2015 Standard Bank Jazz Festival Burns With Spirit

2015 Standard Bank Young Artist for Jazz Nduduzo Makhathini.

2015 Standard Bank Young Artist for Jazz Nduduzo Makhathini.

This year’s Standard Bank Jazz Festival, Grahamstown as part of the National Arts Festival from Thursday, 2 July to Saturday, 11 July, will bring together the best of South African jazz today with some of the world’s most exhilarating contemporary jazz innovators.

The 2015 programme, which features more than 120 sought-after musicians, presents a solid mix of serious limit-shifting jazz as well as the freshest crossover sounds to appeal to music lovers across the spectrum.

Invited artists include the Stockholm Jazz Orchestra, Dutch saxophonist Yuri Honing, Austrian pianist David Helbock, US-based guitarist Lionel Loueke, Zimbabwe’s Oliver Mtukudzi, French drummer André Charlier, South Africans Kesivan Naidoo, Thandiswa Mazwai, Carlo Mombelli and Pops Mohammed, as well as Cape Town pop band Beatenburg and Joburg house band MiCasa. Ray Phiri will be in town for a one-night only solo gig.

“The Standard Bank Jazz Festival acts as a barometer of the South African jazz scene, reflecting our heritage as well as international trends, and opening up opportunities for networking and collaboration,” says Festival Director Alan Webster. “The festival is about acknowledging our roots as South Africans and inviting the world in. We’re not asking how to do it – but sharing experiences with musicians from all over the world to create something new.”

Webster, who has been responsible for putting the programme together since he took over as director in 2001, says the world’s musicians relish the opportunity to visit Grahamstown because of the festival’s high artistic credibility and aesthetic integrity. “It offers musicians 10 days to network, collaborate and learn from each other,” he says.

This collective improvisational energy will perhaps be best experienced this year in The Bjaerv Encounters and Kesivan & The Lights, which will see jazz superstar Kesivan Naidoo mixing it up with the Swedish musicians he met when he played the festival 10 years ago. “There’s no doubt that that experience was a key influence on what Kesivan has become,” says Webster. “It is Grahamstown that allowed that to happen – it’s the essence of what jazz is supposed to be.”

This year, Bokani Dyer, another former Standard Bank Young Artist Award winner, will share the stage with four Swiss musicians he met during his residency in Basel. The Bokani Dyer Quintet will merge the vitality of contemporary South African Jazz with Swiss precision and musicianship.

In Listening to the Ground, this year’s Standard Bank Young Artist award winner pianist and composer Nduduzo Makhathini will perform with fellow South Africans Feya Faku, Ayanda Sikade and Nomagugu Makhathini as well as Swedish saxophone player Karl-Martin Almqvist and bassist Martin Sjöstedt to pay homage to the musical legends who have built the great legacy of South African jazz.

The festival also incorporates the Standard Bank National Youth Jazz Festival, which exposes 350 of South Africa’s best young musicians to the best of jazz over six burning days spent with 50 teachers and 90 professional jazz musicians and educators in rehearsals, workshops, lectures and performances. The top jazz students in South Africa audition for places in the Standard Bank National Schools Big Band and the Standard Bank National Youth Jazz Band.

Need to know

Bookings can be made via the website: www.nationalartsfestival.co.za. Ticketing call centre: 0860 002 004

Pick up a Festival programme and booking kit from selected Standard Bank and Exclusive Books branches from the end of April. The full programme will be online from 30 April at www.nationalartsfestival.co.za.

KEEP IN TOUCH

Standard Bank Jazz Festival

Website: www.youthjazz.co.za

Facebook: www.facebook.com/youthjazz

National Arts Festival

Website: www.nationalartsfestival.co.za and www.youthjazz.co.za

Facebook: www.facebook.com/nationalartsfestival

Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/artsfestival

Women take centre stage with strong female presence at this year’s National Arts Festival

This year’s National Arts Festival programme features more women in an effort to amplify female voices in the theatrical, performing and visual arts.

The Festival – which runs from 2 to 12 July – not only features a number of strong and visible women in most genres, but also numerous productions and exhibitions that interrogate and question fixed thinking in relation to gender more broadly.

At the closing of the recent PEN World Voices Festival in New York, Nigerian author Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie spoke out against the ‘codes of silence’ that govern American life. “The fear of causing offence, the fear of ruffling the careful layers of comfort, becomes a fetish,” Adichie said.

