By Gregory Burrus | Posted Thursday, January 20, 2022
“Winter Jazzfest illustrates just why the City is aptly known as the Jazz capital of the world.”
It’s on now and it’s smoking hot!
Getting from New Jersey to New York is easy. However, getting to enjoy the full scope of the NYC Winter Jazzfest performances is always a challenge for many reasons. So let’s meet the Jazzfest happening right across the water. The New York Times praised the last in-person Winter Jazzfest for growing from its original one-day single-location program, to a 2020 itinerary that spanned 21 stages over eleven nights, in Downtown Manhattan and Brooklyn, featuring over 700 artists, and more than 170 groups. Winter Jazzfest is an unparalleled experience for educated consumers of jazz, experimental sound, and global creative impulses. In 2020, that meant welcoming 17,000 deeply engaged audience members. Yes, Winter Jazzfest is a beacon of the New York City jazz scene, gathering leading musicians from around the world.
Rolling Stone magazine described it this way:
“New York’s annual Winter Jazzfest marathon can be a mad scramble. For two nights in freezing January, dozens of groups in every imaginable style take over various downtown venues. Sets overlap, venues span nearly the whole width of downtown Manhattan from Alphabet City to Soho, crowds can swell to capacity, and if you’re trying to see everything, you might come away vexed.”
Having lived on the waterfront in Jersey City for over 5 years, I can vouch for the fact New York is part of most folks’ lives in this Northern part of New Jersey. These events are just a short 9-minute JerseyNYC Path Train Ride away, a 6-minute NY Waterways Ferry Ride from Hoboken or Jersey City, or a 20-minute NJ Transit ride from Newark. Once in the city, npr.org described Winter Jazzfest visually as:
“Hardy winter folk seek and soak in an exhaustive regeneration over two evenings. Warriors sprint through snow and hop around lower Manhattan for brief encounters. Less ambitious but smarter listeners concentrate in small jewel boxes and take in music as concentrate.”
Hitting the many Winter Jazzfest events in numerous venues all across the lower Manhattan/Brooklyn region is definitely a challenge. I found this awesome guide on All About Jazz produced by Ludovico Granvassu titled “2020 Winter Jazzfest Marathons. A Survival Guide.” It's truly a work of art and provides great insight to the normal depth and breadth of this event. I was so looking forward to future versions, but as you know the pandemic and social distancing changed it all.
2022 Winter Jazzfest
Due to the pandemic shutting venues down again and the fact that this year the Northeast is experiencing freezing cold days of 7-15 (F) degrees, life just got a little easier for attendees. Now, I have to sidetrack and say me being a live music lover, event producer and promoter, in April 2020 when we all were forced to stay inside I had to quickly decide whether to put my much smaller 24 Hours of Music Jamboree Festival on or not. We finally did do it online, and it was no small feat to do it all within 30 days.
Therefore I clearly understand the massive challenge and endless amount of hard work that the Winter Jazzfest founder Brice Rosenbloom and his team went through for this clearly much larger, major event. I watched in disappointment, like many, as his event was canceled on Dec 23, 2021 due to rapidly rising pandemic concerns. I was extremely happy to see his Jan 13, 2022 announcement that said,
“We pivoted, @nycwjf Marathons go virtual starting Friday night Jan 14, and continuing four nights of sets from NYC, Brazil, South Africa, Switzerland, and more. Broadcast at 8pm nightly at WinterJazzfest.com“.
Yes!!!!!!
And now, the Winter Jazzfest website, supported by its partner and my Radio station WBGO, IS live and the 2022 schedule is on the website. To listen to events, check out the Media page which is regularly updated. You can listen live as the festival proceeds right now on the Winter Jazzfest YouTube page. Now, onto a few highlights from some of my favorite artists that I follow, discovered, and listened to this year.
Performances
Click the image and you can see their actual performance within the VIRTUAL MARATHON timeline.
