Home » Jazz Articles » Live Review » Festival International de Jazz de Montréal 2019
Festival International de Jazz de Montréal 2019

Various Venues
Montréal, Canada
June 27 -July 1, 2019
Forty years. Not a lifetime, perhaps, but a remarkably long time for any festival to not only continue to exist but, despite increasing challenges, to thrive. An even greater achievement when it's the Festival International de Jazz de Montréal, which has grown from its humble beginnings In 1980 into the largest festival of its kind in the world. A festival that closes off six square blocks of the downtown core for twelve days each year, to create a music bubble where, between indoor ticketed venues and a series of free outdoor stages, and between hotels, restaurants and shops, it's possible for attendees to literally ignore the rest of the world for a brief time (if they should so choose) and immerse themselves in something positive, free of the trials and tribulations that dominate world news, day in, day out.
FIJM has never been a festival about purity; still, it's long considered itself a jazz festival first while never shying away from bringing acts either tangential or even completely disconnected to a genre where purity, in truth, is a myth. Jazz is, after all, a genre of inclusion rather than exclusion, whether it's indigenous folk music from countries far away, urban elements like hip hop, electronics innovations or any of the other many stylistic markers that have cross-pollinated with jazz, especially over the past 50 years but, truthfully, since its inception.
Still, there are those who bemoan the harsh reality that to exist as a jazz festival, it's not just important but necessary to bring completely unrelated acts into the programming mix. And this year's 40th Anniversary FIJM is no different than any of its previous ones. For every

Brad Mehldau
pianob.1970

Steve Gadd
drumsb.1945

Tord Gustavsen
pianob.1970

Gilad Hekselman
guitarb.1983

Ravi Coltrane
saxophone, tenorb.1965

Antonio Sanchez
drumsb.1971

Joshua Redman
saxophoneb.1969
The bottom line? With a litmus test introduced in the 2011 All About Jazz article When is a Jazz Festival (Not) a Jazz Festival, the Festival international de Jazz de Montréal continues to pass with flying colors. For those who don't want to hear about the festival's non-jazz programming, there wasn't a single day during this year's 11-day run, where there weren't so many choices in the jazz arena that choosing what to see was no mean feat.
Steve Gadd Band
Monument-National
June 27, 2019, 8:00PM
Take the first official day of the festival (there was an opening "Party Surprise 40e" the previous evening, one of the festival's Grande ?vénement outdoor shows that have, in some years, seen as many as a quarter million people on the streets): from the

Vijay Iyer
pianob.1971

Craig Taborn
pianob.1970

Brad Mehldau
pianob.1970

Norah Jones
pianob.1979

Susie Arioli
vocals
Melissa Aldana
saxophoneBut for the first of five evenings covering this year's Festival International de Jazz de Montréal, the clear choice had to be the

Steve Gadd
drumsb.1945

James Taylor
guitar and vocalsb.1948
Beyond Taylor, pianist

Kevin Hays
pianob.1968

Bob Belden
arrangerb.1956

Benny Golson
saxophone, tenor1929 - 2024

Eddie Henderson
trumpetb.1940

Chris Potter
saxophone, tenorb.1971

Joshua Redman
saxophoneb.1969

Mark Turner
saxophone, tenorb.1965
But while it's relatively easy to find Hays on the road, either with his own band or as a member of another, it's the other three members of Gadd's bandall busy west coast session players who only occasionally hit the road and rarely seen in this neck of the woodsthat made catching this show all the more essential.
Trumpeter/flugelhornist

Walt Fowler
trumpet
Frank Zappa
guitar, electric1940 - 1993
Johnny "Guitar" Watson
guitar, electric1935 - 1996

Chad Wackerman
drums
Brandon Fields
saxophone
Scott Henderson
guitarSimilarly, bassist