Practising what she preaches, the award-winning writer recently spoke out against the criminalisation of homosexuality in her home country. But, she told The Guardian: “I have often been told that I cannot speak on certain issues because I am young, and female, or, to use the disparaging Nigerian speak, because I am a “small girl” … I have also been told that I should not speak because I am a fiction writer … But I am as much a citizen as I am a writer.”

Adichie’s critique could equally be levelled at South Africa’s slow burning culture of consent in relation to everyday gender inequities and the often unspoken violence that plagues the lives of many South African women. This year, the National Arts Festival tackles this seam of gender inequality head on.

This focus forms part of the overall thrust of this year’s Festival to bring urgent social matters to light and present material that explores the limits of expressive liberty, provoking audiences and taking them beyond their comfort zones.

“The arts need to challenge and provoke,” says the Festival’s Artistic Director, Ismail Mahomed – and that includes provocation in relation to the most intimate questions of gender identity, sexuality and power relations.

More female artists have been consciously featured in the 2015 programme in an effort to amplify female voices in the theatrical, performing and visual arts. Among the many female writers, directors, performers, curators and trailblazing artists across all genres appearing at this year’s National Arts Festival, some of the leading lights include:

  • Tara Louise Notcutt is involved in seven productions at NAF2015, not least ‘Three Blind Mice’ (Rhodes Box, Monday, July 6, Tuesday, July 7 and Wednesday, July 8 July at 3pm and 8pm daily). Notcutt directs James Cairns, Albert Pretorius and Rob van Vuuren in this unforgiving journey into the dark heart of South African justice, which looks to the horrific and barely believable narratives (Pistorius, Dewani) that have dominated our media recently.
  • Thoko Ntshinga directs the Baxter Theatre Centre’s revival of legendary South African theatre-maker Barney Simon’s hard-hitting 1985 docudrama ‘Born in the RSA’ (Graeme College, Thursday, 2 July at 6pm, Friday, 3 July at 2pm and 6pm and Saturday, 4 July at 2pm and 6pm). Having performed the role of Thenjiwe in the original production, Ntshinga is the lifeline connecting the 1985 staging to this current revival.
  • Patricia Boyer: ‘Miss Margarida’s Way’ (The Hangar, Friday, 10 July at 6.30pm, Saturday, 11 July at 10am and 3.30pm and Sunday, 12 July at 12.30pm and 6pm) Audiences and critics in over 50 countries have cheered this allegory about totalitarianism, which uses as its central metaphor a classroom. Also ‘Florence: A Script Reading’ (Eden Grove, Seminar Room 1 on Tuesday, 7 July at 4pm – as part of Think!Fest 2015) exploring the life of Lady Florence Phillips and the circumstances that led to the creation of the Johannesburg Art Gallery.
  • Nelisiwe Xaba and Mamela Nyamza: ‘The Last Attitude’ (Rhodes Box Theatre, Thursday, 2 July at 2pm, Friday, 3 July at 2pm and 6pm, Saturday, 4 July at 2 and 6pm) After years of not dancing together, two female choreographers/dancers meet up on stage again to do a ballet. The piece will interrogate the politics of this ancient art form: including the male posture and the relationship between the male principal dancer and the ballerina.
  • Jolynn Minaar: ‘Unearthed’ (Olive Schreiner, 7 July 12pm and 8 July 2.30pm): A young South African filmmaker swallows her optimism on the potential shale gas could bring to her people after traveling to ground zero and uncovering the dirty secrets of the fracking industry.
  • Jodi Bieber: ‘Between Darkness and Light’ (Grahamstown Gallery, Albany History Museum, 9am to 5pm daily) is this internationally acclaimed photographer’s first major mid-career retrospective and includes a selection of her work from 1993 to the present. The show has been exhibited at Stadhaus Ulm and Museum Goch in Germany as well as the Wits Art Museum.
  • Monique Pelser: ‘Conversations with My Father’ (Alumni Gallery, Albany Museum, 9am to 5pm daily) is a continuous dialogue (2011 – to date) between the artist and the objects, images, sound recordings and documents she inherited after her father died of a rare motor neuron disease which rendered him unable to speak for the last year and a half of his life. Her father was ‘a good man, a good father’. As a member of the South African Police force, he was also a product of his environment.
  • Thandiswa Mazwai (Guy Butler Theatre, Monument, Saturday, 11 July at 7pm): The Guardian recently called her ‘South Africa’s finest female contemporary singer’. One of South Africa’s most influential musicians, her music defies categorisation, but reflects elements of African traditional, jazz, Afro-soul and house.
  • Thandi Ntuli (DSG Auditorium, Friday, 3 July 11.30pm) Captivating young pianist Thandi Ntuli is making waves in the contemporary South African jazz scene and rapidly earning the admiration of the industry’s most respected musos. She has performed on various local and international stages including the Calabar International Jazz Festival, and recently returned from a national tour promoting her solo album, ‘The Offering’, which has received high accolades.
  • Also catch pianist Kai-ya Chang and gifted vocalists Nomfundo Xaluva, Lindiwe Maxolo, Auriol Hays and Siya Makuzeni (vocals/trombone) at the Standard Bank Jazz Festival.

