on how López-Nussa is deconstructing and reformulating how Cuban and Latin music has been played, on what and by whom. It should be a high-energy show to start out the evening and I love this music. Harold López-Nussa: Timba a la Americana will be playing at the Montage Music Hall at 6:00 and 10:00 pm.
  • Finally making it over to the new venue at the Inn on Broadway for the Gary Smulyan/Dick Oatts Quartet as two saxophones are always better than one, especially when one is a baritone.  Unless they were playing with someone else that I didn't catch (or just flat wrong...), I don't think either of these two masters of the sax have been to RIJF in the past. This will also be a great way to  check out the new venue.  The Gary Smulyan/Dick Oatts Quartet will be hitting the floor (I heard there is not a riser, so I can't say "stage") at the Inn on Broadway at 5:30 and 7:15 pm. 
  • I want to check out violinist Luca Ciarla's solOrkestra for the boundary pushing that I'm expecting based on reading and listening to his music. The "sol" in solOrkestra means Ciarla does all of this alone on stage using his instrument and an array of electronic looping and other effects to put together the "ensemble." This year I've been digging the way the sound works in the soaring sanctuary of the Christ Church, and in my opinion, the bands I've heard this year have really worked there (at least in comparison to some from other years but, of course, the musicians and others may disagree...). I believe that Ciarla's solOrkestra could be another good fit. Luca Ciarla's solOrkestra will, of course, be at the Global Jazz Now series at Christ Church at 7:30 and 9:30 pm.  He also appears in Hatch Recital Hall the next night at 5:45 and 7:45 pm.

There are some artists on this night who I wish I could hear (really, I'd like to hear so much more every night, but scheduling, my arthritic knees, and sheer exhaustion argue otherwise...) plus, given my choices above, you might want some alternatives. Here's some other choices:

  • One thing that makes my venue path different was that I didn't start out with the Jim Rotondi Quintet. As trumpeter Rotondi (and probably several of his quintet members) will likely be staying overnight and playing with One For All (Rotondi is a founding member), I opted to hear them and decided to forego Rotondi on the 28th (and now have given you a glimpse of the next pick post). The Jim Rotondi Quintet will be in Kilbourn Hall at 6:00 and 9:00 pm.
  • I just love gypsy jazz, but despite two opportunities couldn't make it out to hear the Django Festival All Stars.  They will be playing at the Rochester Regional Big Tent on the 28th at 8:30 and 10:00 pm. They also will be appearing in Kilbourn Hall at 6:00 and 9:00 pm on the 27th.  
  • The line in the description of Hazmat Modine draws me: "a uniquely intercontinental sonic collage encompassing a tremendous range of instrumental, vocal, and conceptual originality–all with a lot of soul and groove".  That is true.  However, it's just not to be and I caught a bit of their music the last time they were at the RIJF in 2010. Hazmat Modine will be playing at The Duke at 7:45 and 9:45 pm. They are also playing the Big Tent on the 27th at 8:30 and 10:00 pm.

I've included links to the RIJF page for each artist where you can check out the links to their websites and to their music on Spotify. I'm currently building an RIJF 2024 Spotify playlist with a track from recent albums that I could find for all of the picks I've made my picks (and others listed). Go give it a listen!

This post was originally published on JazzRochester.

JazzRochester at the RIJF: My picks for June 27, 2024

JUNE27.STEVENBERNSEINMillennialTerritoryOrchestra_jrNight 7 of the CGI Rochester International Jazz Festival is a voyage of discovery for me. While there has always been some portion of past jazz fests where artists are exploring a bit more than your average trad jazz fan is looking for, this year's lineup includes quite a lot more of that and appeals to the more adventurous among us (although there is still quite enough to slake the thirst of the more traditional minded). As you might expect from my earlier choices and the ones below, I kind of hop back and forth across that line. It's like with food. My wife eats the same, very healthy and nutritious meal every morning. I try to mix it up.  It's just who I am.  So, with that introduction, while you may want to try something different, here's where I'll be traveling on June 27th of the RIJF:

  • The description of Music For Roads was what hooked me.  This group of top European (and mostly Nordic ...)  musicians are attempting with this project to present the melting pot of landscape, culture, history and current political turmoil that is the U.S. through their "3D instrumental project" of  "immersive jazz," after touring over the years across the country (by car, I'd expect from the title of the project ... although it is also a nod to Brian Eno).  The music of Finnish musicians Tuomo Prättälä  and Markus Nordenstreng (known as Tuomo & Markus) is described as "Nordic American folk with jazz, soul and psychedelic influences." As here, they often work with virtuoso jazz trumpeter Verneri Pojhola on projects.  Listening to their music (the RIJF website links just to earlier work by Pojhola, but I've found and added a 2024 cut on the playlist linked from off an album that I think (hope)  sounds more like what we'll be hearing....). I look forward to what could be a strange, but beautiful trip, with some twang and psychedelia thrown in, although who knows... it could be something completely different. Music For Roads will be appearing at the Theater at Innovation Square at 6:30 and 8:30 pm.
  • Pianist/keyboardist Andy Milne came out of the M-Base Collective (an acronym for Macro–Basic Array of Structured Extemporizations), a musical "movement" organized in NYC by saxophonist Steve Coleman in which many artists have been involved. Milne was at the center of M-Base as a member of Coleman's group Five Elements for a while in the late 1990s and on over 10 projects after that. He appeared here with his band Dapp Theory at the 2007 RIJF.  Andy Milne & Unison is a newer project that returns to Milne's first love, the piano trio, with the bassist John Hébert and drummer Clarence Penn, in which they explore the "intersection of texture and groove." Their 2020 debut album "The ReMission" won a Juno (Canadian Grammy) for Best Album of the Year: Group. The RIJF site links to other music by Milne, but I've added a cut from his 2024 release of Andy Milne & Unison on the playlist I link to below. Andy Milne & Unison will be appearing at the Global Jazz Now series at Christ Church at 7:30 and 9:30 pm.
  • If you like your jazz big, irreverent, playful, created by a nonet of excellent musicians, and with jazz takes on songs you may know from the 20s and 30s through Motown, Prince and Sly and the Family Stone, then Steven Bernstein's Millennial Territory Orchestra should fit the bill.  As the quote from the Something Else! site exclaims, the MTO has "... the euphoric energy of the pre-Big Band-era territory jazz ensembles with the audacity of Downtown music and the memorable melodies of pop.” You may have heard Bernstein's group Sex Mob at RIJF way back in 2005; I've heard him play in town more recently with trombonist Joe Fiedler's group Open Sesame, which similarly mines the tunes of Sesame Street. The Millennial Territory Orchestra will be hitting the stage at the Temple Theater at 7:00 and 9:15 pm.  They'll also be playing the Theater at Innovation Square the next night, June 28th, at 6:30 and 8:30 pm.

