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Farewell to a Behind-the-Scenes Festival Legend, Monterey Jazz Festival at 66

Courtesy Josef Woodard
This year at the Monterey Jazz Festival, 'one major distinguishing mark this year related to a powerful and inherently influential behind-the-scenes star. MJF 2023 marks the year that inspired director Tim Jackson has announced his retirement, after 32 years in that seat... turning the world's oldest continuously run jazz festival into one of the world's greatest festivals.

Ambrose Akinmusire
trumpetb.1982

John Scofield
guitarb.1951

Kris Davis
pianob.1980

Samara Joy
vocals
James Francies
keyboards
James Francies
keyboards
James Francies
keyboardsFrom the exciting "chordless" band corner, we had

Christian McBride
bassb.1972

Kendrick Scott
drumsb.1980

Chris Potter
saxophone, tenorb.1971

Thundercat
bass, electricb.1984

Justin Brown
drumsAll that said, however, one major distinguishing mark this year related to a powerful and inherently influential behind-the-scenes star. MJF 2023 marks the year that inspired director Tim Jackson has announced his retirement, after 32 years in that seat. It must be duly recognized that Jackson took over the reins of the festival from founding director Jimmy Lyons in 1992, and turned the world's oldest continuously run jazz festival into one of the world's greatest festivals.
Before the official musical portion of Friday's opening night set by

Terence Blanchard
trumpetb.1962
Jackson's tenure has been marked by an open-eared appreciation of jazzinside and out, mainstream and marginal, progressive and party-fueledand an uncommon skill for juggling diverse demographic tastes and care for the art form. Clearly, he will be missed and his vision as a festival designer deserves to be replicated/borrowed.
All in all, the roster for this three-night/two-day jazz institution once again realized what seems to be MJF's curatorial mantra: jazz is an ever-evolving and multi-dimensional cultural organism. Festivals such as this one can validate and help nurture such a complex identity and show us a rousingly good time in the process.
That delicate balance of musical intelligence and will to uplifteven to spur the dance impulsewas central to Akinmusire's new commissioned work, Isakoso Ara, which succeeded at what he described in an interview as striving to inspire "people to move around and to celebrateto just move their bodies after having such a long period of not moving...at the same time, I was thinking a lot about my, my own heritage as, as a Nigerian and West African."
In sharp contrast to his more introspective commissioned piece from 2015, The Forgotten Places, Isakoso Ara was pumped up with rhythmic fervor and African-derived vibes, with no less an African musical deity than the great Mali-an vocalist

Oumou Sangaré
vocalsb.1968
Akinmusire's trumpet improvisations were tasteful and true to his measured virtuosity, but the real accent was on the sum effect, the communal energy so critical to West African music. Akinmusire has come with an ear-opening and fresh variation on the tradition of "Afro-jazz" aesthetics, hopefully the start of yet another channel of his broad musical vision.
Speaking of West African origins, aside from Scofield, the guitarist with the most ample and varied stage time was Benin-born

Lionel Loueke
guitarb.1973

Gretchen Parlato
vocals
Elena Pinderhughes
flute
Herbie Hancock
pianob.1940
Hancock, whose band also now includes trumpeter " data-original-title="" title="">Terrence Blanchard and the dynamic young drummer " data-original-title="" title="">Terrence Blanchard (remember that name) along with trusty and grounding bassist

James Genus
bassb.1966
Blanchard himself served as the festival opener in the arena, presenting a compacted retrospective of his life of musical ventures, which has taken him from his jazz center to film composition and now the grand operatic limelight of the Metropolitan Opera. Dubbed "See Me as I Am," Blanchard's rangy set featured his own current group, E-Current and the jazz-friendly Turtle Island String Quartet, with a cameo by

Dianne Reeves
vocalsb.1956
Samara Joy's appearance here resembled other festival profiles for the suddenly meteorically risen singer: a year ago, she instantly won new fans on the smaller West End Stage, in a marginal late Friday afternoon set. This year, after her remarkable and flexible talent has been anointed with global hosannas and a Best New Artist of the Year Grammy, she took to and easily commanded the main arena stage, with her extravagant yet somehow personal vocal presence. The crowd couldn't help itself from a standing ovation or two, even on the sophisticated new arrangement and lyric on

Charles Mingus
bass, acoustic1922 - 1979
Another Monterey festival heritage moment came in the form of

