Ottawa Sun

All that JAZZ

Our top 6 picks for this year's music fest

- PETER HUM

The Ottawa Jazz Festival's indoor shows are where the art is.

While the festival, which launched in 1980, used to be unadultera­ted when it came to presenting jazz, it has since become more like two adjacent, simultaneo­us festivals, one outdoors and the other indoors, with different mandates. Acts that have more mainstream appeal because they feature singers or are groovier or star jazz groups with crossover interest play in Confederat­ion Park or on the OLG Stage in Marion Dewar Plaza. But music that hews closer to the jazz tradition, while evolving and expanding to sound distinctly like 2024, receives top billing at the NAC'S Azrieli Studio and Fourth Stage.

For fans of music that prioritize­s innovation and spontaneit­y along with aural beauty, here are six prime examples worth grabbing seats for.

Darcy James Argue’s Secret Society June 21, 7:30 p.m., NAC Azrieli Studio

Since at least the mid-1990s, some of jazz's sharpest minds have been radically re-thinking what big bands can sound like, expanding the genre in the process. An especially fertile composer and bandleader is Brooklynba­sed, Vancouver-raised Darcy James Argue, whose 18-piece Secret Society ensemble has been stimulatin­g musiclover­s for almost two decades, racking up accolades and nomination­s all the while. The band plays its only Canadian date this summer in the Azrieli Studio on the jazz festival's opening night and is likely to draw from its most recent and Grammy-nominated album, Dynamic Maximum Tension.

Hand to Earth June 22, 9 p.m., NAC Fourth Stage

It doesn't get more cross-cultural and intriguing than this six-person project, which is an offshoot of the Australian Art Orchestra. Its frontline participan­ts are Daniel Yipininy Wilfred, an Aboriginal Australian singer who is the keeper of songs from South East Arnhem Land in Northern Australia that date back more than 40,000 years, and Korean vocalist Sunny

Kim. Their in-the-moment rapport soars over pulsating, electrifie­d soundscape­s courtesy of trumpeter Peter Knight, clarinetis­t Aviva Endean, violinist Amalia Umeda and David Yipininy Wilfred, who plays the yidaki, or didgeridoo. Mysterious, cinematic and unique, Hand to Earth's music is beautiful in a way that you didn't know existed.

Chris Potter Trio June 25, 7 p.m., NAC Azrieli Studio

Saxophonis­t Chris Potter, who has previously performed in Ottawa with Herbie Hancock, Pat Metheny and Dave Holland, is unsurpasse­d when it comes to virtuosity and eloquence. Kicking off a short North American tour in Ottawa, the world-class hornman will be joined by bassist Matt Brewer and drummer Kendrick Scott, both scintillat­ing musicians and members along with Potter of the all-star SFJAZZ Collective. Expect hard-hitting, interactiv­e music that's as articulate as it is visceral.

Marianne Trudel and John Hollenbeck and Remi-jean Leblanc June 28, 6:30 p.m., NAC Fourth Stage

For the past 20 years, Montreal pianist Marianne Trudel has been prolific, innovative and engaging, forging bonds with a host of creative collaborat­ors to make attentiong­rabbing music that balances forthright lyricism with explorator­y drive. Her trio with bassist Rémijean Leblanc and drummer John Hollenbeck is marvellous, and the group's 2023 album Time Poem is filled with rugged, layered music that brims with trust and adventurou­sness.

Ches Smith and We All Break June 28, 7 p.m., NAC Azrieli Studio

Over the past two decades, Ches Smith has been simultaneo­usly a vital drummer powering jazz's outwardbou­nd contingent, collaborat­ing with such artists as saxophonis­t Tim Berne and pianists Kris Davis and Matt Mitchell, as well as a serious student of Haitian Vodou drums. Smith's We

All Break project combines his earthy and edgy passions on a single stage, enlisting Berne, Mitchell and bassist Nick Dunston plus three male Haitian drummer/vocalists and three female Haitian vocalists to perform his original compositio­ns. Traditiona­l Haitian rhythms gird each piece, but the material also allows all-stars of jazz's avant-garde to take flight.

aja monet June 29, 7 p.m., NAC Azrieli Studio

A poet and a performer of poetry for many years, Brooklyn-raised spoken word artist aja monet is a hyper-articulate advocate with her art for Blackness, social justice and joy. Her 2023 debut album when the poems do what they do, which melded monet's thrilling feats of language and potent grooves, was deservedly Grammy-nominated.

At the Azrieli Studio, monet will be supported by elite musicians including pianist Javier Santiago, bassist Ben Williams, drummer Justin Brown and saxophonis­t Logan Richardson.

 ?? ?? CHRIS POTTER
DARCY JAMES ARGUE
CHRIS POTTER DARCY JAMES ARGUE
 ?? ?? HAND TO EARTH
AJA MONET
HAND TO EARTH AJA MONET
 ?? ?? TRUDEL, HOLLENBECK & LEBLANC
TRUDEL, HOLLENBECK & LEBLANC
 ?? ?? WE ALL BREAK
WE ALL BREAK

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