Jimmy Johnson
bassb.1930

Allan Holdsworth
guitar, electric1948 - 2017

Stan Getz
saxophone, tenor1927 - 1991

Billy Childs
pianob.1957

Vince Mendoza
composer / conductorb.1961
And then there's guitarist

Michael Landau
guitar
Joni Mitchell
vocalsb.1943

Bonnie Raitt
guitar and vocalsb.1949

George Duke
piano1946 - 2013

Joe Sample
piano1939 - 2014

Boz Scaggs
guitarb.1944
With a quintet of virtuosos, in fact, it might be reasonable to expect a chops-heavy show with extended soloing. But ever since he first stepped out into a collaborative project with Stuff in the '70s, Gadd's own projects have been more about groove, more about song, more about group interaction and more about relatively constrained solo space that encourages everyone to make the most of those very short passages...no small challenge. With only one personnel changeHays replacing original keyboardist (and fellow Taylor band alum)

Larry Goldings
organ, Hammond B3b.1968
Largely drawing on material from Steve Gadd Band (while also culling material from past Gadd and Gadd Band albums), which features compositional contributions from everyone in the band (and then some), the group opened, briefly, in abstract territory before launching into the lightly funky "Where's Earth," a Gadd/Hays/Landau composition that largely set the pace for the evening at one of the festival's oldest venues, Monument-National. What was most initially striking was just how quiet the band was, and yet it in no way impacted the potency of its delivery. Even if Gadd largely focused, as he did here, on just snare, high hat and bass drum, he propelled the band with a relaxed and deceptively lazy groove. It may look easy, but few drummers can deliver a behind-the-beat backbeat like this; rather than encouraging people to stand up and dance wildly, it was subtler, with much of the audience swaying in their seats, their heads "chicken-necking" in time.
And groove was, indeed, the order of the day, with Johnson's warm tone and slippery lines anchoring the band, and only occasionally resorting to overt displays of virtuosity. Still, when he did, as with the band's unique take on The Crusaders saxophonist

Wilton Felder
saxophone, tenor1940 - 2015
Trading off with a Landau, whose gritty tone, visceral bends, whammy bar inflections and occasional forays into light-speed phrases were matched (and raised) by Johnson, it was a tune, first heard on the group's CD/DVD combo, Way Back Home: Live in Rochester, NY (BFM Jazz, 2016), that ultimately led to an extended feature for Hays.
It was just another example of how this group could turn a simple idea on its side, with no bass-driven pulse for almost the entire song. Instead, propelled simultaneously by Johnson and Landau's

Steve Cropper
guitar, electricb.1941
There wasn't a weak song in the set. Still, amongst its many highlights? Landau's darkly balladic "Auckland by Numbers," its form making clear that the guitarist's language is far more sophisticated than his general reputation might unfairly suggest. With Fowler's burnished flugelhorn doubling the melody alongside Landau, it also provided an opportunity to hear the guitarist weave singable melodies through more sophisticated harmonies, all the while employing the swelling lines and, in particularly, chords that he often bent up to with his whammy bar. His solo was a lesson in simplicity, space and tone, where each and every note counted more than any more virtuosic demonstration ever could. Fowler, too, contributed brief but absolutely perfect connective threads, a similar instruction in the value of "less is more" and subtle dynamics that were a significant aspect of the entire show.
Fowler's "Duke's Anthem," a ballad first heard on the aptly titled 70 Strong (BFM Jazz, 2015), was another delicate high point. Written for the great