Charles Lloyd
saxophoneb.1938

Keith Jarrett
pianob.1945
Lloyd has largely avoided playing that particular "greatest hit" in the recent long chapter of his musical life, but its return as the culminating tune of his latest Monterey set bristled with nostalgia and perhaps a personal favor to the outgoing director Jackson. This time out, his band represented layers of his own personnel shifts in recent years: bassist

Reuben Rogers
bass, acoustic
Gerald Clayton
pianoLloyd, renowned and much respected as a jazz elder by nowincluding NEA Jazz Master statushad bluster and a few surprises in store, as when, on the famous resolving two-hit figure ending "Forest Flower," the penultimate note was a half-step higher than we expected. It was a clever gotcha moment from a lively musically sage.
Given the festival's finger-on-the-pulse programming agenda during the Jackson era, it was a bit surprising to learn that Scofield was making his first appearance here in 15 years. But the kindly guitar legend made up for some lost time by appearing as the festival's "showcase artist" in three separate contextsplus a special pre-festival gala concert and the screening of "Inside Scofield," an illuminating new documentary by German director Joerg Steineck (and one of the best jazz films I've ever seenboth artfully made and true to the artist's story and essence).
Friday evening's Sco fodder came in the form of Scary Goldings, the playful, partyingbut partying with pockets of seriousness in towsix-piece group featuring the eminent and witty organist and longtime Scofield ally

Larry Goldings
organ, Hammond B3b.1968

MonoNeon
bass
Tal Wilkenfeld
bassb.1986

Jeff Beck
guitar1944 - 2023

Louis Cole
drumsOn Saturday, Scofield took to the main stage with his group Yankee Go Home, tapping into his recent delving into nostalgic pop-rock cover material and life as a hip guitar wizardly uncle figure in the jamband scene, also touched on with his new album Uncle John's Band (ECM, 2023). His group, featuring organist-keyboardist

Jon Cowherd
piano
Vicente Archer
bass
Josh Dion
drumsOn the playlist were "Mr. Tambourine Man" (the opening track of his new ECM album), Jimmy Webb's masterpiece "Wichita Lineman," and Hall and Oates' "I Can't Go For That," all reshaped and reinvented into Scofield-ian forms.
Come Sunday evening, Scofield put in one of the festival's strongest shows, by his lonesome (with the help of a few pedals). His ability to make the solo guitar format work, with some select looping and effects-spicing, became apparent on his strikingly fine "pandemic" project John Scofield (ECM, 2022). In the intimate Pacific Jazz Café venue in Monterey, Scofield wended through a handful of standards done up in his identifiable fashion"My One and Only Love," "Blue in Green," a fingerstyle take on "My Funny Valentine," "Alfie"along with such excursions into such pop gems as John Lennon's "Julia" and an inside-out "Louie Louie," replete with a mini-lecture on that song's curious back story.
Realizing that he was going on, verbally, he joked "the concert's over, right?" But that is one of Scofield's charms: he has a warm and fuzzy interaction with the audience, making serious music in his own sweet and salty way, but recognizing that the setting and the listening body are part of the cultural equation. He's one of us, or so we feel.
In some way, that special mix of serious musical appreciation and nurturing, graced with a casual/affable vibe around the microcosm that is the Monterey County Fairgrounds for a weekend each year also reflects the long, fruitful stretch of Jacksonian years at MJF. As he accepted DownBeat's "Lifetime Achievement" award onstage on the final evening, Jackson had a well-deserved moment in the spotlight celebrating his role as an important figure in jazz, an organizational life of a party with some deep and historic cultural implications.
All involved, on all sides of the stage, are rooting for a continuation of MJF's healthy recipe under the watch of Jackson's hand-picked successor, Darin Atwater.
Tags
Festivals Talking
Oumou Sangare
Josef Woodard
ambrose akinmusire
John Scofield
Kris Davis
Samara Joy
James Francies and {{Sullivan Fortner, and {{Terri Lynne Carrington
Christian McBride
Kendrick Scott
Chris Potter
Thundercat
Justin Brown
Terence Blanchard
Lionel Lueke
Gretchen Parlato
Elena Pinderhughes
Herbie Hancock
James Genus
Turtle Island String Quartet
Dianne Reeves
Terri Lyne Carrington
Keith Jarrett
Reuben Rogers
Gerald Clayton
Joerg Steineck
Scary Goldings
Larry Goldings
MonoNeon
Tal Wilkenfeld
jeff beck
Louis Cole
Yankee Go Home
Jon Cowherd
Vicente Archer
Josh Dion
Jimmy Webb
Hall and Oates
Darin Atwater
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