I saw Miki Yamanaka perform a few years ago at Newark Bethany Baptist Church with Antonio Hart, and she was awesome. She has gotten better and better.
The New York Times said, “For Women in Jazz, a Year of Reckoning and Recognition.” NPR said, “Camille Thurman Is A Rare Jazz Double Threat.”
What can I say, she's fantastic.
“Charismatic and dynamic saxophonist/bandleader Lakecia Benjamin […] has played with Stevie Wonder, Prince, Alicia Keys, The Roots and Macy Gray.” (Read more here.)
All I will say is you have to watch it to get it.
“Samir LanGus is a Grammy-nominated musician, born and raised in the city of Ait Melloule, Morocco whose passion for music stems from the variety of street sounds of his city.” (Read more here.)
I love the style and energy. Very cool band, and I love the sax player.
SOME CONCERTS YOU SHOULD CHECK OUT WHEN THEY OCCUR here on YouTube.
Brandee Younger Quintet – Virtual Marathon Night 3
Terri Lyne Carrington and Social Science
Helen Sun 48:46 Virtual Marathon Night
Podcasts
Also, if you want to hear some more about what the artists are thinking and where jazz is headed, check out this podcast which is very cool and informative: Make Jazz Trill Again.
When it comes to the artist and what they want from Jazz, here’s an example of the Jazzfest musicians liking the new, addressing gender inequality, but wanting to bring back the best of the past when Jazz was dance music. Take a listen, as I found it enlightening:
“Make Jazz Trill Again Podcast is anti-institutional take on life, music and inspiration hosted by Melanie Charles and Yunie Mojica. Keeping in mind that Jazz and Black Music were birthed in the streets by and for the people, Make Jazz Trill Again Podcast is for the streets, for the people, to dance to. Join hosts, vocalist, flutist, and producer, Melanie Charles and Yunie Mojica, saxophonist, producer and GRAMMY-nominated composer, as they converse with fellow women musicians, creators, movers and shakers.” (Read/watch here.)
Don’t forget to check the full list of events here.
So despite the fact live music revenue streams are still taking a bit hit as venues shut down, I hope this quick introduction to a truly wonderful Jazzfest helps a little. It can be heard online and will provide some relief in today’s stress, or, as the Winter Jazzfest Anteloper Bandleader (VIRTUAL MARATHON NIGHT 2) said, “Music can be like medicine. It makes us feel just a little better.”
About the Winter Jazzfest Founder and Producer: Brice Rosenbloom
“Live music promoter and event producer Brice Rosenbloom is the Co-Artistic Director of Le Poisson Rouge and founder of the NYC Winter Jazzfest. His company, Boom Collective, presents hundreds of concerts a year in venues all over New York City. “ (Read more here.)
“Winter Jazzfest was founded by Brooklyn-based music curator and concert promoter Brice Rosenbloom. Rosenbloom is President of NYC concert promotion and production company Boom Collective, presenting concerts and festivals in NYC and beyond. […] The New York Times calls Winter Jazzfest ‘the city’s most renowned jazz festival.’
In these current times Rosenbloom has pivoted attention to supporting the music community and towards racial justice activism. In April 2020 Rosenbloom helped launch Jazz Coalition, a grass-roots organization committed to unifying the jazz community around efforts that uplift musicians during the pandemic. The Jazz Coalition’s Commission Fund has raised over $100,000 to date and has commissioned over 100 jazz musicians worldwide with grants to create new work. In June Rosenbloom became a steering committee member of The Blacksmiths, an organization committed to fostering racial equity in the arts sector, and to infusing the racial justice movement with art and music.” (Read more here.)
About the Writer
Gregory Burrus books bands and produces, promotes, captures, and records live music events along with various community and private activities.
My mission is to help my customers, which are community groups, live music bands, and local nonprofits, reach their goals and accomplish their missions while enjoying the day-to-day process of life.
Learn more at 24hoursofmusicjamboree.com and gregoryburrusproductions.com