George Duke
piano1946 - 2013
"Auckland by Numbers" and "Duke's Anthem" needn't suggest, however, that the set was largely defined by its ballads. Fowler's "Timpanogos," Steve Gadd Band's closing track, was this evening's second, a somewhat Latin-inflected composition that may have possessed a relaxed, ambling groove, but intimated at greater power to come later in the set. Between Fowler and Landau's similarly tasty timbres defining the melody and Hays' Fender Rhodes solo just one of many impressive features for this often overlooked pianist, it also demonstrated a rare quality that defined the entire group. More often than not, when a musician writes a song it's meant as a feature for him/herself. And while it's true that Fowler did, indeed, improvise towards the end of the song, it was clearly all in service of the song.
The attention to rhythm and feel may have suggested music that was, in fact, deceptive at its core, with plenty of sophistication to be found but couched in ways that made it completely accessible. Still, Larry Goldings' closing "Sly Boots," from 70 Strong, made clear just how effortlessly the entire band could play with time. Alternating between a driving 6/4 pulse and 4/4 rhythm that, with the same underlying tempo, shifted the feel significantly, it was an exhilarating set-closer that, following solos over its riff-driven vamp, led to a closing Gadd solo that closed the main set with a major climax. From initial explorations of the potential of a single snare drum to subsequent thundering toms, reminiscent of his '70s work with

Chick Corea
piano1941 - 2021
Still, Montréal audiences are known for their enthusiasm, and this night was no different. Just about lifting the roof off Monument-National, it was clear that there would be no way for Gadd not to return for an encore, the band delivering something completely unexpected: a take on

Bob Dylan
guitar and vocalsb.1941
Hays proved a more-than-capable singer whose bluesier approach had little to do with Dylan's inimitable vocalizing; it also turned into a swinging, walking blues for Landau's final (and, yet again, impressive) solo of the night and a feature from Hays where he scatted along with his grand piano lines. The song was firmly anchored by Johnson's unshakable yet ambling lines and Gadd, who did more with the bell of his ride cymbal, a bass drum and a snare than many drummers do with massive drum kits.
Gadd's kit was, in fact, relative basic, with his snare (he kept a couple onstage), high hat and medium-sized bass drum augmented by two rack toms and one floor tom, in addition to four additional cymbals. Not a small jazz kit, to be sure, but still a more modest one than used by many. Gadd also had an electric metronome onstage to his left, where he'd dial in the precise tempo for each song in an earphone, before counting in the band. While there can be a certain excitement generated by counting a song in with an approximation of the tempo used, say, on a recording, it's also a crapshoot, sometime just too slow or fast enough to completely lose the groove,
With Gadd and his band so deeply committed to feel, to dynamics ranging from subtle to more dramatic, and from solo approaches that favored tone, spontaneous compositional form and the value of space (which made any move towards greater virtuosity all the more dramatic), it's no surprise that Gadd wanted to make sure the tempo was precisely what it needed to be.
It was a stunning performance from a group of veterans with nothing to prove but still plenty to say. Whether they were drummers, bassists (sitting beside Canadian singer Nikki Yanovsky's current bassist), horn players, keyboardists or guitarists, or whether they were simply fans of one of the last half century's greatest drummers, the Steve Gadd Band delivered for its audience on all fronts...and then some.
Tord Gustavsen Trio
Gesu
June 28, 2019, 6:00PM
If Steve Gadd's show was, amongst other things, a clear lesson in the value of dynamics, Norwegian pianist

Tord Gustavsen
pianob.1970
Gustavsen was one of the third wave of Norwegian artists, also including

Nils Petter Molvaer
trumpetb.1960

Trygve Seim
saxophone
Trio Mediaeval
band / ensemble / orchestra
Frode Haltli
accordionKristin Asbjørnsen
vocals
Solveig Slettahjell
vocals
Silje Nergaard
vocalsWhen he emerged on ECM with Changing Places in 2003 however, he immediately established a reputation for himself as a pianist exploring a narrow area of tempo and a range of dynamics so subtle that just the slightest elevation was surprisingly dramatic. While these characteristics might seem limiting for some, Gustavsen's primary touchstones, including Norwegian folk music and hymns, European classicism, American gospel music and the nexus between Caribbean music and New Orleans jazz, provided the pianist a firm foundation over which he and his trio could slowly evolve.
Gustavsen, double bassist Harald Johnsen (tragically, passing away in 2011 at the too-young age of 41) and drummer