There are some artists on this night who I wish I could hear (really, I'd like to hear so much more every night, but scheduling, my arthritic knees, and sheer exhaustion argue otherwise...) plus, given my choices above, you might want some alternatives. Here's some other choices:

  • As I noted for the night of the 26th, you can't go wrong with the Manuel Valera Trio, who will be appearing on the 27th at the Inn On Broadway at 5:30 and 7:15 pm, and The Levin Brothers, who on the 27th will be playing at The Wilder Room at 6:00 and 10:00 pm. 
  • Canadian pianist and singer/songwriter Laila Biali has been a Juno (Canada's Grammys) winner and nominee. Her band will include Eastman profs Christine Jensen (saxophone) and Jeff Campbell (bass). Her latest release is Your Requests, an album of standards based on the requests of her social media community. I've included a cut on the playlist from her prior album of her music, Juno nominated album "Out of Dust."  Laila Biali will be at Montage Music Hall at 6:00 and 10:00 pm. On the 28th, she'll also be appearing at Max at Eastman Place at 6:15 and 10:00 pm.

I've included links to the RIJF page for each artist where you can check out the links to their websites and to their music on Spotify. I'm currently building an RIJF 2024 Spotify playlist with a track from recent albums that I could find for all of the picks I've made my picks (and others listed). Go give it a listen!

This post was originally published on JazzRochester.

JazzRochester at the RIJF: My picks for June 26, 2024

Bill Charlap Trio, Photo: Philippe LEVY-STABNight 6 of the CGI Rochester International Jazz Festival .... Wednesday is over the "hump" for me at the RIJF. Looking forward from Wednesday, you realize there are only 3 more nights of the festival left and you feel most the exhaustion brought about by the preceding five nights. My Wednesday will follow a familiar path, venue-wise.  While you should do you, here's the acts I'll be hearing on Wednesday, June 26th of the RIJF:

  • Starting out with the Bill Charlap Trio in Kilbourn Hall, which is one of the best spaces to hear an excellent piano trio like this. Grammy-winner Charlap and his mates bassist Peter Washington and drummer Kenny Washington were a standout for me when they played in 2011. These three have been playing trio together for so long that they anticipate and  move as one through the music, whether it is a swinging standard or a quiet ballad. The Bill Charlap Trio will be playing Kilbourn Hall at 6:00 and 9:00 pm.
  • The next stop is in the UK at the Global Jazz Now series where the Alex Hitchcock Quartet is on offer. I'm pretty sure that saxophonist Hitchcock is not bringing the whole Dream Band (way more than a quartet), the music I heard from a very recent live album would be beautiful in the soaring spaces of Christ Church, but it he may show up with some members or some of the first call jazz players he works with here on this side of the pond.  Either way, I'm looking forward to hearing something and someone new (although there may be some familiar Brits in his band who have been at RIJF before.  Alex Hitchcock Quartet can be found at the Christ Church at 7:30 and 9:30 pm.
  • I'm going to finish up the night with vocalist (and Producer Pick) Ekep Nkwelle. She's a new voice on the scene.  Check out her singing and beautiful arrangement of Geri Allen's "Timeless Portraits and Dreams"with the Julliard Jazz Ensemble in 2022, included on NPR's Tiny Desk Concerts. Just the type of music to end a night in the Atrium at Max of Eastman Place, where she and her band will be presented at 6:15 and 10:00 pm.

There are some artists on this night who I wish I could hear but can't. Given my choices above, you might also want some alternatives. Here's some other choices:

  • If solo piano is more your style on this night, then you can't go wrong with Manuel Valera. While a purveyor of the infectious music and rhythms of Cuba with his working band New Cuban Express, he is just as comfortable with Monk. Valera will be appearing solo at ESM's Hatch Recital Hall at 5:45 and 7:45 pm. The Manuel Valera Trio will be playing sets the next night on June 27th at the Inn On Broadway at 5:30 and 7:15 pm. 
  • I have seen the Producer Pick the Levin Brothers several times as they appear around Rochester once in awhile due to connections in this part of the world (they were last year in December 2023, presented by the Bop Shop at the Lovin Cup). Bassist Tony Levin is a graduate of Eastman and is more known for his work with Peter Gabriel and the later version of King Crimson than for jazz, but he has major jazz chops. His brother Peter has played piano and keyboards on a host of jazz and pop albums. They both have played with a who's who of jazz luminaries.  Plus, from what other band else are you going to hear a jazz arrangement of King Crimson's "Matte Kudasi" (I saw King Crimson with Tony in college, and had that album ... yes, I wasn't always a jazzhead)? While I won't be hearing them this time around, the Levin Brothers be playing at Montage Music Hall at 6:00 and 10:00 pm. The next night, June 27th, they'll be at the Wilder Room at 6:00 and 10:00 pm. 
  • Cuban-born pianist Hilario Duran and his Trio is another option for those who want more mambo and other Cuban rhythms. I've heard Duran play a number of times at the festival (he has hailed from Toronto for a couple of decades so gets here relatively often), but he's an amazing pianist and his trio is outstanding.  The Hilario Duran Trio will be playing the Wilder Room at 6:00 and 10:00 pm.
  • Added June 25th: As I forgot to add his second date to the post for yesterday, you may have heard about the infectious and joyous performances by the Paa Kow Afro-Fusion Orchestra at the Montage on the 25th. I heard a number of people saying they were there for the early show.  They will also be playing at the Duke on the 26th at 7:45 and 9:45 pm.

