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Featuring
Pat Metheny, Mark Knopfler, Madeleine
Peyroux,
Charlie Haden, Paul Anka, John Mayall and Omara
Portuondo
Festival
International de Jazz de Montreal,
happening this summer from June
30 to July 10, courtesy
of official presenter
General Motors of Canada in
collaboration with Stella
Artois. Fresh
on the heels of our triumphal 25th anniversary
blow-out, the
seminal event will begin in less than two months. As in the past,
there’ll
be some 2000 musicians rolling into town from all corners
of the planet, bringing the sounds of jazz and its diverse musical
cousins
along for the ride. This year marks the longawaited return
of Festival darling Pat Metheny, scheduled for no fewer than 5 formal
appearances and, hopefully, a few informal
ones, as he did in 1997. What follows is an overview of all the indoor
shows on
the program for this year’s Fest, apart from
those already announced, of which several have already sold out –
notably
Madeleine Peyroux and Michael Bublé.
This
year’s Festival is offering some 150 indoor concerts, distributed over
15
series of which several have been re-named thanks
to the arrival of new sponsor Stella Artois.
So get ready for the new Les
nuits Stella Artois
at Club
Soda, with its open-concept
roster of musicians and DJs who’ll each be taking their turns on stage.
And don’t forget that on June 7th, we’ll
be
announcing another 350 free outdoor concerts, bringing the total number
of
musical events to 500, not counting on-site street
performers and wandering musicians.
New
at this year’s Festival: World-renowned
musicians giving master classes
Of
the many novelties scheduled this year, one of the most eagerly
anticipated
will be taking place in the latter days of the Festival.
From July
7 to 10 the new
Montreal
Musicians and
Musical Instrument Show (MMMIS) will
be set up in the complexe
Desjardins, offering a number of activities where beginning musicians
and
seasoned veterans will be given the opportunity
to try out various musical instruments and even attend master classes
hosted by
some of the biggest names appearing
at this year’s Festival. Film-lovers take note: after taking a year off
for 2004, the Ciné-jazz
event
is back,
offering a
wealth of music programming in the Salle Claude-Jutra at the
Cinémathèque
québécoise throughout the Festival.
The
Pleins
feux General Motors series,
8:30 p.m. in Salle
Wilfrid-Pelletier at Place
des Arts
•
Michael
Bublé (June
29 & 30)
The young crooner from Vancouver
packs ‘em in whenever he’s in town. Opening act: Samina
•
Cesaria
Evora (July
1) The
Barefoot Diva who brought the music of Cape Verde to the world.
Opening
act: Alex Cuba Duo
•
Mark
Knopfler (July
2) The voice
and guitar of Dire Straits
• The
Voices of Soul (July
3) Two generations of artist, ccompanied
by orchestra, dancers and chorus
• Omara
Portuondo and I
Musici de Montréal (July
4) The pre-eminent queen of
the Buena Vista Social Club presents selections from her most recent
album.
Opening act: bc
with Bet e and Carlos Placeres
• Sonny
Rollins (July
6) A giant of the saxophone
• Roberta
Flack and Al
Jarreau (July
7, double bill) Master vocal
acrobat Al plus Roberta, the legendary voice behind Killing
Me Softly
• Paul
Anka (July
8) The Ottawa
native comes to town with
a big band and novel musical project, Rock
Swings, where
he performs recent rock classics in swing style
•
1,
2, 3… Jazz with
Gregory
Charles (July
9) A unique concert, especially created for the Festival, with several
musicians and choir.
The
Grands
Concerts TD Canada Trust series,
6 p.m., Théâtre
Maisonneuve at Place
des Arts
•
Trio!
Stanley
Clarke, Béla Fleck and Jean-Luc Ponty (June
30) Three virtuosos of the strings
•
Dave
Holland Big Band (July
1) One of the best bassists in the world with his favorite group
• Bobby
McFerrin and guests (July
2), The always-surprising master of vocal improvisation
•
Land
of the sun with Charlie
Haden and
Gonzalo Rubalcaba (July
3) A sensitive work in homage to the late Mexican composer
Jose Sabre Marroquin
• Dr.