Jarle Vespestad
drumsThat a subsequent album with his quartet (featuring, in addition to Vespestad, double bassist

Mats Eilertsen
bassb.1975

Tore Brunborg
saxophoneb.1960
Whether interpreting music ranging from Johan Sebastian Bach to the late

Leonard Cohen
vocals1934 - 2016

Arve Henriksen
trumpetb.1968

Eivind Aarset
guitar
Hakon Kornstad
saxophoneb.1977
With The Ofher Side (ECM, 2018) representing his first trio album since Being There (but releasing four additional recordings featuring different lineups in the years between them), and with Johnsen now gone, Gustavsen recruited double bassist

Sigurd Hole
bass, acousticb.1981

Eple Trio
band / ensemble / orchestra
Mathias Eick
trumpetb.1979

Andreas Ulvo
pianob.1983
The double bassist launched his own Elvesang imprint in 2018, bravely making his first release for the label a solo bass recording, Elvesang, released the same year. Recorded in a small wooden church, as the All About Jazz review describes about an album that placed amongst the year's best recordings:
"A wooden church may, for some, be far from an ideal recording facility, but it was clearly the perfect place for Hole to shape Elvesang. The intrusion of outside sounds, ranging from thunder and bird sounds to gentle rain on the roof, only add to the album's overall nature-driven ambiance, made all the more so by the room's lovely natural reverb. It may be a bold move for Hole to make his first release under his own name a solo bass record, but even when it reaches beyond melody to more adventurous texture and color, Elvesang is an album of profound beauty and, more often than not, calming quietude. A recording that trades nuanced, delicate evocations for the merely obvious, Elvesang is all the more impressiveand captivatingfor it."
Unfortunately, Hole was unable to make this transatlantic tour for family reasons, and so Gustavsen has been forced to recruit more than one substitute. That the pianist's Montréal show would be the first and only appearance by Gjermund Silseth (" data-original-title="" title="">Mari Boine,


Hildegunn Øiseth
trumpetDuring a first-time performance of the trio's imaginative interpretation of a rural Norwegian folk song, Silseth demonstrated tremendous facility con arco, as he seamlessly moved between normal registers and delicately executed harmonics, with copious reverb causing many of his phrases to sustain through subsequent lines to create a more expansive melodic and harmonic tour de force. Cheers The only constant in all of Gustavsen's ECM recordings, Jarle Vespestad is a drummer who would surprise Gustavsen fans, were they to investigate his other work. Beyond being a charter member of the innovative noise improv group