I've included links to the RIJF page for each artist where you can check out the links to their websites and to their music on Spotify. I'm currently building an RIJF 2024 Spotify playlist with a track from recent albums that I could find for all of the picks I've made my picks (and others listed). Please go give it a listen.

This post was originally published on JazzRochester.

JazzRochester at the RIJF: My picks for June 25, 2024

JUNE25.JOE DYSONS LOOIK WITHIN_jrNight 5 of the CGI Rochester International Jazz Festival is shaping up to be one of those nights where I will be hearing a rich stew of music, each coming from a unique place on this globe. It's one of the things I love about this festival. Each will be a unique experience and from artists who I've (mostly) not heard before.  While you may want to try something different, here's where I'll be traveling on June 25th of the RIJF: 

  • After taking a night off from starting RIJF at Kilbourn, I'm heading back for drummer Joe Dyson's Look Within. Although I'm sure I've seen him working with others before (and probably caught him on HBO's series Treme), but not as a leader and his debut CD as a leader under the same title Look Within was a great listen. As Rob Shepard notes in a PostGenre interview with Dyson after release of the CD, the New Orleans-native's music "emphasizes not just the Crescent City in a broad sense but also his family, mentors, and the subcultures there which make it such a special place." His music include influences from his upbringing in the church (there are excerpts from his father's sermons on cuts of the CD) and things he experienced traveling the world with others as a sideman. Joe Dyson's Look Within will be at Kilbourn Hall at 6:00 and 9:00 pm.
  • After hearing them perform here in 2023, I'd like to get some more of the Oddgeir Berg Trio from Oslo, Norway (and it also gives me an opportunity to spell his name correctly). This year pianist Berg and his new trio are touring a new album, A Place Called Home, which is based on the sparsely-populated island of Rolla, where Berg's father was born and his family spent a lot of time exploring, exploring the "magic of nature, the spaces hidden in memory, and the bonds that family provides."  As their website's about page notes, and I confirm, the music of Oddgeir Berg Trio is "electroacoustic jazz with one leg in melancholy and the other in ecstasy." Oddgeir Berg Trio will be at the Global Jazz Now Series at Christ Church at 7:30 and 9:30 pm. 
  • From a Norwegian island, I'll then travel (sonically, at least... I'll only be walking to the nearby Montage) to Africa to hear Ghana-born drummer and composer, Paa Kow, who like many great African musicians before blends jazz and African music to create his own "Afro-Fusion" sound.  While I think the music will make me want to move, that's not possible at the Montage Music Hall where Paa Kow will be heard at 6:00 and 10:00 pm (which is probably good... you don't want to see me dance). And as a drummer many, many years back, there is that "custom, hand-carved, traditionally inspired Ghanaian drum set that is the only one of its kind in the world" his website describes, which I hope he's bringing along to the gig. 

There are some artists on this night who I wish I could hear (really, I'd like to hear so much more every night, but scheduling, my arthritic knees, and sheer exhaustion argue otherwise...) plus, given my choices above, you might want some alternatives:

  • I'll be seeing him later with his trio, but you might want to catch the amazing Bill Charlap, who will be playing solo in ESM's acoustically near perfect Hatch Recital Hall at 5:45 and 7:45 pm.
  • Vocalist and composer Michael Mayo, a Producer Pick, Mayo's CD Bones, his background and lineage (his parents are first-call musicians) promise an eclectic blend of jazz, ne0-soul, R&B, the Beach Boy's Pet Sounds, hip hop, drum & bass, and other influences. Mayo will be at the new The Duke venue at 7:45 and 9:45 pm. 
  • I love samba and the other music of Brazil. The great Verve album Getz/Gilberto is a favorite, so I regret not being able to fit in the Brazilian Jazz Quartet featuring Diego Figueiredo & Ken Peplowski. The two of them were at RIJF last year as well.  They will be playing in the Theater at Innovation Square at 6:30 and 8:30 pm. They also will be playing the night before in the Rochester Regional Health Big Tent at 8:30  and 10:00 pm, but Innovation Square may be better acoustically, which is why I have it here.

I've included links to the RIJF page for each artist where you can check out the links to their websites and to their music on Spotify. I'm currently building an RIJF 2024 Spotify playlist with a track from recent albums that I could find all my picks (and others listed). Go give it a listen. 

This post was originally published on JazzRochester.

