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Nice Jazz Festival 2018

Nice, France
July 16-21, 2018
The 2018 Nice festival started like a damp squib when a crashing, flashing thunderstorm hit the city an hour before the opening. The ensuing deluge made the stages and electrics unsafe. With no chance of rescheduling, most musicians left town for their next gig and the first night was cancelled. The ambassador of the Festival

Gregory Porter
vocalsb.1971

Nat King Cole
piano and vocals1919 - 1965

Kyle Eastwood
bassb.1968
With time to spare, the question of the amount of jazz content in jazz festivals came to mind. When instrumentalists led jazz away from lyrics, melody and dance rhythms in the 1950s, the young section of the audience took their money, their dance moves, their love songs and turned to the Blues side. They found R+B and Rock waiting for them, then Soul and Tamla Mo'town developed and The Beatles sealed the deal. Blues related music became more financially successful and enduring across generations than jazz. (US recording sales 2012-Rock $102m/R&B $49.7m/Jazz $8.1m). Jazz evolution has no reverse gear but Jazz Festivals need commercial music to pay the bills. Played well, nothing is right or wrong it's all music, and in Nice, six bands every night for one price means a choice of music.
On Tuesday, July 17th, both stages were back in action. The smaller 2,000 seated outdoor stage area generally presented jazz, the larger 8,000 standing capacity stage other genres. There was a half hour overlap so It was possible to catch some of all six bands each night.
A group called "Caja Negra" took the smaller stage. The guitar was played high in a classical position but not flamenco style with two scat singers hand clapping palmitas in the rhythmic counterpoint Spanish gypsy way. The underlying sound wandered between Southern Spain and the Arabic music of North Africa using two percussionists, stand up bass, piano, guitar and the band leader Pierre Bertrand on alto saxophone. M. Bertrand composes, plays and also leads the Nice Jazz Band. This was a free concert but on the main stage people paid to hear straight Soul music from Derobert and the Half Truths, in from Nashville, TN. Derobert has a smooth rounded voice trained in church. The whole group worked hard to build the energy on a hot and sultry night. The standing audience swayed, danced and applauded.
Later,

Robert Glasper
pianob.1978

Herbie Hancock
pianob.1940

Christian Scott aTunde Adjuah
trumpetb.1983

Bobby McFerrin
vocalsb.1950
On Wednesday, singer Camile Bertaud took the smaller stage for her almost entirely scat performance with a jazz trio. A pianist herself classically trained at the conservatoire in Nice, Ms Bertaud showed the range of her voice in scat versions of music by Bach and Ravel and a homage to Eric Sati, titled "Sati, are you satisfied"? On the same stage, the treat for the evening was The New Monk trio featuring Eric de Wilde on piano with bass and drums(pictured). M. de Wilde wrote an autobiography of Thelonius Monk and has extensively researched the music. They opened with "Misterioso" befitting Monk's mysterious and sometimes contrary character as portrayed in "Monk's Mood" and they ended with a slow version of "Locomotive." In their presentation of "Friday 13th" M.de Wilde demonstrated how a theme of just four measures turned into an 11 minute recording. Soul for the evening was delivered enthusiastically by Deva Mahal and her band, her power and energy direct from church gospel, the trademark of soul singers. There was pithy urban poetry from French rapper Orelsan and the main stage was filled with musicians and dancers for a spectacular of Afrobeat music from saxophonist

Seun Kuti
saxophoneb.1983

Fela Kuti
saxophone1938 - 1997
Thursday, pianist

Baptiste Trotignon
pianob.1974

Yosvany Terry
saxophone
Melanie De Biasio
vocals
Gary Clark, Jr.
guitarOn Friday Jef Roques Quartet, winners of last year's Springboard competition, featured some fine guitar by the leader, tending towards bebop, including long riffs in his own compositions. They played a slow "That's all" from " It had to be you" to great effect contrasting with his faster pieces. The treat on Friday was

Rhoda Scott
organ, Hammond B3b.1938

Sophie Alour
saxophoneb.1974

Miles Davis
trumpet1926 - 1991


Les McCann
piano1935 - 2023
Festivals are a different atmosphere than clubs or concerts and mixed music means mixed audiences. The two stage concept gave depth and variety, by some too easily opposed and disregarded because we all have our predetermined preference... but Vive la Difference!
Tags
Jazzin' Around Europe
Martin McFie
France
Gregory Porter
Nat King Cole
Kyle Eastwood
Clint Eastwood
Robert Glasper
Herbie Hancock
CHRISTIAN SCOTT
Taylor McFerrin
Bobby McFerrin
Camile Bertaud
Eric de Wilde
Thelonius Monk
Orelsan
Seun Kuti
Yosvany Terry
Melanie De Biasio
Gary Clark Jr
Jef Roques
Rhoda Scott
Sophie Alour
Lisa Cat- Berro
Julie Saury
Miles Davis
Eric Legnini
Les McCann
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