Supersilent
band / ensemble / orchestraStåle Storløkken
multi-instrumentalistHelge Sten
guitar, electric
Stian Carstensen
accordion
Farmers Market
band / ensemble / orchestraThat most recent Farmers Market album, compared to his work with Gustavsen, only serves to demonstrate the full breadth of Vespestad's capabilities. On one hand, he's muscular and virtuosic; on the other, all about subtlety and nuance. Vespestad seems to ferociously attack his kit with Farmers Market; with Gustavsen he often plays so quietly that it feels like he's barely whispering on his kit. Moving from turbulent rubato to firm groove, Vespestad used a reductionist kit with just a snare drum, bass drum and single floor tom, alongside a high hat and two cymbals.
While, in his early days with Gustavsen, he sometimes used small chains to evoke the quietest of colors from a cymbal, other times using a "stick" made of cardboard to match the pianist"s softest touch, these days, in addition to his hands/fingers, Vespestad employs a variety of wooden sticks, brushes and mallets. With the significant contribution of his sound engineer, Vespestad was able to evoke deep-in the-gut timbres from his cymbals (sometimes sounding like gongs), or the most delicate tone from his floor tom (other times, a thunder-like complexion), as he struck it with a mallet, only to immediately mute it with the palm of his hand.
Vespestad rarely solos, and last night's show at the wonderful Gesù theater inside the ?glise de Gesù was no different. But when he took an extended improvisation during the same Norwegian folk song that featured a cappella features for Silseth and, ultimately, Gustavsen, he demonstrated just how much was possible, even with such a small kit.
Gustavsen has come so far since those early days with ECM near the turn of the millennium. He's still exploring relatively slow tempos when there are tempos at all; like many of his Norwegian colleagues, Gustavsen and his group are all masters of rubato playing. Still, these days he's as likely to investigate dynamic and turbulent maelstroms as he is more delicate elegance. The pianist occasionally expanded into brighter tempos as well, but while nuance and understatement remain fundamental cornerstones to his playing and overall aesthetic, Gustavsen has become a much more potent player as well. The pianist took full advantage of his instrument's entire range, sometimes barely touching the keys but elsewhere attacking them with sheer physicality as he stood up, swaying, at times, with a clear or inner pulse.
The set, lasting slightly over ninety minutes, was largely drawn from The Other Side, though with more muscle at times and even broader dynamics during, for example, the rubato tone poem "IIngen Vinner Frem Til den Evige Ro," the pianist's collaborative interpretation of a Norwegian traditional folk song. His trio set also featured, as with The Other Side, imaginative looks at a number of compositions by Johan Sebastian Bach, including back-to-back looks at a profoundly lyrical "Schafes Bruder," supported by Vespestad's pliant pulse and Gustavsen's slowly building solo; and an equally melody focused but more brooding "Jesu Meine Freude / Jesus, del Eneste," blending one of the Baroque-era composer's six most recorded motets with a Norwegian hymn composed by Oscar L?fgren and inspired by an early 20th Century sermon at an Oslo church, which turned into one of the concert's most flat-out gorgeous moments.
In addition to interpretations of hymns and Bach compositions, Gustavsen included originals like The Other Side's melancholic opener, "The Tunnel," and a rare look back in time with Being There's closing "Wild Open," which rendered his gospel and church roots most clear, both driven by Vespestad and Gikseth's gentle rhythmic support.
But one of the set!s highlights was the pianist's look at

Leonard Cohen
vocals1934 - 2016
Gustavsen's use of electronics ranged from deep register support of his piano and reverb to sustain lines, to gentle synth washes and, at one point in the set, a blending of grand piano (left hand) with a higher register (right hand) synth line that initially doubled the piano but then diverged into two different, improvised contrapuntal melodies. While utilizing electronics more than ever before, he nevertheless avoided any kind of superfluous excess; instead, his use was consistently tasteful and largely organic in execution and sound.
The pianist also demonstrated a growing interest in middle eastern tonalities, which popped up throughout the set while, at the same time, augmenting Gustavsen's existing musical foundations.
Having seen Gustavsen many times since he first appeared in Montréal in the early 2000s, this trio performance may be his best yet, all the most surprising for it being Gjermund Silseth's one and only date collaborating with the pianist. Still, in many ways that only made the performance that much more special, as what it lacked in intrinsic chemistry it more than made up for in the kind of energy that comes from a first live encounter.
Clearly the audience agreed, responding so loudly that, following the trio's single encore, it was equally encouraged to do another. Sadly, while Gustavsen's trio didn't play a second one (with Silseth onboard, it may not have had another piece to play), its three members did come back on stage for one final curtain call. A regular at FIJM, there's little doubt that this was a performance that the sold out crowd will likely not soon forget.
Manu Katché
Monument-National
June 29, 2019, 8:00PM
First garnering international attention touring and/or recording with significant pop/rock artists like

