Hauraki-Coromandel Post

Jazz fest to get things swinging

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The long-standing and widely beloved Port of Tauranga National Jazz Festival turns 61 this Easter and is celebratin­g with a dazzling programme of events that bring the swing to Tauranga Moana from March 23 to April 1.

Every year, the festival showcases performanc­es by some of the best jazz musicians in Australasi­a and the world alongside some of the country’s best emerging jazz musicians. The country’s longest-standing and best-regarded jazz festival brings thousands of people into the heart of Tauranga, including audience members and jazz lovers from across the country.

Festival manager Marc Anderson said, “The longevity of our event is an indicator of the power and timeless nature of jazz across generation­s. While the genre continues to evolve, and our artist base grows, at the same time, the classics and true heart of jazz music remain. Jazz lovers across the country plan their Easter holidays around our festival and the city welcomes our relaxed, cool, and grooving jazz festival crowds with open arms.”

The festival always opens with the three-day Wright Family Foundation National Youth Jazz Competitio­n, in which some of the most talented jazz artists from schools across the country meet and compete for the 23 coveted trophies and prizes which include cash prizes, as well as gold, silver, and bronze awards. The 46th competitio­n offers audience and participan­ts everything from performanc­es to workshops and jams from March 26 to 28 at Baycourt Community and Arts Centre.

The Katikati Jazz Street Party on Saturday, March 23 dishes up soulful sounds alongside food, market stalls and kids’ entertainm­ent.

The Baycourt Community and Arts Centre Jazz Festival programme offers some of the biggest names in jazz and soul from Aotearoa New Zealand and around the world. A powerhouse 18-piece all-girl jazz band from O¯ tautahi, All Girl Big Band, the multi-instrument­al Australian jazz legend James Morrison, New York city-based jazz guitarist and composer Russ Spiegel, “infectious­ly groovy neo-soul” (NZ Herald) artist Louis Baker with an epic band, and Tauranga’s own Akash Dutta each host special concerts.

In Blue Eyes – The Music of Frank Sinatra, opening March 23 to 28, New Zealand playwright April Phillips has created a touching storyline into which she has woven several Frank Sinatra classics.

The festival’s very own ‘French Quarter’, the family-favourite Jazz Village on Good Friday, delivers entertainm­ent for everyone in true New Orleans style. Featuring luscious big band jazz with the All-girl Big Band, fresh and exciting fusion jazz with the Michal Martyniuk Quartet, funky swingin’ jazz and blues with Shaken Not Stirred, poppy dancing tunes with Chill Winston, and red hot rhythm and blues with The Flaming Mudcats, audiences can also stroll through the funky shops, meander down bustling aisles of artisan market stalls, enjoy a wide variety of food and refreshmen­ts including wine and beer while they enjoy live music and make a day of it.

With the Speakeasy Supper, Kitchen Takeover and St Amand on The Strand will transport food and jazz lovers into the heart of a New York Speakeasy.

At the hugely popular Downtown Carnival on Saturday and Sunday, March 30 and 31, tens of thousands of jazz lovers immerse themselves in the vibrant sounds of New Zealand’s finest musicians performing live on multiple stages and in top-notch bars and restaurant­s in Tauranga city’s Strand, Wharf St, and Red Square.

The festival will close with Jazz at the Mount, a day of great music in the heart of Mount Maunganui’s main shopping area with bands that include Lockie Bennett Quartet, Big Tasty, Kokomo, Ke Lo Ke and Retrogroov­e.

To see the full Port of Tauranga National Jazz Festival 2024 programme, seek more informatio­n, or book tickets, please visit www.jazz.org.nz.

 ?? ?? The festival plays in Tauranga from March 23 to April 1.
The festival plays in Tauranga from March 23 to April 1.

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