Story: What’s Red Hot and Cool All Over?

Dave Shultz

By Dave Shultz
Written on 18 April 2008
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The 2007 International Jazz Festival in Cape Town, South Africa

Once a year in South Africa, the hottest Jazz Musicians from all over the world gather to play the coolest music that traces it roots back to the West African and Western music traditions of the 19th century. Jazz has evolved over the years into a wider definition including folk, electronic and even hip-hop styles. You’ll find all that and more during the Jazz Festival in Cape Town.

Live on five stages at the Cape Town Convention Center, over 40 divergent groups of musicians perform their unique vision of Jazz. The festival runs two nights and there is truly something for everyone. Traditional, world beat, fusion, hip-hop, it’s all here in abundance.

It’s hard to describe the feel of the festival. Intimate and cool, crowded and hot, pulsating, flashing, soothing, relaxing, a beat you can feel more than hear, sensuous, black and white, colored lasers, enough energy to power the world! It’s all that and more. It is truly an experience.

Since there are five different stages running at the same time, you can sit through an entire set of any given group or constantly wander from one venue to the next soaking up a smorgasbord of sights and sounds until the senses are overloaded. You won’t be disappointed!

Some of the theaters are intimate tiered seating and some are huge open spaces filled with throngs of people pulsing with the beat of the music and lights. One theater is outdoors near the food court where you can sit down to a hot meal where you’ll find yourself subconsciously chewing to the beat.

There are top headliners like the Joe Sample Trio with Randy Crawford and local favorites Jack Dejohnette with Sibongile Khumalo and Ladysmith Black Mambazo that strained the capacity of even the biggest hall. Some of the performers were lesser known in Africa like Leela James but after her performance that packed the big room, she will soon be a household name.

One of the big surprises was Yehya Khalil and his Egyptian Jazz Fusion. Normally you wouldn’t associate Egypt with Jazz but their performance was mesmerizing. The organizers do an outstanding job of recruiting talent from all over the world and giving them a showcase unlike any other. They may have arrived in Cape Town as unknowns but they departed with a huge following.

The crowds were as diverse as the musicians. Devotees came from all over the world. While the majority of the attendees were from Africa, there were groups from the US, UK, Russia, and all over Europe. The variety of languages being spoken was even more extensive than the music being played.

You wouldn’t expect to find a group called Hip Hop Pantsula at a Jazz Festival but after viewing his performance at the Free Concert at Green Market Square, there was no doubt his contribution was just as significant as the traditionalists. His performance was about the energy of the music and a message about the changes in Africa that seemed very appropriate.

Here is a breakdown of the performers by Stage…

Kippies – The main stage in the big hall. The groups here drew the biggest crowds. Standing room in the front with bleachers in the back.
Ladysmith Black Mambazo
Stimela
Concord Nkabinde
Joe Sample Trio featuring Randy Crawford
Randy Crawford
Gino Vannelli
Leela James
Average White Band
Ismaël Lô

Rosies – A moderate theater with tiered seating.
Jack De Johnettes Trio featuring Danilo Perez & Jerome Harris
Geri Allen Trio
Lee Konitz Quartet
Danilo Pérez
Vivid Africa
Themba Mkhize
Darius Brubeck & the SAPO/UKZN Rolling Reunion Band
Kurt Rosenwinkel New Quartet
Khaya Mahlanga

Basil 'Manenberg' Coetzee – Outdoors standing only unless in the food court.
Jack De Johnette & Sibongile Khumalo "Intercontinental"
Esther Miller featuring Jeremy Pelt
Nils Landgren and his Funk Unit
The Standard Bank National Youth Jazz Band (SBNYJB)
The Caribbean Jazz Project
Shannon Mowday
Yehya Khalil & the Egyptian Jazz Fusion
Madala Kunene

Bassline – This is the high energy very loud stage. Standing in the front and tables in the back.
The Rudimentals
Tortured Soul
Fethi Tabet
Closet Snare
Hip Hop Pantsula
Saskia Laroo Band
Mpho Skeef

Moses Molelekwa – A smaller more intimate theater with tiered seating. Get there early because it always fills up.
Bev Scott-Brown
Diego Amador
Muirhead Quartet
Hilton Schilder Band
Ernest Mothle
Bheki Khoza
The Stoner

This event should be on the list of any serious music fan. Traveling to South Africa is an experience well worth anyone’s time but to be able to attend this star-studded event at the same time is like icing on the cake.
Cape Town Jazz Festival http://www.capetownjazzfest.com
South Africa Tourism http://www.southafrica.net/

The best way to get there…
South African Airways http://www.flysaa.com

Where to stay…
Radisson SAS Hotel Waterfront http://www.radissonsas.com
Extreme Hotel Cape Town http://www.extreme-hotels.com/

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