Peter Gabriel
vocalsb.1950

Robbie Robertson
bass, electricb.1943

Sting
bass, electricb.1951

Kyle Eastwood
bassb.1968

Herbie Hancock
pianob.1940

Yelena Eckemoff
piano
Manu Katche
drumsb.1958

Jan Garbarek
saxophoneb.1947
Following a string of four recordings for the groundbreaking label (celebrating its 50th anniversary this year) that began with 2006's Neighbourhood and ended with 2012's Manu Katché (not including the 2015 compilation, Touchstone for Manu), the drummer packed up his sticks for ostensibly sunnier climes with ACT for 2014's Live in Concert, the first of three recordings for two different labels (moving to the French Anteprima imprint for 2016's Unstatic) that also found Katché grabbing a seat in the producer's chair.
This isn't always a good idea. Many musicians are, indeed, capable of self producing, but just as every writer needs an objective editor, most musicians need an ear that's not so deeply and directly invested in the music. It's what made Katché's four ECM albums so good; for many, ECM lite to be sure but, nevertheless, between the cachet and strength of the musicians with whom the drummer playedfrom Garbarek, Polish trumpeter

Tomasz Stańko
trumpet1942 - 2018

Marcin Wasilewski
pianob.1975

Trygve Seim
saxophone
Tore Brunborg
saxophoneb.1960

Jacob Young
guitarb.1970

Mathias Eick
trumpetb.1979

Nils Petter Molvaer
trumpetb.1960

Jason Rebello
pianob.1969
Jimmy Watson
b.1922
Katche's live album for ACT was still just an in-concert reflection of his ECM work, with eight of its ten songs drawn from 2007's Playground, 2010's Third Round and Manu Katché.
Katché's Anteprima debut, 2016's Unstatic, was, in many ways, a continuation and logical next step from his ECM work (featuring Jim Watson, Tore Brunborg and previously touring trumpeter

Luca Aquino
trumpetb.1974
Clearly, most everyone does, indeed, need a producer or, at the very least, co-producer.
Still, let it never be said that Katché doesn't put together a crack band, or that his own playing is ever anything less than impeccable. But comparing two drummer-led shows just two nights apart, the differences were significant, and not in a "different but good" kind of way.
First and foremost, while Steve Gadd was the titular leader, his band was as egalitarian as could be, with everyone contributing compositionally and the set defined by no single star but, instead, as a group of five equally impressive musicians who shone, both individually and collectively, throughout the evening, even as Gadd demonstrated clear leadership, albeit in a subtler fashion. While Katché gave everyone in his quartet, featuring keyboardist Elvin Galland, guitarist Jim Brandcamp and electric bassist
Jérôme Regard
bassSecond, if Steve Gadd demonstrated his unmistakable mettle throughout the show, especially during a handful of most impressive solos, Katché always seemed to be front and center, both when he ought to have been but, worse, when it was his band mates who were in the (subdued) spotlight. Empathic fills when engaging with his players was one thing, but his sharp snare and powerful cymbal work more often acted as distractions rather than meaningful additions to the music around him.
Third, with electronics becoming a more dominant force that oftentimes overshadowed Katché's compelling drum sound and Brandcamp's compelling guitar work, the drummer was also taking risks that diminished his overall approach. A recent review of The Scope on the S.B.G. website said it all:
"In the ninth album of his discography, Manu Katché has introduced so many elements from groove, pop, dance, and even reggae, that at this point it's almost impossible to say which kind of music we have in The Scope. Even because the quantity of 'synthetic' components has definitely surpassed the amount of 'analogue' ones, which include his drums."
Unfettered stylistic purviews and broader cross-pollinations can, indeed, work. On ECM, beyond Katché's own recordings, more significant ground breakers like Nils Petter Molv?r's Khmer (1997),

