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International Jazz Day: Istanbul, Turkey April 30, 2013
ByIstanbul, Turkey
April 30, 2013
At a morning press conference opening the 10th annual Panama Jazz Festival in January, 2013, a long table was peopled by dignitaries and musical dignitaries. Festival highlight, saxophonist

Wayne Shorter
saxophone1933 - 2023

Danilo Pérez
pianob.1966

Herbie Hancock
pianob.1940
It may have been an impromptu concept, or a preplanned statement, but clearly, the rendezvous in Istanbul was on Hancock's mind. In his capacity as the UNESCO Goodwill Ambassador for Intercultural Dialogue and present Chairman of the

Thelonious Monk
piano1917 - 1982
As the Panama festival and various discussions proceeded, it also became apparent that Panama City and Istanbul have much in common, as vital cultural junction points in the world, literally and symbolically connecting east and west, north and south. These global hot spots are often seen as harbingers of peace and cultural understanding. Ditto, the connective and peaceable force of jazz, for musicians and listeners, across borders.
This novel, noble venture began in 2012, with simultaneous events all on April 30in Paris, France, at the UN in New York City, and in jazz's birthplace in New Orleans, LA, in the epicenter of Congo Square. 2013's model, centered in Istanbul, also spread its wings and influence across the world, with simultaneous concerts and events in locales gone globaland viral. A day of panels, conferences, musical moments and other jazz-centric doings around the city culminated in a two-hour grand gala concert at the ancient Hagia Eirene Museum (a vast mosque-like structure dating back further than the famed Hagia Sophia).
That gala evening came musically fortified with an all-star cast of musiciansan international castincluding Hancock, Shorter, guitarist

John McLaughlin
guitarb.1942

Esperanza Spalding
bassb.1984

Terence Blanchard
trumpetb.1962

Al Jarreau
vocals1940 - 2017

Dianne Reeves
vocalsb.1956

Zakir Hussain
tablas1951 - 2024

Milton Nascimento
guitar and vocalsb.1942


Jean-Luc Ponty
violinb.1942

Branford Marsalis
saxophoneb.1960
Fast forwarding from Panama City early this year to April in Istanbul, from one idealistic, global-minded jazz event to another, and it was another bright and early (by jazz standards) morning gathering in Istanbul on April 30. The day's program began in the Galatasary High School, the city's oldest high school, with a history going back to the 15th century. If it was Tuesday, this had to be International Jazz Day, commencing with speechifying and music-making.
UNESCO director-general Irina Bokova's offered her lavish praise and a UNESCO Medal to Shorter, who later gamely sat in with the gifted twenty-something current class of the Thelonious Monk Institute (now based at UCLA), to the evergreen tune of the saxophonist's classic "Footprints," duly stretched into fresh territory on that stage. (The gifted current Monk Institute class: trumpeter

Mike Cottone
trumpetb.1985
Joshua J. Johnson
saxophoneErich Miller
trumpetb.1989

Diego Urbano
vibraphoneb.1986

David Robaire
bass, acousticb.1986

Jonathan Pinson
drumsThe musical component of the morning also included a brief history of jazzled by singer
Lisa Henry
vocals
Charlie Parker
saxophone, alto1920 - 1955

Miles Davis
trumpet1926 - 1991

Gil Evans
composer / conductor1912 - 1988

Ornette Coleman
saxophone, alto1930 - 2015

Antonio Carlos Jobim
piano1927 - 1994
In his speech that morning, Hancock toasted the worldly crossroads capital that is Istanbul, saying, "your city exemplifies the beauties of jazz." Bringing his attention more to the room at hand, he said, "when I see students' eyes light up, then I know why I do what I do. The future caretakers of jazz are here with us."
By day, on International Jazz Day, a series of events wove its way across venues around the city, nearby the Taksim area and the day's home base, the Marti Istanbul Hotel. One could walk down the long pedestrian boulevard of the Istiklal Caddesialso the address of the Galatasaryand swing by various events, stopping for tea, roasted chestnuts or Turkish Delight candies along the way.
Down at the Beyoglu Municipality Youth Center, a panel discussion called "Jazz Festivals: The work and art of promoting jazz around the world" brought together some prominent European festival directors and significant figures, including the Umbria Festival's Carlo Pagnotti, the Vienne festival's Fritz Thom, Jean-Rene Palacio (Jazz a Juan and the Monte Carlo Jazz Festival), and Claire Whitaker, whose director of the company Serious, is partly responsible for the London Jazz Festival.
Clearly, for decades, the jazz festival circuit and scene across the Atlantic has had a critical role in nurturing, preserving and nudging jazz culture forward, and in a stronger way than some of its counterparts in America. Asked by a member of the audience about the process and considerations involved in choosing a festival program, Palacio stated, simply, "It's for you. We must sell tickets, but we all have a passion for jazz." He pointed to the money-oriented choice of booking

Sting
bass, electricb.1951
At the end of the panel, Whitaker wisely commentedin a statement which registers deep in the institutional ethos of jazz supporters and International Jazz Day at its corethat, compared to other more commercial areas of music, "jazz is not the easy choice, but you get a quality of engagement."
There was plenty of quality engagement going downand turning multiple cornersthat night at the Hagia Eirene. UNESCO head Bokova set the sweeping stage for the event by telling the capacity, invitation-only crowd that, "tonight, Istanbul is the capitol of jazz." Hancock introduced the evening by noting the global network of related activities and energies, touching every country in the world and every state in the U.S. He asserted, "I can't imagine something that promotes peace and fosters goodwill as jazz does... it's a symbol of possibilities."
In an intentionally wide-ranging and eclectic musical pageant, smartly and elaborately organized by the inherently flexible Los Angeles-based keyboardist

John Beasley
pianoThis being jazzsubject to change and muse-kissed chops on given themesimprovisational high points of the show sometimes materialized on the fly. Some kind of magic swarmed into the air as Esperanza Spalding and pianist

Robert Glasper
pianob.1978

Igor Butman
saxophone, tenorb.1961

Anat Cohen
clarinetb.1975
Turkish elements in the program, in the real-time present tense, included impressive Turkish players, trumpeter Imer Demirer and dazzling guitarist Bilal Karaman, and notably spotlight-seizing clarinetist Hüsnü ?enlendirici. Repertoire-wise, the set list navigated through Arabic-related standards, including "Isfahan," "Night in Tunisia" and "Caravan," as well as Al Jarreau's take on recently departed pianist

Dave Brubeck
piano1920 - 2012
Significant sons of great American legends were involved in the program, as well. Drummer

T.S. Monk
drumsb.1949
Capping off a whirlwind musical world tour under one ancient roof in Istanbul, in a show well-documented for broadcast, streaming and otherwise disseminating into the known world, International Jazz Day circled its way to a take on "Night in Tunisia" with all the musicians onstage and in the spirit. Dianne Reeves crystallized the universal- minded but also site-specific feeling of the moment in one of her trademarked "you are here" scatting riffs: "Under a bright Turkish moon/the world is celebrating International Jazz Day."
In phase two of this massive and yet definitively concentrated undertaking, by all accounts a resoundingly successful venture in its 2013 model, the deeper implied message remains the same: while the focus is on what happens on one day, April 30, the grander message has to do with making jazz a 24/7/365 entity in the pantheon of world cultures.
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