John (July
4) The voice
and soul of New Orleans
• Toots
Thielemans with Kenny Werner and special guests Pat Metheny
and Paolo Fresu (July
6) The Belgian harmonica virtuouso teams up with
three renowned musical companions
• Beyond
the Missouri Sky with
Pat Metheny and
Charlie Haden (July
7) The two
jazz masters have agreed,
for one night only, to re-create that brilliant suite for the 26th edition
of the Festival
• Pat
Metheny Exploring the Music of the Classic Gary Burton
Quartet with
Steve Swallow (July
8) Their first
time together on stage together since
1977
• Ranee
Lee and musicians, with
special guest Oliver
Jones (July
9).
The
Invitation
series,
7:30 p.m. Salle
Ludger-Duvernay in the Monument-National
•
Tabla master Zakir
Hussain, host
of the 1st part
of this year’s Invitation
series,
invites the public to a series of 4 concerts and
4 musical directions
• For the inaugural night, it’ll be Classic
Indian
Music with
master of the
sarangui,
Sultan Khan (June
30)
• A night of Contemporary
Indian Music will
then take place with Master
Percussionists of India (July
1)
• A more Western-oriented evening with Zakir
and his Jazz
friends follows,
including Charles
Lloyd and
Eric Harland (July
2)
• A closing night concert dedicated to beauty,
purity and musicality with John
McLaughlin (July
3).
One
of the greatest guitarists alive, Pat Metheny will be among us again
for the 26th edition,
presiding over the 2nd part of
the
Invitation
series
and offering
what looks to be a repeat of his 1988 passage when he played with so
many
others. He’ll be
performing with his regular trio members (Scott
Colley and Antonion Sanchez) on July
5 at the Spectrum
• With bassist
Me’shell
Ndegeocello,
trumpetist Enrico
Rava,
drummer Chris
Dave and
saxophonist David
Sanchez and
other on
July 6 at the Spectrum
• With Charlie
Haden (July
7, at Théâtre Maisonneuve)
• And to close the series,
on July 8 on 2
different stages: with Gary
Burton, Steve
Swallow and Antonio
Sanchez in the
Théâtre Maisonneuve, and then on a double
bill at the Gesù - Centre de Créativité: in duet
with Mick
Goodrick and
then with the Dewey
Redman Quartet.
The
Couleurs
SAQ series,
6 p.m. at
the Spectrum
de Montréal
•
Feist
(June
30) Recent
winner of two Juno awards
• Bryan
Lee (July
1) Powerful energetic blues
• Ron
Sexmith with Special Guest Alex Cuba (July
2) The Toronto
singer (who is also winner of a Juno award) in concert with one of the
most innovative
Latin artists
• Gianmaria
Testa (July
3) Back after sold-out crowds at the MONTREAL HIGH LIGHTS
Festival
•
Eric
Truffaz and his
project Saloua
(July
4) His latest
album explores an impressive variety of musical styles
•
Ojos
de Brujo (July
6) A union of
passionate flamenco and hip-hop rhythms Manu
Katché (July
7), a drummer who’s very
much in demand these days with his project Tendances
that
includes some
of the best young French jazz musicians
•
Harry
Manx and Xavier Rudd (July
8, double bill) A folk-flavored evening with Canadian
singer-composer-guitarist
and a multi-instrumentalist
Australian
• John
Mayall & The Bluesbreakers (July
9) The signature group of British blues since forever,
this is their first visit to the Festival in 10 years.
