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A Brief Guide To Ukrainian Jazz: Part 2

The second installment of A Brief Guide To Ukrainian Jazza series developed with the cooperation of the Ukrainian Instituteintroduces five more highly talented jazz artists/groups from Ukraine. In addition, we profile the jazz festivals and jazz clubs that are keeping the Ukrainian jazz flame burning brightly in these most difficult of times.
Pokaz Trio


Andrii Pokaz
pianoEarly in 2024, Pokaz Trio released its much-anticipated follow-up, Voices on the Berlin label XJazz! Music, with a new line-upAlexi Poliakov and
Eugene Myrmyr
bass
Esbjorn Svensson
piano1964 - 2008
"Leaving Home" encapsulates all the dynamism of this exciting trio. Simmering bass and cantering drums provide the bedrock for Andrew Pokaz's luminescent, thrilling play. Myrmyr's bright solo in the midsectionover a sustained piano ostinatooffers a lyrical interlude. Bassistand trioratchet up the intensity until Poliakov steps up to unleash his own fireworks, the trio uniting on the outro. Esbjorn Svensson, you feel, would have loved this.
Danil Zverkhanovsky


Danil Zverkhanovsky
guitar, electricb.1994

Kurt Rosenwinkel
guitarb.1970
In 2011, at the age of 17, Zverkhanovsky began composing music, which over the course of the next decade would see the light of day as three EPS. In 2023, the guitarist released these combined works as the fittingly titled Work In Progress on his own Dnipro & Kruchi label. In his review for All About Jazz Hrayr Attarian praised the album as "an original and elegant opus ... simultaneously raw and sophisticated." It is a varied set, compositionally and mood-wise. The music touches on post-bop and the blues, also embracing more modern-leaning terrain epitomized by "Lady G," where Zverkhanovsky really struts his stuff.
From Work In Progress, "Postmodern Serenade" offers a taster of Zverkhanovsky's modern jazz aesthetic. The guitarist's solo is an attractive mélange of economy, refinement and vitality. The horns arrangements hereand throughout the albumfor trumpeter

Dima Bondarev
trumpetb.1984
Sölvi Kolbeinsson
saxophoneJesus Vega
drums.jpg)
Igor Osypov
guitar, electricUsein Bekirov


Usein Bekirov
keyboardsHis debut album, Taterrium (2016) was over a decade in the making and sees Bekirov framing Tatar folk music in jazz arrangements. His original compositions steer a melodious jazz-funk, ethno-jazz course, including a homage to

Joe Zawinul
keyboards1932 - 2007
Fast-forward to 2023 and Bekirov's album Sato (TLSG Digital)named for the first Crimean Tatar jazz band (sato is a bowed tanbur), in which his father Riza played. Once again Bekirov lines up his jazz prism and deep dives into Crimean Tatar folk music. This time around, however, he corrals an all-star line-up:

Randy Brecker
trumpetb.1945

Ada Rovatti
saxophone, tenorb.1976

James Genus
bassb.1966

Mike Stern
guitarb.1953

Dennis Chambers
drumsb.1959

Hadrien Feraud
bassb.1984
Tamara Lukasheva


Tamara Lukasheva
vocals
Matthias Schriefl
trumpetA most versatile artist, Lukasheva's impressive three-octave range can be heard in solo, small ensemble and big-band/orchestral settings (check out Anima Tangible Music, 2024, her remarkable collaboration with the 45-piece INSL Lviv Orchestra). Lukasheva feeds on multiple sources of inspiration, but Ukrainian folk and jazz/improvisation are never far from the surface.
One of Lukasheva's primary vehicles is her quartet, whose music is as notable for its originality as it is for its brilliance. From Homebridge (Traumton Records, 2019), we offer the dynamic "Night and the Moon"think Bj?rk-meets-Neil Cowley Trio at its most visceral, and you are somewhere in the ballpark.
Sebastian Scobel
pianoJakob Kühnemann
bassDominik Mahnig
drumsRoksana Smirnova & Misha Kalinin

In 2020 Smirnova and Kalinin released the duo album Whispers (Global Sonics), a genre-elusive collaboration of ambient textures, impressionism, subtle rhythms and improvisation. There are shades of

Robert Fripp
guitarb.1946

Brian Eno
synthesizerb.1948
Where To Hear Jazz In Ukraine: Jazz Festivals
The COVID pandemic and the war with Russia has had a severe impact on the live jazz scene in Ukraine. Some festivals, such as Odesa Jazz Fest, the progressive Am I Jazz? and Vinnytsia JazzFest have either gone into hibernation or have disappeared altogether. Others have somehow managed to carry on. The following is a list of those festivals active/planning to reactivate.Jazz Bez
Few jazz festivals anywhere in the world straddle two countries; Jazz Bez breaks the usual mould, Since 2001, Jazz Bez has been held in both Ukraine and Poland, the principal host cities being Lviv and Przemy?l. In fact, around 20 towns and cities on both sides of the border usually participate. All styles and periods of jazz feature. Alongside top Ukrainian and Polish jazz artists, groups hail from every corner of Europe. Illustrious American names such as
Greg Osby
saxophoneb.1960

