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The Optimal Evolution of Amersfoort World Jazz

Courtesy Nico Brons
Jazz is not a history museum, it should be music of the future.
Alexander Beets
Considering how well this year's model of eleven nights blossomed at seven distinctly picturesque locations, in gatherings that ranged from cozy dozens to swarming hundreds, a comprehensive review of the year's musical summits clearly indicates Amersfoort has reached a threshold of becoming one of jazz's premier annual destinations for a truly global jazz experience. The consistently expanding Network Conference added expertise and perspective to the experience with a series of in-person and online forums that offered enjoyable, educational formats for discourse regarding business and marketing that expanded the "World Jazz" concept.
Distinguished guests included American bassist and conductor

John Clayton
bassb.1952

Gerald Clayton
pianoOrchestra Jazz Siciliana
band / ensemble / orchestraMuch of the festival's positive energy is derived from Director

Alexander Beets
saxophone"Jazz is not a history museum," says Beets. "It should be music of the future."
A prime example of Amersfoort's growth came through the very special guests in
Orchestra Jazz Siciliana
band / ensemble / orchestraThe band lived up to the occasion with a pair of stirring concert collaborations, in varied programs that included guests like the Claytons, vastly popular Dutch vocalist " data-original-title="" title="">Trijntje Oosterhuis, the festival's National Artist in Residence
Lucas Santana
saxophoneMitchell Damen
drumsThe orchestra's original designation was as The Brass Group Big Band decades ago, and they have maintained part of that moniker throughout landmark projects with renowned guests and appearances throughout the Italian regions. Their foundation has included a first rate music school for over thirty years, providing extensive multi-media library facilities for the public and OJS has been honored by the Sicilian Parliament for cultural contributions. The triumphant gigs in Amersfoort signified yet another step in its prestigious development.
The orchestra's initial performance began at a club-type venue, with a rousing set of standards that featured Clayton Sr. as guest conductor on songs like "Sunday in New York" and

Sam Cooke
vocals1931 - 1964

Stevie Wonder
vocalsb.1950
Accordingly, one of the intimate hall's benefits turned out to be that everyone in the room got a nice, close-up look at the entire band, and individual facial features and gestures were far more visible and engaging than most large-group formats. An exemplary interpretation of "I was Made to Love Her" and the alternating, multi-horn section finale to "Higher Ground" had most people in the building dancing away from their soon unnecessary chairs. Much of the set was familiar ground for Oosterhuis and Clayton, who'd covered the material previously with the

Clayton-Hamilton Jazz Orchestra
band / ensemble / orchestrab.1995

Steely Dan
band / ensemble / orchestrab.1972
Oosterhuis shared a few biographical tidbits about how Wonder was an influence, and how his music fostered her awareness of trailblazers like Little Willie John, an anecdote that led to the evening's wonderful closing number, "Crying Over You." Clayton returned to the stage and contributed a seemingly effortless demonstration of optimal dexterity and bass tones while the orchestra soared and the audience cheered. Considering that the OJS had only received their arrangements a few days prior, the set was quite an achievement. The next day's set with Oosterhuis and Santana, before a much larger outdoor audience, was even more impressive, and the cheers were even louder.
Producer Lannino, who teaches marketing with a Masters in business management from Berklee College of Music, also handles international relations and participated as a panelist in the World Jazz Conference that ran during the festival's latter schedule. He showed considerable skill on the bass during the closing, "Director's Invitation" concert that provided further high notes for the festival's finale.
"Thanks to this new partnership our orchestra can be heard by many more audiences," said Lannino. Alexander Beets is a great resource and when he says something you know it's true. I'm sure more and more will come from this partnership."
The festival's most distinguished performer was probably American bassist Clayton, whose presence added prestige while his musical skill on the upright bassist and cheerful verve as a conductor added luster to multiple locations throughout the festival grounds. Clayton and son Gerald were constantly inspiring ambassadors and it was a delight to watch them interact with the many fans who greeted them all over town. It was also the week of the elder Clayton's 70th birthday. He celebrated as a lean, mean, music machine beginning with the OJS stint, progressing masterfully the next night into a duet performance with pianist

Peter Beets
pianob.1971
Both musicians were in top form, and the high, domed ceiling was great for acoustics, and except for some chatter that intruded from the café a floor below, the show was flawless. Clayton's bow solo had a sweaty audience mesmerized and sticking around despite summer extremes. Clayton looked and sounded like he had reached four-string nirvana, and a cheerfully intense Beets appeared the same. They were joined for a couple songs by (Director) Beets, the pianist's older brother who modestly downplays his chops, but showed they were quite real during a sublimely searing take on

Duke Ellington
piano1899 - 1974
National Artist in Residence Lucas Santana was the festival's endorsed exceptional talent and an International Jazz Laureate. The emerging saxophone and flautist from San Paolo, Brazil, who previously studied in Amsterdam; has gathered multiple accolades including a 2021 Downbeat Student Award. Santana's second album Ambivalence (Zennez, 2022) is gaining momentum and his quintet (Tijs Klassen bass,
Tim Hennekes
drums
Davor Stehlik
guitarTimothy Banchet
pianoSantana's most unique appearance came during an official opening ceremony, in a performance that included spoken word, electronics, plus sax and flute improvisation, with two poets and another saxophonist adding flourishes of computerized distortions. The memorable half-hour set took place in a large rectangular church, temporarily repurposed by special commission with brightly painted, pink-based walls. The new interior would only exist for a few weeks of exhibition for the festival, and be restored to its original blank interior that Sunday. The concept came in conjunction with nationwide recognition of iconic abstractionist Piet Mondrian, born in Amersfoort in 1872. While Mondrian may be known for flaring geometric canvasses, there was nothing too square about the pop-up gallery or the poetic jam. As the poets continued an alternating narrative amidst looping effects and horn segments, it was enlightening to watch Santana deeply survey the vast murals for inspiration grounded in the artwork. His commitment to the project and the festival was clear, and stood out in a year that has seen a sizeable increase in spoken-word sets at locations like North Sea Jazz.
Familiar Netherlands talent represented the Professional Association of Performing Musicians and its well known flagship jazz venue in Amsterdam, Bimhuis. Adding to the organization's 50th anniversary were the BIM All Stars featuring