JazzRochester at the RIJF: My picks for June 24, 2024

JUNE24.JOELOVANOTRIOTAPESTRY_jrNight 4 of the CGI Rochester International Jazz Festival will be pretty eclectic as well. Although you should do you in choosing your listening preferences for the evening, if you're interested, here are the artists on my itinerary for the fourth night of the 2024 RIJF:

  • Starting out with the Giveton Gelin Quartet.  I ended my 2023 Festival with Giveton Gelin and really enjoyed the set played by this young trumpeter, who hails from the Bahamas.  Might be nice to hear him earlier in the mix, so to speak. Giveton Gelin Quartet will be playing at the Montage Music Hall at 6:00 and 10:00 pm. They will also be at Max at Eastman Place on June 25th at 6:15 and 10:00 pm.
  • In my 2022 wrap-up post A tonic for my soul, if not my body ... JazzRochester's 2022 Rochester International Jazz Festival, I noted that Finnish bassist Kaisa Mäensivu's Kaisa's Machine was one of the standouts that year.  The music of Kaisa's Machine is described in the NYC Jazz Record as an "Energetic bebop that could have just easily wafted out of a hole-in-the-wall NYC bar." It's more than that and should be a treat in the sonic space of Christ Church.  Kaisa's Machine will be playing the Global Jazz Now series at Christ Church at 7:3o and 9:30 pm.
  • Ending the third night with Joe Lovano's Trio Tapestry, with pianist Marilyn Crispell and drummer Carmen Castaldi, is just one of many groups master saxophonist Lovano has played with, but these three musicians really sing.  Their most recent ECM record Our Daily Bread is introspective, lyrical and full of quiet power.  Trio Tapestry plays the Temple Theater at 7:00 and 9:15 pm. 

There are a couple I wish I had time to hear (or could be in more than one place at a time) and, given my choices above, you may want to choose:

  • Coming out of Eastman School of Music many years ago, drummer Jared Schonig is bringing some or all of his "Two Takes" recordings back "home" this year.  These were a quintet and big band recordings that received a lot of praise.   One of the big band numbers is titled "Gibbs St.," which is affectionately known as Jazz Street during RIJF.  This is one I'm going to really miss missing (or maybe I'll get there ... who knows?).  A Producer Pick, Jared Schonig "Two Takes" is at the Theater at Innovation Square at 6:30 and 8:30 pm.
  • If you're looking for some of that piano trio straight ahead groove with some funk thrown in the mix, you can't go wrong with the Jae Sinnett Trio.  If Randy Brecker is still around, perhaps there will be some Quartet action as he is part of Sinnett's Zero to 60 Quartet?  The Jae Sinnett Trio plays the Wilder Room at 6:00 and 10:00 pm and on June 25th at the Inn on Broadway at 5:30 and 7:15 pm . 

I've included links to the RIJF page for each artist where you can check out the links to their websites and to their music on Spotify. I'm currently building an RIJF 2024 Spotify playlist with a track from recent albums that I could find all my picks (and others listed). Go give it a listen. 

Later edit: Now I know to be careful when I use a previous day's post as a template for the next day. I've adjusted the intro paragraph accordingly. Plus, a couple of artists are playing in two venues over two days, so added those. 

This post was originally published on JazzRochester.

You can hear them the other 356 days of the year, but these local musicians will also be appearing at the 2024 RIJF!

RIJF_cgi_Logo_COLOR_jrThe Rochester International Jazz Festival explodes onto the scene every June, bringing a global spotlight to our city's vibrant music scene. While it's tempting to get swept up in the whirlwind of national and international musicians, let's not forget the incredible talent we have right here in our own backyard!

Rochester boasts a thriving jazz community, from budding high school ensembles to seasoned professionals and nationally-recognized artists who call this city home. Many of these local musicians grace the RIJF stages, offering a chance to experience their music firsthand. Sure, I focus my "picks" on those who you don't get to hear in Rochester often (or at all), but sometimes catch some in between Club Pass hopping. Fact is, this site is dedicated to championing Rochester's live jazz scene the other 356 days of the year. So every year, I compile a list of these local jazz and other musicians performing during RIJF. This way, you can discover the next big name before they hit the national stage or revisit a local favorite you know and love. Plus, on Wednesdays during the festival, I'll highlight some of these musicians playing gigs outside the official RIJF footprint, giving you even more opportunities to experience Rochester homegrown jazz.

Below are the local musicians, jazz and otherwise, who will be appearing at the RIJF this year (let me know if I missed any and I'll get them in here). Check out their Artists pages on the RIJF site for more information. 

Friday, June 21st

  • Harley School Jazz Band @ City of Rochester Jazz Street Stage presented by the Community Foundation, 3:45 pm
  • Penfield High School Jazz Band @ City of Rochester Jazz Street Stage presented by the Community Foundation, 4:30 pm
  • Pittsford Sutherland High School Jazz Band @ City of Rochester Jazz Street Stage presented by the Community Foundation, 4:30 pm
  • Bob Sneider and Paul Hofmann Play the Music of Pat Metheny and Lyle Mays @ ESM, Hatch Recital Hall (Club Pass), 5:45 & 7:45 pm
  • Eastman Youth jazz Orchestra with Herb Smith @ City of Rochester Jazz Street Stage presented by the Community Foundation, 6:00 pm
  • All In Brass Band @ Rochester Regional Health Care Big Tent, 6:00 pm
  • Bad Sneakers @ Wilder Room (Club Pass), 6:00 & 10:00 pm
  • Cinnamon Jones @ Wegmans Pavilion, 7:00 & 9:00 pm

Saturday, June 22nd

  • Webster Thomas High School Jazz Band @ City of Rochester Jazz Street Stage presented by the Community Foundation, 3:45 pm
  • Glenelg High School Jazz Band (Columbia, MD) @ City of Rochester Jazz Street Stage presented by the Community Foundation, 4:30 pm
  • School of the Arts Jazz Band @ City of Rochester Jazz Street Stage presented by the Community Foundation, 5:15 pm
  • Sofrito Latin Jazz Quartet @ Inn on Broadway (Club Pass), 5:30 & 7:15 pm
  • ESM Jazz Honors Unit 1 @ City of Rochester Jazz Street Stage presented by the Community Foundation, 6:00 pm
  • 78 RPM Big Band @ Rochester Regional Health Care Big Tent, 6:00 pm
  • Chris Beard Band @ Headliner Series, City of Rochester Jazz Street Stage presented by the Community Foundation, 7:00 pm