Jon Hassell
trumpetb.1937
But on the basis of The Scope and his FIJM performance, Katché seemed, at the very least, to be losing the script. Despite a good percentage of the audience clearly connecting to the drummer, his band and his music, a surprising number could be seen leaving the hall throughout the concert, never a good sign. Beyond the poor mix and songs that grooved hard yet still seemed somehow lightweight, Katché's introduction of vocals was also a less than ideal move. Even beyond the Auto-Tuning, Katché has a pleasant enough voice, but certainly nothing to compare with his virtuosic, polyrhythmic skills behind the kit.
Furthermore, while there was little doubt as to who was leading Steve Gadd's band in the same venue two nights prior, it wasn't because the veteran American drummer was dominating the proceedings. At this point in his career, Gadd (and his band mates) simply have nothing to prove, a lesson from which Katché could well learn.
At this point in his career, Katché has long since transcended having anything to prove either. And yet, between his relentlessly domineering playing and front position in the mix, along with song introductions that were delivered with such frenetic speed (en Fran?ais, of course) that it was almost impossible for language- challenged folks in the crowd to discern even the names of his songs...or his band mates, for that matter. It would seem, at least, that Katché was far better off when he had an active producer who could help constrain his excessive tendencies while, at the same time, encouraging his strengths as a composer and performer.
That said, given the larger percentage of the audience that was clearly thrilled with Katché's performance, maybe it is working for him. With Afro- tinged polyrhythms, electro-soul songs and persistent virtuosity (even if it overshadowed that of his band mates), there certainly was plenty about which to be impressed. But when comparing Katché to the plenty more relaxed Gadd, it's hard not to feel like the Parisian drummer was working a little too hard to entrance and trying a little too much to dazzle.
Tags
Comments
PREVIOUS / NEXT
Support All About Jazz

Go Ad Free!
To maintain our platform while developing new means to foster jazz discovery and connectivity, we need your help. You can become a sustaining member for as little as $20 and in return, we'll immediately hide those pesky ads plus provide access to future articles for a full year. This winning combination vastly improves your AAJ experience and allow us to vigorously build on the pioneering work we first started in 1995. So enjoy an ad-free AAJ experience and help us remain a positive beacon for jazz by making a donation today.
Montreal
Concert Guide | Venue Guide | Local Businesses
| More...
Montreal Concerts
Sep
17
Wed
Les Mercredis Jazz X Terrasse
Le Balcon
Montreal, Canada
Sep
18
Thu
Les Jeudis Jazz Jam X Terrasse
Le Balcon
Montreal, Canada
Sep
18
Thu
Saku Mantere, Album Release (divine Apology)
Diese Onze
Montreal, Canada
Sep
18
Thu
Hermeto Pascoal
Place Des Arts - Cinquième Salle
Montréal, Canada
Sep
24
Wed
Les Mercredis Jazz X Terrasse
Le Balcon
Montreal, Canada
Sep
25
Thu
Les Jeudis Jazz Jam X Terrasse
Le Balcon
Montreal, Canada
Oct
1
Wed
Jazz Jam Night
Le Balcon
Montreal, Canada
Oct
1
Wed
Les concerts Jazz Cabaret Chic
Le Balcon
Montreal, Canada
Oct
2
Thu
Best of Jazz & Blues
Le Balcon
Montreal, Canada
Oct
5
Sun
Kate Wyatt Trio Murmurations Album Launch (6:30 show)
Upstairs Jazz Bar & Grill
Montreal, Canada

Montreal
Concert Guide | Venue Guide | Local Businesses | More...Les Mercredis Jazz X Terrasse
Le BalconMontreal, Canada
Les Jeudis Jazz Jam X Terrasse
Le BalconMontreal, Canada

Saku Mantere, Album Release (divine Apology)
Diese OnzeMontreal, Canada

Hermeto Pascoal
Place Des Arts - Cinquième SalleMontréal, Canada
Les Mercredis Jazz X Terrasse
Le BalconMontreal, Canada
Les Jeudis Jazz Jam X Terrasse
Le BalconMontreal, Canada
Jazz Jam Night
Le BalconMontreal, Canada
Les concerts Jazz Cabaret Chic
Le BalconMontreal, Canada
Best of Jazz & Blues
Le BalconMontreal, Canada

Kate Wyatt Trio Murmurations Album Launch (6:30 show)
Upstairs Jazz Bar & GrillMontreal, Canada