Hans Dulfer
saxophone
Eric Ineke
drums
Sun Mi Hong
drumsThe quality of Hungary's jazz scene was well represented under the banner Babel Sound Collaboration by the Peter Sarik Trio's highly-anticipated Bela Bartok project, Santa Diver, the

Mihaly Borbely
woodwinds
Bálint Gyémánt
guitarPoland's five-piece Unleashed Cooperation began unobtrusively with typical rising intonations, but within a minute or so they actually had blossomed into something unusual. Unfortunately, that sound was less than optimal to say the least, and their tone was never fully balanced. Pianist Patryk Matwiejczuk bravely led the way until the other players (Krzystof Kusmierak on saxophone, Patryk Rynkiewicz on trumpet, Flavio Gullotta on bass,

As South African singer Keorapetse Kolwane and her well-dressed group warmed up, a full courtyard gathering knew immediately they were in for a classy night. Contrary to some of the soundboard issues at the building's interior stage, acoustics were solid throughout. Kolwane's personal connection to the music was obvious as she explained a dedication to her late grandmother. "I will try to put every song in context," she said. "Excuse the language barrier, I didn't do it on purpose." Her unlisted backup band offered excellent support, highlighted by the pianist on pieces like "Song for Gretchen." Much of the set had a bit of a

Dianne Reeves
vocalsb.1956
Trumpeter " data-original-title="" title="">Loet van der Lee's quintet and guests featured another welcome appearance by Santana. They opened with a snappy number that gave everyone a brief introductory solo and showed the whole band's skills. Guest guitarist Durk Hijma piloted a hollow-body Gibson on slick sequences while Santana got tips on the song charts from van der Lee, who switched to a fine flugelhorn. Santana proved a quick study, the three-horned attack was refreshing like the hot afternoon's courtyard breeze. Santana really got into the music with facial expressions of delight.
Collectively, the band looked relatively young but swung like old pros, including a modified Brahms piece with Santana on flute.
Gideon Tazelaar
saxophone, tenorJohn Clayton and Peter Beets got together again as Clayton conducted pianist Beet's New Jazz Orchestra, one of the larger assemblies that kept the central bar and restaurant area heavily occupied and engaged. The set included a song with sensational Spanish harmonica player

Antonio Serrano
harmonicab.1974

Toots Thielemans
harmonica1922 - 2016

Leon Russell
pianob.1942
Among other promising London-based prospects, Nigeria's

Camilla George
saxophoneThe
Pit Dahm
drums
Charley Rose
saxophone, tenorPat Cleaver
bassb.1989
A popular pub crawl supported by the city's caterers also returned from hiatus and took place in eighteen bars and restaurants to turn the central area into a flourishing hive of excited jazz fans that rivaled the very best of such summer scenes. Thousands of people buzzed throughout the old town area, as hundreds more than usual swarmed throughout the multi-stage surroundings. Truly great public awareness was apparent for the jazz "brand" overall and Amersfoort in particular, as organizers combined a vast array of styles while retaining a true, jazz-based format.
There was much to be seen, heard and tasted. The tag about musician's paradise seemed very real, not just for the many energized musicians, but the growing legions of Amersfoort fans as well. Whether or not the relatively compact city will be able, or will even aspire to expand from the current formula is still a question, but there is no doubt about the city's ability to put on a wonderful mid-size event.
Numerous venues and artists throughout western Europe listed major concerns regarding attendance and finance as consumer bases returned, or didn't, from pandemic restrictions. If such worries existed in Amersfoort, they were never noticeable. The vivid evidence from this year's festival proves Amersfoort provides a multitude of international performers and strong local audience many opportunities to meet, while the adjoining conference, with numerous creative participants, indicates a likelihood of growth. As the World Jazz scene expands, it certainly seems the evolving tradition will continue to thrive.
Music at its best is a multi-faceted passion that raises the human condition, drawing people together in manners that illuminate the many positive similarities and differences of various social constructs. Amersfoort 2022 was, indeed, music at its best.
Tags
Jazzin' Around Europe
John Clayton
Phillip Woolever
Netherlands
Gerald Clayton
Orchestra Jazz Siciliana
Alexander Beets
Fabio Lannino
Trintje Osterhuis
Lucas Santana
Vito Giordano
Domenico Riina
Mitchell Damen
Sam Cooke
Stevie Wonder
Clayton-Hamilton Jazz Orchestra
steely dan
Little Willie John
Peter Beets
duke ellington
Hans Dulfer
Sun Mi Hong
Béla Bartók
Dianne Reeves
Antonio Serrano
Toots Thielemans
Leon Russell
Camilla George
Pit Dahm
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