Sunday, June 23rd

  • Honeoye Falls-Lima High School Jazz Band @ City of Rochester Jazz Street Stage presented by the Community Foundation, 3:45 pm
  • Webster Schroeder High School Jazz Band @ City of Rochester Jazz Street Stage presented by the Community Foundation, 4:30 pm
  • Pittsford-Mendon High School Jazz Band @ City of Rochester Jazz Street Stage presented by the Community Foundation, 5:15 pm
  • Harold Danko @ ESM, Hatch Recital Hall (Club Pass), 5:45 & 7:45 pm
  • New Horizons Jazz Ensemble directed by Don Sherman @ Rochester Regional Health Care Big Tent, 6:00 pm
  • Ryan Johnson & Escape Terrain @ Wegmans Pavilion, 7:00 & 9:00 pm
  • Bill Tiberio Band @ The Duke (Club Pass), 7:45 & 9:45 pm

Monday, June 24th

  • Trio 55 @ Central Library of Rochester and Monroe County, 115 South Ave., 12:00 pm
  • Brighton High School Jazz Band @ City of Rochester Jazz Street Stage presented by the Community Foundation, 3:45 pm
  • Bloomfield High School Jazz Ensemble @ City of Rochester Jazz Street Stage presented by the Community Foundation, 4:30 pm
  • Spencerport High School Jazz Band @ City of Rochester Jazz Street Stage presented by the Community Foundation, 5:15 pm
  • ESM Jazz Honors Unit 2 @ City of Rochester Jazz Street Stage presented by the Community Foundation, 6:00 pm
  • Penfield Big Band @ Rochester Regional Health Care Big Tent, 6:00 pm
  • The Honey Smugglers @ Wegmans Pavilion, 7:00 & 9:00 pm
  • RIJF-ESM Scholarship Concert @ City of Rochester Jazz Street Stage presented by the Community Foundation, 7:30  & 9:30 pm

Tuesday, June 25th

  • Hanna PK @ Central Library of Rochester and Monroe County, 115 South Ave., 12:00 pm
  • Greece Arcadia High School Jazz Band @ City of Rochester Jazz Street Stage presented by the Community Foundation, 4:30 pm
  • Fairport High School Jazz Band @ City of Rochester Jazz Street Stage presented by the Community Foundation, 5:15 pm
  • New Horizons Big Band, directed by Priscilla Todd Brown @ City of Rochester Jazz Street Stage presented by the Community Foundation, 6:00 pm
  • Gate Swingers Big Band @ Rochester Regional Health Care Big Tent, 6:00 pm
  • Music Educators Big Band @ City of Rochester Jazz Street Stage presented by the Community Foundation, 7:30  & 9:30 pm

Wednesday, June 26th

  • Simon Fletcher @ Central Library of Rochester and Monroe County, 115 South Ave., 12:00 pm
  • Canandaigua High School Jazz Band @ City of Rochester Jazz Street Stage presented by the Community Foundation, 4:30 pm
  • Greece Athena High School Jazz Band @ City of Rochester Jazz Street Stage presented by the Community Foundation, 5:15 pm
  • ECMS Faculty with Special Guest Vocalists @ City of Rochester Jazz Street Stage presented by the Community Foundation, 6:00 pm
  • Brockport Big Band @ Rochester Regional Health Care Big Tent, 6:00 pm
  • Group Ife @ Headliner Series, Wegmans Stage at Parcel 5, 7:o0 pm
  • Black Rabbit @ Wegmans Pavilion, 7:00 & 9:00 pm
  • Rochester Metro Jazz Orchestra @ City of Rochester Jazz Street Stage presented by the Community Foundation, 7:30  & 9:30 pm

Thursday, June 27th

  • Jimmie Highsmith, Jr. @ Central Library of Rochester and Monroe County, 115 South Ave., 12:00 pm
  • Greece Olympia High School Jazz Band @ City of Rochester Jazz Street Stage presented by the Community Foundation, 3:45 pm
  • Victor High School Jazz Band @ City of Rochester Jazz Street Stage presented by the Community Foundation, 4:30 pm
  • West Irondequoit High School Jazz Band @ City of Rochester Jazz Street Stage presented by the Community Foundation, 5:15 pm
  • ECMS Jazz Alumni @ City of Rochester Jazz Street Stage presented by the Community Foundation, 6:00 pm
  • Hilton High School Jazz Band @ Rochester Regional Health Care Big Tent, 6:00 pm
  • Miller & the Other Sinners @ Headliner Series, Wegmans Stage at Parcel 5, 7:00 pm
  • Sonidos Unidos @ Wegmans Pavilion, 7: 00 & 9:00 pm

Friday, June 28th

  • Jazz Generation @ Central Library of Rochester and Monroe County, 115 South Ave., 12:00 pm
  • Mike Kaupa Jazz Workshop (Trumpet) @ ESM, Ray Wright Room, 1:00 pm (bring your instrument)
  • Monroe Community College Jazz Band @ City of Rochester Jazz Street Stage presented by the Community Foundation, 4:30 pm
  • Joey Stempien Big Band@ City of Rochester Jazz Street Stage presented by the Community Foundation, 5:15 pm
  • Mike Kaupa's ECMS Ensembles Saturday Ensemble & Junior Jazz @ City of Rochester Jazz Street Stage presented by the Community Foundation, 6:00 pm
  • Greece Jazz Band @ Rochester Regional Health Care Big Tent, 6:00 pm
  • Latriste & Frequency @ Headliner Series, Wegmans Stage at Parcel 5, 7:00 pm
  • Judah Sealy @ Wegmans Pavilion, 7: 00 & 9:00 pm
  • Al Chez & The Brothers of Funk @ City of Rochester Jazz Street Stage presented by the Community Foundation, 7:30 & 9:30 pm