The
Rythmes
series
9 p.m., Métropolis
•
Pink
Martini (June
30) The famous
group from Oregon that’s all the rage
in
Europe. Opening act: bc
with Bet e and
Carlos
Placeres
• Mavis
Staples and the Blind Boys of Alabama (July
1, double bill) The great gospel and soul singer
and the
legendary group from the American south
• Medeski,
Martin and Wood (July
2) More electrifying than ever, with extraordinary
guest guitarist Marc
Ribot,
who’ll be
taking care of the first part of the show with the Young
Philadelphians (Grant Calvin Weston & Jamaaladeen Tacuma)
•
Bonobo, Herbaliser and D.J. Food (July
3, triple bill) 6 hours of uninterrupted
music
• The
Neville Brothers (July
4) Stopping off in Montreal
with their excellent and most recent album. Opening
act: Mumbo
Jumbo, voodoo
combo • Khaled
(July
5) Finally back in Montreal
with his new album Ya-Ray
•
Soirée Afro Beat with Femi
Kuti (July
6) The most influential voice in Nigerian music. Opening
act: Afrodizz,
propelling
Afrobeat into
the 21st Century
• Grande
nuit salsa Spanish
Harlem
Orchestra (July
7) 13
musicians and singers, the same who athered
a record crowd for the Grand Événement General Motors in
2003. Opening act: Papo
Ross &
Orquesta Pambiche
•
Daniel
Lanois (July 8
at 6 p.m.
and 9:30 p.m.) The brilliant artist is back with his hot, all-new CD Rockets
• K-OS
(July
9) Their
new album Joyful
Rebellion was
just awarded three Junos. The
Jazz
d’ici La Presse series,
6 p.m. at the Gesù
– Centre de créativité
•
Provost
Lachapelle Brochu (June
30) In trio format for their first indoor show
• Rémi
Bolduc (July
1) Re-visiting the musical
orientations of cult TV shows • Bernard
Primeau Montréal Jazz Ensemble invite Les
Violons du Roy / Rencontre entre Jazz et Classique (July
2) Both celebrating their 20th anniversaries
in the arts with this extraordinary encounter
• Dawn
Tyler Watson and Paul Deslauriers (July
3) A unique combination of an irresistible singer and a
brilliant guitarist
• The
Stephen Barry Band (July
4) Offering no less that a complete Blues
Anthology
• Charles
Papasoff (July
6) Serving
up selections from his most recent album, along with members of his
quartet
•
Bourassa
Tanguay Derome (July
7) Three
musicians at the height of their talents departing from the beaten
track
•
Altsys
Nonet (July
8) With a
superb interpretation
of Birth
of the Cool
•
Eric
Longsworth in Duet with Sylvain Luc (July
9) Two virtuosos, one on electric cello, the
other on eclectic guitar. The
Voix
du monde Bell
series,
7 p.m., Club
Soda
•
Gwyneth
Herbert (June
30) A rising young jazz star from England
• Viktoria
Tolstoy (July
1) That’s right: she’s the greatgrand-daughter
of the famous writer, a wonderful singer and easy on the eyes, too. Her
first
visit to Montreal
•
Lizz
Wright (July
2) On her
second visit to the Festival, Lizz remains fresh, but more mature
•
Madeleine
Peyroux (July
3 & 4) Finally back for 2 nights and as many sold-out concerts,
presenting
pieces from her most recent
album
• Sophie
Milman (July
6) A
20-year-old singer who’s carved herself a special place on the Canadian
jazz scene
•
Jolie
Holland (July
7) Many
consider her a ‘prettier’ version of Tom Waits
• Juana
Molina and Keren
Ann (July
8, double
bill) One from Argentina
and
the other from France,
together on stage they’ve brought Montreal
audiences to their feet
•
Claudia
Acuña (July
9) A woman of
passion and emotion, this is her 2nd
visit
to the Festival.
