Text Only
Search

 
Jazz Festival Draws International Crowd


06 September 2007
Watch Jazz Festival report / Windows Broadband - download   video clip
Watch Jazz Festival report / Windows Broadband  video clip
Watch Jazz Festival report / Windows Dialup - download   video clip
Watch Jazz Festival report / Windows Dialup  video clip

Vancouver played host again this summer to its 22nd International Jazz Festival. During the 10-day event at the end of June, a wide spectrum of music enlivened the city.  For Producer Michael Bai, Elaine Lu takes a look at the festival.

"There are tons of people every year,”  musician Jennifer Hodge says. ”A lot of people do come from out of town."

"This is my first time here,” musician Jackie Greene adds. “But it seems like the whole city is kind of involved.”

Vancouver Jazz Festival, musicians
Vancouver Jazz Festival performers
More than 1,800 musicians from 19 countries took part in this year's Vancouver International Jazz Festival, attracting more than a half million people. Swedish pianist and composer Sten Sandell was one of them. "I like it very much because it's more open-minded than many other festivals I've been to before."

Ken Pickering, the festival's artistic director, says openness is key to nurturing an international jazz community. "It's very important for us to be outward-looking, rather than parochial and inward-looking. So we are looking out into the world, and try to showcase the best of what we have, but also invite the world to our place."

Freddy Cole, the younger brother of the late jazz legend Nat King Cole, speaks of his affection for Vancouver. "Vancouver has a magic about it. The city is a wonderful city, and the people have always been very enthusiastic about the music."

Vancouver International Jazz Festival
Vancouver International Jazz Festival
Aside from the magic of the city, the festival's programming recognizes jazz music's ever-changing landscape by incorporating traditional and classic styles, as well as avant-garde expressions. The difference in how different musicians' define jazz reflects this experimental spirit.

Cole says, "Jazz ain't nothing but blues." Jazz singer Coco Zhao counters, "Jazz is just as is."

Media director John Orysik knows the allure of the word "international" for the festival. "That's what we are trying to do -- a global perspective on the music.  We take the word 'International' in our name very seriously.  When you come to the Vancouver International Jazz Festival, you are hearing international musicians performing.  Because we feel jazz is a global music now, it belongs to the world."

And the music played across the city during the festival, from concert halls to street corners, connected world-class musicians to a sprawling fan base.

emailme.gif E-mail This Article
printerfriendly.gif Print Version

  Top Story
North Korea Demands Apology After Naval Clash with South

  More Stories
Bomb Rocks Northwestern Pakistan
Obama to Visit Families of Fort Hood Shooting Victims
Officials Warn of Possible Collapse of Palestinian Authority
Hariri Names New Lebanese Government After Five Week Vacuum  Audio Clip Available
Clinton Urges 'Compassion' for Americans Detained in Iran  Audio Clip Available
Tropical Storm Ida Aims For US Gulf Coast;  State of Emergency in Effect
Berlin Wall Celebration Marked by Joy and Caution  Audio Clip Available
Obama Makes First China Tour as Economic Interdependence Grows  Video clip available
APEC Economies Report Improved Trade Finance, Discuss Free Trade  Audio Clip Available
Scientists Report Abnormal Sea Level Rises Off Western Australia  Audio Clip Available