Saturday, June 29th

  • Eastridge High School Jazz Band @ City of Rochester Jazz Street Stage presented by the Community Foundation, 3:45 pm
  • Palmyra-Macedon High School Jazz Band @ City of Rochester Jazz Street Stage presented by the Community Foundation, 4:30 pm
  • Gates-Chili High School Jazz Band @ City of Rochester Jazz Street Stage presented by the Community Foundation, 5:15 pm
  • ESM Jazz Honors Unit 3 @ City of Rochester Jazz Street Stage presented by the Community Foundation, 6:00 pm
  • New Horizons Jazz Ensemble, directed by Don Sherman @ Rochester Regional Health Care Big Tent, 6:00 pm
  • Prime Time Brass Band @ Headliner Series, Wegmans Stage at Parcel 5, 7:00 pm
  • The Pickle Mafia @ Wegmans Pavilion, 7:00 & 9:00 pm
  • Majestics @ Roots & Americana Series at the Little Theatre, 7:00 & 9:15 pm

Additionally, Bob Sneider or Mike Cottone will be leading the Squeezers Jam Sessions every night starting at 10:30 pm at the Hyatt Regency Rochester, which often attracts other artists appearing at the RIJF to sit in with the house band. I believe that parking in the Hyatt lot is free with validation.

Check my Wednesday posts on June 19th & 26th to find where some of them might be playing outside the RIJF. 

 

This post was originally published on JazzRochester.

JazzRochester at the RIJF: My picks for June 23, 2024

JUNE23.KEEZER_LOCKE_SMITH_jrNight 3 of the CGI Rochester International Jazz Festival will be pretty eclectic, although ending with something familiar (or should I say someone...). By the third day I hope to be getting acclimated to the rhythm of the festival, so to speak. I'm going all nine days so have to pace myself.  So, although you should do you in choosing your listening preferences for the evening, if you're interested here are the artists on my itinerary for the third night of the 2024 RIJF:

  • I remember being floored when I first heard Columbian-born jazz harpist Edmar Castañeda on National Public Radio's Tiny Desk Concert in 2010, listening to the intricate tapestry that he was creating with his hands just flying over the strings.  I've never had an opportunity to hear him play live, until now.... His most recent, and 8th, album as a leader is Viento Sur with his nine-musician World Ensemble. Edmar Castañeda will be in Kilbourn Hall at 6:00 and 9:00 pm.
  • East Axis will be challenging for some, but while "out" or avant-garde jazz is not unknown at the RIJF, it is refreshing to have this and other more "out" artists in the lineup. However, as the notes on their RIJF artist page quote, East Axis an “avant-garde band for those who are afraid of the avant-garde,” a quartet of monster musicians that includes multi-instrumentalist Scott Robinson, Matthew Shipp on piano, Kevin Ray on bass, and Gerald Cleaver on drums. There is so much going on in this music, which can range from subtle beauty to cacophony (although even with the latter there is a lot of structure in that apparently lack of structure). I encourage you to take a chance and give your ears some exercise.  East Axis will be filling the space in Christ Church at 7:30 and 9:30 pm.
  • The last show of the night will for me be like a comfortable shoe ... or not.  Locke/Keezer/Smith is Rochester-raised vibist Joe Locke, pianist Geoffrey Keezer and trumpeter Tommy Smith.  I've seen Joe Locke in many different groups when he has come to town to play the RIJF at least 9 times since his first n the beginning, and also once in NYC at Dizzy's with Kenny Washington.  He's worked with Tommy Smith and the Scottish National Jazz Orchestra that Smith leads.  While I sometimes pass on artists who I've heard at the RIJF so I can get out to hear something different,  Joe Locke is always exploring and always brings something new and I believe that will be assured with these great musicians together. Comfortable shoes or not, Locke/Keezer/Smith will be at the Temple Theater at 7:00 and 9:15 pm

There are a couple I wish I had time to hear (or could be in more than one place at a time) and, given my eclectic choices above, you may want to choose:

  • I've always loved jazz flute and will miss hearing flutist Andrea Brachfield and Insight, who will grace the new Club Pass venue at The Inn on Broadway at 5:30 and 7:15 pm.
  • Closing out an evening at the RIJF with a piano trio at Max is always a nice, but that's not on my dance card on the third night, so I'm going to miss the Franck Amsallem Trio, who will be playing in the Atrium of Max of Eastman Place at 6:15 and 10:00 pm.

I've included links to the RIJF page for each artist where you can check out the links to their websites and to their music on Spotify. I'm currently building an RIJF 2024 Spotify playlist with a track from recent albums that I could find all my picks (and others listed). Go give it a listen. 

This post was originally published on JazzRochester.

JazzRochester at the RIJF: My picks for June 22, 2024

JUNE22.GROOVERQUARTET_jrMy second night at the CGI Rochester International Jazz Festival will be taking a few more risks. But, as I said in my post about the first night of RIJF, that's often what I'm looking (or "hearing?) for, especially since there are fewer "bucket list" performances to catch.  I love hearing new things and taking my ears in directions where they may not have gone before. Of course, you should do you. However, if you're interested, here are the artists/groups I am aiming to hear on the second night of the 2024 RIJF:

