Music Festival Name: | Aarhus Jazz Festival |
Years Active: | 1989 – present |
Dates: | Eight days in July |
Genre: | Jazz, blues, experimental jazz and jazz-influenced rhythmic and electronic music. |
Website: | Aarhus Jazz Festival |
Aarhus Jazz Festival (formerly Aarhus International Jazz Festival) is an eight-day jazz festival in Aarhus, Denmark. It is held every year in July,August or September.[1] [2] The festival performs at the Aarhus Concert Hall,[3] as well as many different venues across the city. Many concerts are played outdoors in the public space and are for free.[4] Aarhus Jazz Festival has been awarded with the European Effe Label in 2017–2018. The 2018 festival was held from 14 to 21 July and the 2019 festival takes place from 13 to 20 July.[5]
Initiated in 1988 by Musikhuset and local venues, Aarhus Jazz Festival has been an annual summer event in the city since 1989. The festival is bent on featuring new talents in jazz as well as both local and international stars. From the beginning, the festival has featured many notable and world-renowned international jazz stars and bands such as Stan Getz, Dizzy Gillespie, Herbie Hancock, The Zawinul Syndicate, Clark Terry, Mike Stern and John Scofield – some of them several times – in a mix with more local notables such as John Tchicai, Jesper Thilo, Svend Asmussen, Ed Thigpen, Cæcilie Norby, Sinne Eeg, Marilyn Mazur, Pierre Dørge and Alex Riel. The programme is quite broad in its musical choices, often including world renowned blues performers like B. B. King, Bonnie Raitt, John Mayall or Danish blues acts like Kenn Lendings Blues Band, Shades of Blue or The Blue Junction. Alternative musical styles with jazz-influences have been represented by artists such as Nitin Sawhney, Sting, Dr. John, Abdullah Ibrahim and The Roots in a mix with many local, new or unknown names.[6] [7] [8] [9] [10] [11] [12] [13]
The festival has grown considerably in the 2010s; in 2014 it featured 230 concerts at 29 venues, while in 2018, the festival celebrated its 30th anniversary with more than 360 concerts across 42 venues.[14] [15]
From 2014 to 2017 when Aarhus was European Capital of Culture, Aarhus Jazz Festival turned its focus towards European jazz; jazz from Poland in particular, since the city of Wrocław was Capital of Culture in 2016.[16] [17] The 2016 festival took a deliberate focus on the women in jazz, and included international female artists like Melody Gardot, Sarah McKenzie and Lizz Wright and that years poster also featured Hiromi Uehara. Both the 2016 and 2017 festivals were expanded to last 10 days and also included world music concerts in addition to the more rigid jazz programme.[18]
Stan Getz was the first international artist to play at Aarhus Jazz festival in 1989 and as a homage, the 2018 festival played his music at several concerts. The 2019 festival will celebrate 100 years of jazz music in Aarhus.
Graphic designer Finn Nygaard, himself from Aarhus and a lover of jazz music, has created many of the festival posters.[19] He received design awards for these posters in 1990, 1991, 1998, 2000, 2001, and 2002.[20] [21]
See also: Danish jazz.