The Star Early Edition

ECLECTIC LINE-UP FOR JAZZ FESTIVAL

Theresa Smith takes a closer look. With only a handful of artists announced yesterday, the organisers behind next year’s 16th annual Cape Town Internatio­nal Jazz Festival are keeping mum about the headline acts.

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THE CAPE TOWN Internatio­nal Jazz Festival organisers are playing their cards close to their chest, if yesterday’s announceme­nt of next year’s line-up is any indication.

While the 20 band names released so far range from jazz stalwarts to hot newcomers, they seem to be leaving the identity of their headline acts for later.

Tickets for the annual Cape Town Internatio­nal Jazz Festival (CTIJF), which takes place on the weekend of March 27 and 28, go on sale from 9am today. If previous years are anything to go by, tickets will sell out fast, regardless.

Jazz enthusiast­s will have to wait until January 27 (when the next announceme­nt pertaining to the line-up will be made) to learn who will grace one of the five stages that will be set up at the Cape Town Internatio­nal Convention Centre.

That’s not to say the line-up announced so far is dull; it is anything but!

New York vocalist Amel Larrieux fuses a range of genres – R&B, soul, hip hop, jazz and folk - with flashes of Middle Eastern, West African and Indian styles. Another New Yorker who will be coming to the festival is Dutch-born pianist Gerald Clayton, the son of bassist and band leader, John Clayton.

Capetonian­s will surely turn out in their droves to finally catch up with Polish singer and songwriter, Basia. The vocalist establishe­d an internatio­nal career with her Latintinge­d jazz-pop crossover tunes and wide vocal range, beginning in the late ’80s when she was part of the trio Matt Bianco, with hits like Half

a Minute.

Another Cape Town favourite is Melanie Scholtz, who together with rapper Jitsvinger, will present Our

Time. She opened the Standard Bank Jazz Festival at this year’s National Arts Festival in Grahamstow­n and brought the house down with her collaborat­ion with the Afrikaans hip hop artist.

English tabla player and composer, and father of Asian electronic­a music, Talvin Singh, will collaborat­e with Indian sitar player, Purbayan Chatterjee.

Sons of Kemet are a band that cry out for a live experience, mixing as they do jazz, rock and Caribbean folk with touches of African-inspired music. Led by saxophonis­t, clarinetti­st, composer and “BBC New Generation Artist”, Shabaka Hutchings, Sons of Kemet feature Oren Marshall (Moondog, Radiohead) on tuba and Seb Rochford (Polar Bear, Babyshambl­es) and Tom Skinner (Zero 7, Matthew Herbert) on drums.

Bass guitarist Bänz Oester and his friends The Rainmakers improvise around original jazz compositio­ns, African polyrhythm­s, funky blues and obscure Swiss and Bulgarian folk tunes.

Pop trio Beatenberg exploded onto the local music scene earlier this year, prompting South Africans to ask, “who is Chelsea Blakemore?”

South African bassist and composer, Carlo Mombelli, is a lecturer at Wits, but will be coming to Cape Town for the festival with his quartet, The Storytelle­rs, featuring Kyle Shepherd on piano, vocalist Mbuso Khuzo and Kesivan Naidoo on drums.

English multi-reedist Courtney Pine drew on his soprano saxophone skills for his 2012 album House of

Legends, which is the name of his performanc­e at this festival. With that palbum Pine drew on his AfroCaribb­ean roots, revisiting calypso, soca, zouk and reggae and even bringing in South African rhythms into an electrifyi­ng be-bop dance party, so expect more of the same.

The Claude Cozens Trio from Cape Town will showcase hot new drummer Cozens, who plays with pianist Shepherd and electric bassist Benjamin Jephta. He recently released his debut album,

Jubilee Jam.

Swedish trio Dirty Loops are Jonah Nilsson on vocals and piano, Henrik Linder on bass and Aron Mellergård­h on drums. As their name suggests, they take pop songs and twist them with some funky sounds and jazzy slaps, creating videos that go viral online.

American post-bop trumpeter, Wallace Roney, will bring along his quintet, which will also feature jazz fusion drummer Lenny White and double bassist Buster Williams.

In their current configurat­ion South African performanc­e ensemble The Brother Moves On perform mainly as a band. They released a full-length album last year,

A New Myth, though their first musical offering is available from their website as a free download.

Durban guitarist Madala Kunene is the king of the Zulu blues, again an artist you want to experience live. Earlier this year he released an album, 1959, which features some Durban artists such as Guy Buttery and Lu Dlamini who would be a welcome addition to his performanc­e.

Sipho “Hotstix” Mabuse has a longstandi­ng link with the festival since he used to own Kippies, the legendary jazz venue that gives one of the festival stages its name. The musician and band leader has been performing for close to 50 years and still tours the world.

The current line-up of the Mahotella Queens feature singers Hilda Tloubatla, Nobesuthu Mbadu and Amanda Nkosi. Though the band have been together in some or other guise since 1964 and they were always prolific performers, very little of their earlier recordings are available.

Naima Kay is a new Afro-pop proponent with a wide vocal range from KZN, first discovered in her home town of Port Shepstone when she sang at the Ugu Jazz Festival.

On the developmen­tal side, the Delft

Big Band under the direction of Ian Smith and GrandWest Open Mic winner Zoe Modega will also take to the main stages.

Tickets: R860 for a weekend pass and R530 for a day pass from Computicke­t. Limited early bird weekend passes available. Rosies stage tickets: R30 a show, available from mid-February.

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 ??  ?? MADALA KUNENE
MADALA KUNENE
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 ??  ?? COURTNEY PINE
COURTNEY PINE
 ??  ?? AMEL LARRIEUX
AMEL LARRIEUX
 ?? PICTURES: SUPPLIED ?? SONS OF KEMET
PICTURES: SUPPLIED SONS OF KEMET
 ??  ?? BÄNZ OESTER QUARTET
BÄNZ OESTER QUARTET

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