  • Many years ago, while I was in high school, and for a couple of summers during college. I worked at what was then called the San Diego Wild Animal Park (my family lived nearby in Escondido, CA). During those summers there was a steel drum band, with some great musicians, that would play at various locations around the park. I could hear them as I worked and remember those steel pans (they had at least 6, plus various djembes and other drums) and it became part of the background of those summers, upon which I still think back and smile. But enough history... that is what tweaked my interest in the Jonathan Scales Fourchestra as I was curious bringing that very unique sound of the steel pans (or drums) into jazz, along with some rock, funk and hip hop influences. Not your grandfather's "sounds of Trinidad."  I couldn't fit them in when they were at RIJF in 2022. The Jonathan Scales Fourchestra will be in the Wilder Room at 6:00 and 10:00 pm.
  • Anyone that watches my Instagram feed of images from live jazz performances during the year knows that I like to stretch my ears to hear some sounds that are more "out", often doing it at concerts presented by Bop Shop Records. The aRT Trio--Pheeroan akLaff, Scott Robinson and Dr. Julian Thayer--are likely to bring my ears some exercise. Based on descriptions and my look on the interwebs, my exercise may also include the eyes as the aRT Trio incorporates a multimedia experience into its music. The arT Trio will be playing at the Global Jazz Now venue in Christ Church at 7:30 and 9:30 pm. This won't be for everyone, but it definitely is worth checking out, especially in the grandeur and resonance of this venue ... if you dare. The link on the RIJF's website is for EastAxis, who are playing on Sunday at the church (and include Scott Robinson) ... more about them in a later post perhaps?
  • To get a bit of grounding back in the "soul" of jazz, I'm finishing off the night with The Groover Quartet. Keyboardist Michael LeDonne, saxophonist Eric Alexander, guitarist Peter Bernstein and drummer Joe Farnsworth have all been to RIJF before on their own as leaders and in various groupings (and I've heard most of them...). This powerhouse quartet will bring a deep, smoky groove for the late night for me after stretching my ears in several directions. The Groover Quartet will be in the Temple Theatre at 7:15 and 9:15 pm (and on Sunday, June 23rd in the Innovation Theater at 6:30 and 8:30 pm). Only question is whether there will be a vintage Hammond B-3 and Leslie Box to get that sound....

I'm going to miss a few I'd love to hear and, given my eclectic choices above, you may want to choose:

  • Gwilym Simcock & Tommy Smith are going to be great, but I've heard both of them before (Tommy is at RIJF many years; Gwilym has been twice). They are both fantastic on their own, it should be a powerful concert together. Simcock and Smith will be gracing the stage of Kilbourn Hall at 6:00 and 9:00 pm.
  • As I already had a organ quartet on my dance card, I'm going to have to miss the Nick Hempton Organ Quartet, but if you're looking for more of that sound you can check them out at 6:00 and 10:00 pm in Montage Music Hall.
  • For those who want some of that western swing of Bob Wills & His Texas Playboys, with one ore more twists, you may want to check out the "fearless smashing-together of genres" Producer Pick The Brain Cloud, who will be hitting the stage at The Little Theatre's Theatre One at 7:00 and 9:15 pm (and on Sunday, June 23rd in the Montage Music Hall at 6:00 and 10:00 pm).

I've included links to the RIJF page for each artist where you can check out the links to their websites and to their music on Spotify. I'm currently building a Spotify playlist of a track from a recent albums I could find by all my picks (and others listed), if you want to check it out.

This post was originally published on JazzRochester.

JazzRochester at the RIJF: My picks for June 21, 2024

Image of ArtemisAnd away we go . . . time to get these 2024 RIJF posts started! I and my alter ego JazzRochester will be coming out for CGI Rochester International Jazz Festival, June 21st through the 29th. All 9 days, baby!  Like last year there are fewer "bucket list" concerts this year, which is not a bad thing in my book. I've heard plenty of my "bucket list" jazz artists and groups over the years of attending the festival (and elsewhere), although there are still some I hope to hear. 

At the RIJF you are often confronted with many options, pulling you in different directions musically, but you do have to choose. Some of these choices are imposed on you by timing, some by lines, some by sheer accident after hearing raves about an artist you didn't even have on your radar. As RIJF Producer John Nugent's oft repeated adage goes . . . "It's not who you know, it's who you don't know." I've included links to the RIJF page for each artists where you can check out their websites and music on Spotify and decide for yourself. 

So, you do you, but if you're interested, here are some of the artists/groups I am aiming to hear on the first night of the 2024 RIJF:

  • Like almost every RIJF, I'll be starting my first night of the festival in Kilbourn Hall to hear Artemis, the 2023 Downbeat Jazz Group of the Year and the Jazz Journalist Association's Mid-Size Ensemble of the Year in 2024. The label's leader Don Was, after hearing them at the Newport Jazz Festival, noted that "these incredible musicians dwell in the rarefied air of bands whose whole is greater than the sum of its already sublime parts." The women of Artemis weave together straight-ahead jazz, more contemporary influences, and a lot of improvisation. Founded in 2017, this group features pianist  Renee Rosnes, trumpeter Ingrid Jensen, tenor saxophonist Nicole Glover, alto saxophonist/flutist Alexa Tarantino, bassist Noriko Ueda, and drummer Allison Miller, all who are accomplished composers and bandleaders in their own right. Each member brings her own distinct voice to the mix. Two members have additional connections to Rochester, both related to the Eastman School of Music. Tarantino graduated with a Bachelor's degree from Eastman; Jensen is the sister of saxophonist Christine Jensen, who is now an Assistant Professor of Jazz Studies & Contemporary Media at Eastman. Artemis will be playing in Kilbourn Hall at 6:00 and 9:00 pm (remember to get your wrist band for the 6:00 pm show).
  • The Nasser/Premazzi Quartet is one of those "it's not who you know" choices I mention above, as pianist Simona Premazzi and saxophonist Kyle Nasser are new to me. However, from what I read and have listened to, their music will be weaving modern influences with a deep respect for the tradition of jazz, which is just what my ears are looking for. The Nasser/Premazzi Quartet is playing in the Global Jazz Now series at Christ Church at 7:30 and 9:30 pm
  • I will round out my first night with RIJF Festival Producer Pick Christie Dashiell Quartet, who will be gracing the stage at Max of Eastman Place at 6:15 and 10:00 pm. This will be a classic RIJF evening for me. Starting in Kilbourn, ending in Max.  As a singer and composer, Dashiell is mining a lot of music--jazz, R&B, gospel and soul--that pulls at my strings.  