The
Jazz
Beat TD Canada Trust series, 9:30
p.m., Spectrum
de Montréal
•
Roy
Hargrove RHF
(June
30) One of the finest trumpet players of his
generation is back for a few blasts
• Master saxophonist
Charles
Lloyd is here
with his
quartet (July 1) accompanied by Geri
Allen, Larry Grenadier and Eric Harland
• Hommage
to Chano Pozo – Randy
Weston’s African Rhythms Trio and Candido
(July
2) An evening
of Latin
rhythm
• Enrico
Rava Quintet with special guest Francesco Cafiso (July
3) The Italian trumpet player and composer
will be presenting a young prodigy of the saxophone
• Bill
Frisell Quintet (July
4) With pieces from Unspeakable,
recently awarded a Grammy • Pat
Metheny Trio with Antonio Sanchez and Scott
Colley (July 5)
Selections
from the Metheny repertoire, plus some new pieces, as well
• Pat
Metheny and
friends resh Encounters (July
6) Playing with a variety of musicians, some of whom for the
first time, including David
Sanchez,
Enrico
Rava, Scott
Colley, Antonio
Sanchez &
Me’shell Ndegeocello,
Ron
Blake and Chris
Dave
• Terence Blanchard Quintet (July
7) The virtuoso trumpet player is back for the
first time since 2001
• David
Sanchez Group and the Alexander String Quartet (July
8) Sharing the stage with others to play
selections from his legendary work Focus
• Steel
and Glass Ramachandra
Borcar (July
9) Multi-talented Ram performs selections from an
outstanding film soundtrack
he recently composed.
The
Nuits
Stella Artois series,
Midnight, Club
Soda
•
Brazilian Girls (June
30) Just one girl and no Brazilians at all, but
the energy sure is there! Followed by Maüs
with
sensuous,
on-the-mark DJ
• Bugge
Wesseltoft (July
1) Another celebration of the marriage of jazz to electronic
music. Followed
by Vincent
Lemieux
•
Holy
Fuck (July
2) This
intriguingly named ensemble will be followed by Sean
Kosa, a
protégé
of Tiga
• Los
Amigos Invisibles (July
3) A perfect mix of electronic music with Latin, directly from Caracas,
followed
by DJ
Afro, from
the same
group
• Federico
Aubele (July
4), followed by DJ
Panko for an
evening of
electrolatino-flamenco-african-asian
sounds
• Do
Make Say Think (July
6) A nervy group from Toronto
whose signature sounds deconstruct
all known genres. Followed by the astonishing DJ
Mini from Montreal,
recognized around the world for sheer inventiveness
• Automato
(July
7) 6 New
Yorkers who challenge the norms of hip-hop, followed by DJ
RJD2, one
of the most
exciting names in instrumental music
• Four
Tet (July
8) with his new and daring album, plus the planetary Akufen
• Nicolas Repac (July
9) The guitarist for Arthur H is as exciting as
Arthur himself, followed by Éloi
Brunelle of
Epsilonlab.
The
Jazz
contemporain Galaxie CIBL series,
9 p.m.
Salle
Beverly Webster Rolph at the Musée d’art
contemporain de Montréal
•
Octurn
(June
30) Eight
Belgian musicians stand at the confluence of jazz, swing and funk
• Kartet
with Benoît
Delbecq (July
1) An elite group who blend intellect with intuition
• Humcrush
(July
2) A heavy-duty duo of Norwegian musicians who
were a
huge hit in Canada
last year
• Tim
Postgate Horn Band with
special guest Howard
Johnson (July
3) An exciting encounter between
an excellent guitarist and three horns
• Queen
Mab Trio (July
4) Three women whose passions are rock, jazz, klezmer, Latin
and chamber music
• Collectif
Slang (July
6) Combines hip-hop and drum’n bass influences
•
Les
Projectionnistes
July
7) Fun, multi-colored music
• Slamming’
The Infinite Steve
Swell (July
8) The global reference for trombone is finally in town
• François
Carrier Trio –
Kala
(July
9) with the Nouvel Ensemble de Musique Improvisée (NoEmi).
