Whanganui Chronicle

Celebratio­n of jazz

Fox leads workshop for Internatio­nal Jazz Day

- Georgie Ormond

Friday marked the 10th anniversar­y of Internatio­nal Jazz Day and it was the second time the milestone has been celebrated in Whanganui. The internatio­nal event was started by jazz legend Herbie Hancock, a goodwill ambassador for United Nations arm Unesco, who says the mutual co-operation needed to play jazz is a skill the world could use in everyday life.

Unesco is the acronym for United Nations Educationa­l, Scientific and Cultural Organisati­on. Its aim is to build peace through internatio­nal cooperatio­n across many discipline­s.

Jazz is one of several “internatio­nal days” Unesco hosts to mark human life and history.

“Jazz helps peace because jazz is like a language and we use language to share ideas to share knowledge, to share things with people that bring them together,” Unesco commission­er Vanisa Dhiru said.

“Unesco is the United Nations organisati­on that supports all the thinking around science culture and education.”

While jazz and science may seem worlds apart, Dhiru says it’s how you conceptual­ise science.

“Science is around making sure that people discover, that they learn, that we take learnings from science and apply them to everyday life.”

The event’s organiser and president of the Whanganui Jazz Club, Ken

Jazz helps peace because jazz is like a language and we use language to share ideas to share knowledge, to

share things with people that bring them

together.

Chernoff, said the event brings people together.

“From all walks of life, from all over the world to promote a kaupapa that is very important to the world today,” he said. “Which is communicat­ion, internatio­nal co-operation and initiative­s locally to get people together to promote intercultu­ral dialogue.”

Jazz maestro Rodger Fox led a workshop for school students during the day. He was pleased with the turnout. “We had about 30 students from around the area. Fifteen or 16 came across from Freyberg High

School in Palmerston North which is great,” he said.

“Most of them play in concert bands, brass bands and orchestras with a few playing jazz. It’s really giving them insight into what the music is all about. I think a lot of them think with the improvisat­ional side of jazz people just make it up, they don’t realise there is a formula to go through to actually be able to improvise, so that you are ‘in key’, as it were.”

A gala performanc­e was held at the Whanganui Collegiate Prince Edward Auditorium, with students sharing the stage with the pros — the Rodger Fox Band and WAI.TAI.

Whanganui is the only place in Aotearoa that formally celebrates Internatio­nal Jazz Day.

Unesco received funding from the New Zealand Government, Dhiru said.

“It’s part of the responsibi­lity of the New Zealand Government in being part of the Unesco family to make sure that we’ve got some resources here in New Zealand to help promote the objectives of Unesco.”

Unesco commission­er Vanisa Dhiru

 ?? Photo / Georgie Ormond ?? Rodger Fox led a workshop for school students in Whanganui on Internatio­nal Jazz Day.
Photo / Georgie Ormond Rodger Fox led a workshop for school students in Whanganui on Internatio­nal Jazz Day.

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