But I don't come out of these choices unscathed.  I'm going to miss a few other artists/groups who I'd love to hear or have been suggested by the festival's Producers (although I may end up hearing one given how things sometimes happen at RIJF). These are:

  • Fiery pianist Connie Han with her trio, who will be at the Montage Music Hall at 6:00 and 10:00 pm. If by the end of the night I'm not feeling like vocals, I may close out the night with Ms. Han.  Connie Han will also be playing solo piano at the ESM Hatch Recital Hall the next night at 5:45 and 7:45 pm
  • The trio of Allison, Cardenas & Nash (Ben Allison, Steve Cardenas and Ted Nash), all award-winning artists in their own right, will be collaborating at the new venue at the Inn On Broadway at 5:30 and 7:15 pm
  • Sometimes I just want something a bit ... different. Electric Kif may fit that bill at the new venue The Duke across from Parcel 5 at 7:45 and 9:45 pm, and then next day in the Rochester Regional Healthcare Big Tent at 8:30 and 10:00 pm
  • Producer Picks of jazz for the first night also include the outstanding Stanley Jordan playing Hendrix at Temple Theater at 7:00 and 9:15 pm and the Benny Bennack III Quartet at the Big Tent at 8:30 and 10:00 pm (and on Saturday at the Theater at Innovation Square at 6:30 and 8:30 pm).
This post was originally published on JazzRochester.

As we head towards May, my mind starts drifting into jazz in June: A quick intro to the Rochester International Jazz Festival

CGI RIJF logoIt's been a month since CGI Rochester International Jazz Festival Producers Marc Iacona and John Nugent announced the lineup today for the 21st Edition of the RIJF at a news conference at the Inn on Broadway, one of two new Club Pass Series venues this year, and I thought it was time that I quit procrastinating and start the coverage in JazzRochester. The nine-day festival, a leading jazz festival globally, is just over the horizon, running from Friday, June 21 to Saturday, June 29, at 20 indoor and outdoor venues, all within walking distance in downtown Rochester's East End cultural district.  So here's a quick introduction to the festival....

What can you expect at the RIJF? A wildly diverse selection of music, of course! Lots of it. In addition to a LOT of jazz, there will be sounds brought to you by more than 1750 artists coming from 16 countries to play in 326 concerts, including 100-plus free shows. [This year's artists} are coming from sixteen countries, including Canada, England, Scotland, Cuba, France, Bahamas, Finland, Sweden, Norway, Ghana, Spain, Cameroon, Columbia, Sierra Leone, Brazil, the U.S. and right here in Rochester, NY. As in other years, the music at the RIJF ranges from the headliners playing in Kodak Hall at Eastman Theatre and five nights of free headliner shows outdoors, four on the Wegmans Stage at Parcel 5, and one on the City of Rochester Stage at East & Chestnut. This year the Club Pass Series features 216 shows at 12 venues, including two new ones: the historic Inn on Broadway and The Duke, a new entertainment space in Sibley Square adjacent to the Mercantile on Main Street.  Jam sessions will be held nightly at 10:30 pm at the Hyatt Regency Rochester's Astor on Main, sponsored by the Dimarco Group. Jams will be MC'd by trumpeter Mike Cottone on Fridays and Saturdays and guitarist Bob Sneider on Sunday through Thursday.

The RIJF Ticket Shop will move this year due to construction at the usual location at the corner of Gibbs St. and East Ave. The Ticket Shop will be open in the Kilbourn Hall Box Office at 26 Gibbs St. for ticket sales and Club Pass ticket redemption from June 17th to 20th from Noon to 5:00 pm and noon to 4:00 pm on June 21st. During the Festival, it will be located in the Merchandise Tent on Gibbs Street, which will be open June 21-29 from 4:00-11:00 pm daily.

I'm there all nine days, baby! For what it's worth, I will soon start publishing some posts setting out the the artists I'm planning on taking my ears to each night of the festival. Of course, to some extent, those picks will be wishful thinking due to scheduling conflicts or the fact I can no longer sprint between venues (if I ever could), or my knees (I'm getting one replaced in July) or other parts of me may give out.  Sure, it's not all jazz, and some of the jazz may not be to your liking, but it is a chance to hang out with thousands of fellow Rochesterians and folks from all over the world, listening to music, eating some food, drinking some beverages.  If you keep your ears open, I promise you you'll hear something you like and, more than likely, come back again in 2025. I'll pass along other news as it comes, which you can always find on the RIJF 2024 category link in the right panel.

This post was originally published on JazzRochester.

Dreaming of June while we go out to hear ... Live jazz around Rochester, NY, October 26 through November 1

Image of neon jazz club signBelieve it or not, it's time to think about June (and wouldn't you like to think about something other than the next few months of snow?). Club Passes for the 2024 Rochester International Jazz Festival, hitting ROC's streets downtown from June 21 to 29, go on sale on Friday at 10:00 am with early bird pricing (until the end of the year).  I'm told they make great holiday gifts.

Click on the link below and you will find the listings I've gathered for live jazz in and around Rochester for the next seven days, plus listings through October and now November after the "fold." Please let me know when you hear about any gigs that I've missed here (see the Contact Us link above). 

Continue reading "Dreaming of June while we go out to hear ... Live jazz around Rochester, NY, October 26 through November 1" »

This post was originally published on JazzRochester.