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YstadSweden JazzFestival 2018

Ystad, Sweden
August 1-6, 2018
Ystad on the Swedish South coast is known for two things: Henning Mankell's crime novels (and the tv movies) about his police detective Wallander, who investigates spectacular murder cases in the small town of just nearly 30,000 people; and since 2010 for the YstadSweden JazzFestival, one of the country's best jazz events. If one should describe it in one word it would be "friendly." It is totally noncommercial because the entire festival team consists of volunteers, including the founder and director

Jan Lundgren
pianob.1966
Venues include Ystad's beautiful 1894 Theatre, the Scala (Sweden's oldest cinema still in use), the sports hall Ystad Arena, the church of St. Mary, the Konstmuseum (art museum) and the church of Ystad's 13th century monastery.
Well known artists this year included the singers

Cecile McLorin Salvant
vocalsb.1989

Lizz Wright
vocalsb.1980

The Manhattan Transfer
vocals
Ulf Wakenius
guitarb.1958

Oscar Peterson
piano1925 - 2007
Every year, the festival features a Guest of Honour, an influential jazz veteran. In former years it was, for instance,

Quincy Jones
arranger1933 - 2024

Hugh Masekela
flugelhorn1939 - 2018

Monty Alexander
pianob.1944
It has become a tradition that every year the excellent Swedish Bohusl?n Big Band performs in Ystad with a special guest. When I attended the festival for the first time in 2016, it was

Joe Lovano
drumsb.1952
Ystad's oldest church, St. Mary's from the 1240s, has a tradition that started in 1748. Between 9.15 p.m. and 1.00 a.m., the night watchman blows his horn every 15 minutes to signal that all is well. According to a new tradition, this job is now assumed on the first jazz festival evening at 10.30 p.m. by a trumpeter. While past players included Hugh Masekela from South Africa and the Italian

Paolo Fresu
trumpetb.1961
Mårten Lundgren
trumpetThe final day of the Ystad jazz festival on the Swedish South coast started with a unique event. At 4.00 a.m. buses took the audience sixteen kilometers East of Ystad to a headland from which Ales Stenar overlooks the Baltic Sea. Ales Stenar is an ancient stone circle although it does not really have the form of a circle but of a Viking long-ship. The stones were erected about 1,200 years ago at the heyday of Viking culture and provided the dramatic background for a sunrise concert bythe Norwegian trumpeter Nils Petter Molvaer, who is famous for his experiments with electronics. At Ales Stenar he played his trumpet over pre-recorded soundscapes and rhythms.
The festival finale featured Sweden's trombone ace Nils Landgren (the last trombonist of the Crusaders) and his Funk Unit together with many other festival performers like the director Jan Lundgren on the piano, the Finnish saxophonist
Jukka Perko
saxophone
Fred Wesley
tromboneb.1943
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