The
Jazz
dans la nuit series,
10:30 p.m. Le
Gesù – Centre de créativité
•
Hiromi
(June
30) A Japanese
avant-garde pianist and composer who has played with greats like Chick
Corea
•
Fred
Hersch and Bobo
Stenson (July
1, a double program of solo piano) One of that
instrument’s greatest poets followed
by the Swedish piano star
• Geri
Allen Trio (July
2) Known for their melodic sense and openness to different musical
trends
• Bill
Charlap Trio (July
3) One of the finest interpreters of jazz standards for piano
• Odean
Pope with Saxophone Choir (July
4) A total of 12 musicians on stage, tight as a single
instrument
• Paolo
Fresu PAF Trio (July
6) The
product of a love for acoustics that’s lasted 15 years
• Tin
Pan Aliens with Steve
Swallow, Hans
Ulrik and Jonas Johansen (July
7) A jazz super-trio
• 80/81
Revisited Pat
Metheny and Dewey
Redman with John Menegon and Matt Wilson. Pat Metheny, Mick Goodrick in
duet (July
8). A reunion of Festival veterans after their
tours of the early 80s.
•
Dewey
Redman Quartet (July
9). The famous father of Joshua Redman, who for the last 40 years has
proven
time and again
why he’s considered as among the best saxophonists ever.
The
Tango
Flamenco series,
8:30 p.m., Théâtre
Jean-Duceppe de la PdA
•
Tango
Flamenco (June
29 to July 9,
hiatus on July 5) Back by popular demand after their sold-out concerts
last
fall during the
Jazz
All-Year Round series.
A fusion of flamenco and classical Spanish dance with Argentine tango,
gathering 25 top dancers
and musicians on stage.
Susie
Arioli featuring Jordan Officer, 8
p.m., Cabaret
Music-Hall
Their
first album in 2001 conquered the hearts of jazz lovers everywhere.
Susie and
inseparable companion, guitarist and arranger
Jordan have continued their re-visiting of the music of the 30s, 40s
and 50s
with their 3rd album, That’s
for me. With
Shane McKenzie on double bass, ‘Madame Swing’ will take up
residence on the Cabaret stage for 5 nights in all, July
6 to 10. A good time in store for all.
The
Jazz cruise, 6
p.m., Bateau Cavalier-Maxim,
King
Edward Pier
Fine
food and great music on the river ! Croisières AML offers a
4-course
gastronomic package with music every night of the Festival,
except Saturdays and the first Thursday. On the good ship
Cavalier-Maxim,
featuring the Montréal
Jazz Club,
comprised
of Anthony Rozankovic (piano), Pierre Pepin (bass), Camil Belisle
(drums) and
singers Martine Mai, Freddie
James, and Chantale Thibeault. A surprise guest musician will also
appear each
night, as will Philippe Dunnigan on violin.
Leaving at 6 p.m. from the Kind-Edward Pier and returning 11 p.m.
Reservations
are essential: (514) 842-3871 or at 1-800-667-3131.
Tickets
on sale starting on Saturday, May 14 at 9
a.m.
Tickets
for all indoor concerts for the 26th
edition
of the Festival International
de Jazz de Montréal will be on sale starting
Saturday, May 14, 2005 at 9 a.m. at
the ticket office of the Spectrum; at all Ticketpro
and Admission outlets, depending on he
venue; and also at the venues where shows will be taking place.
Tickets
can be procured at the following locations:
Spectrum
de Montréal, 318, Ste-Catherine St. West
(www.spectrumdemontreal.com) (514)
861-5851
Ticketpro, at (514)
908-9090 or,
toll-free, at 1-866-908-9090
(www.ticketpro.ca).
Admission, at (514)
790-1245 or,
toll free, at 1-800-361-4595.
Ticket
offices of venues where Festival shows will be taking place:
Place
des Arts, or by
calling (514)
842-2112 (www.pdarts.com) • Monument-National
• Club
Soda
•
Musée
d'art contemporain de Montréal • Métropolis
• Cabaret
Music-Hall • Gesù
– Centre de créativité.
www.montrealjazzfest.com
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