Dayna Stephens
saxophone, tenor
Logan Richardson
saxophone, altoJazz Kolo
Founded by bassist/composerIgor Zakus
bassLeopolis Jazz Festival
Leopolis Jazz Festival, (formerly known as the Alpha Jazz Fest), is held in downtown Lviv over three days in June. Founded in 2011, the festival attracts 40,000 attendees each day to three different stages. Two of the stages in the historic center are free to the public. The concerts on the main stage, in Bohdan Khmelnytskyi Culture Park (capacity 3,200), are ticketed events.When All About Jazz covered the festival in 2017, artists included

Herbie Hancock
pianob.1940

Avishai Cohen
bassb.1970

Chick Corea
piano1941 - 2021

Chucho Valdes
pianob.1941

Paolo Fresu
trumpetb.1961

Richard Galliano
accordionb.1950

Ilhan Ersahin
saxophone
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Igor Osypov
guitar, electricJam sessions, and master classes run throughout the three days, and perhaps uniquely, the festival offers dedicated autograph sessions.
Koktobel Jazz Fest
Koktobel Jazz Fest, which markets itself as a jazz and world music festival, has been running since 2003. The festival switched its home from Koktobela resort town by the Black Sea on the Crimean peninsulafollowing Russia's invasion and annexation in 2014. Its new home is the beach resort town of Zatoka in the Odesa Oblast province of southwestern Ukraine. Zatoka boasts many kilometers of pristine, white-sand beaches. Evening concerts are held in the spacious grounds of the 13th-century Akkerman Fortress, some 15 kilometers away.Held over a week in the second half of September, the festival's free stages has hosted

Archie Shepp
saxophone, tenorb.1937

Stanley Clarke
bassb.1951

Billy Cobham
drumsb.1944

Billy Cobham
drumsb.1944

Jerry Bergonzi
saxophone, tenorb.1947

Erik Truffaz
trumpetb.1960
Indie/experimental rock, electronic music and folk music, from " data-original-title="" title="">Goran Bregovic to

Us3
band / ensemble / orchestra
Cinematic Orchestra
band / ensemble / orchestraLviv Jazz Days
Held over several days at the end of Aprilcoinciding with UNESCO World Jazz Dayand the beginning of May, Lviv Jazz Days was founded in 2018 as an international festival, but with the aim of promoting Ukrainian jazz. Gala concerts are held in Lviv National Philharmonic Hall. Other venues include Lviv National Music Academy and Lviv Officers House. Jam sessions take place in the Dzyga Arts Centre.Jazz On The Dnieper
The first edition of Jazz On The Dnieper was held in Dnipro in 1968. The festival has had a checkered history, being more off than on in the following decades, and with a long hiatus in the '90s. Since 2016 the rebranded international festival has taken place over several days in the summer. Under the artistic direction of Anna Russkevych the festival has attracted artists such as
Dee Dee Bridgewater
vocalsb.1950

Jacky Terrasson
pianob.1966

Richard Bona
bass, electricb.1967

Joey DeFrancesco
organ, Hammond B31971 - 2022

Dado Moroni
pianob.1962
Other festivals worth checking out
Art Jazz: a two-day celebration of jazz and art (improvisational drawing, exhibitions, photography, etc.) held in a theatre in Rivne.Where To Hear Jazz In Ukraine: Jazz Clubs
32JazzClub, Kyiv

Barman Dictat, Kyiv
Though by no means exclusively dedicated to jazz, this legendary bar in central Kyiv features regular jazz gigs. Trumpeter
Dennis Adu
trumpetb.1987
Art Cafe Nevidomyy Petrovs'kyy, Dnipro
Situated along the river, this bar and budget-restaurant, also known as Art Café Unknown Petrovsky, hosts regular jazz concerts and jam sessions for local musicians.A handful of other venues are worth checking out if you are in the neighborhood. Some present jazz more frequently than others, so it is always recommended to check their websites/social media beforehand. Venues worth investigating include Jazz Club Rusanivka (Kyiv); Alchemist (Kyiv); Dzyga (Lviv); Jam Factory Art Centre (Lviv): Perron no7 (Odesa); Pintagon (Kharkiv); Jam Jazz Club (Rivne).
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