Lerato Bereng is this year’s Featured Young Curator. Having graduated with a Masters in Fine Art (with distinction) from Rhodes University, she will be returning to her stomping ground. Bereng, who is a curator at Stevenson gallery in Johannesburg, has curated ‘Nine O’Clock’ (Fort Selwyn, 9am to 7pm daily), an exhibition featuring a selection of works by Simon Gush, including elements from his project, Red (2014), and administrator for Standard Bank Young Artist Kemang wa Lehulere’s exhibition ‘History Will Break Your Heart’ (Monument Gallery, 9am to 6pm daily).

For gripping theatre based on harrowing true stories about women rising up against the odds, see:

  • I Have Life: Alison’s Story’ Based on the true story of a woman who, twenty years ago, was raped, stabbed multiple times and then had her throat cut, SAFTA Lifetime Achievement award winning theatre director Maralin Vanrenen’s adaptation of Marianne Thamm’s book, is a tribute to one woman’s remarkable journey from her ordeal, through her recovery and on to becoming an inspiration around the globe. Featuring Suanne Braun as Alison Botha. (Victoria Theatre, Thursday, 2 July at 4pm, Friday, 3 July at 2pm and 6pm, and Saturday, 4 July at 2pm and 6pm)
  • Woman Alone’, Christo Davids’ adaptation of Dannelene Noach’s autobiographical novel ‘Arabian Nightmare’ tells the story of a woman working as nursing co-ordinator in one of the large, modern hospitals in Riyadh who ends up being abducted and incarcerated in a Saudi Arabian jail. A Muslim woman comes her rescue in a poignant tale about personal courage in the context of current-day religious conflicts. (The Hangar, Friday, 10 July at 12:30pm, Saturday, 11 July at 1pm and 9pm, and Sunday, 12 July at 10am and 3.30pm)
    Singer sensation Auriol Hays will be performing as part of the Standard Bank Jazz Festival in Grahamstown in July.

    Singer sensation Auriol Hays will be performing as part of the Standard Bank Jazz Festival in Grahamstown in July.

    Taiwanese pianist Kai-Ya Chang features on the scintillating programme at this year's Standard Bank Jazz Festival, to be held from 2 to 12 July in Grahamstown (Image: Wikimedia Commons)

    Taiwanese pianist Kai-Ya Chang features on the scintillating programme at this year’s Standard Bank Jazz Festival, to be held from 2 to 12 July in Grahamstown (Image: Wikimedia Commons)

    The Stevenson Gallery's Lerato Bereng is the featured curator at this year's National Arts Festival. She is pictured here at the Zeitz MOCCAA Gala held in Cape Town in March. (Image: Twitter.com/@ZeitzMOCAA)

    The Stevenson Gallery’s Lerato Bereng is the featured curator at this year’s National Arts Festival. She is pictured here at the Zeitz MOCCAA Gala held in Cape Town in March. (Image: Twitter.com/@ZeitzMOCAA)

    Actress and director Maralin Vanrenen has adapted Alison Botha's story about her brutal rape 20 years ago into a theatre production, 'I Have Life – Alison's Journey', which will be staged at this year's National Arts Festival.

    Actress and director Maralin Vanrenen has adapted Alison Botha’s story about her brutal rape 20 years ago into a theatre production, ‘I Have Life – Alison’s Journey’, which will be staged at this year’s National Arts Festival.

NEED TO KNOW

bookings are open and can be made via the website: http://www.nationalartsfestival.co.za. Ticketing call centre: 0860 002 004

Pick up a Festival programme and booking kit from selected Standard Bank and Exclusive Books. The full programme is online at http://www.nationalartsfestival.co.zA

ABOUT THE FESTIVAL

The National Arts Festival is an important event on the South African cultural calendar, and the biggest annual celebration of the arts on the African continent. This year it runs from 2 to 12 July 2015 in the small university town of Grahamstown in the Eastern Cape. The programme comprises drama, dance, physical theatre, comedy, opera, music, jazz, visual art exhibitions, film, student theatre, street theatre, lectures, craft fair, workshops, tours (of the city and surrounding historic places) as well as a children’s arts festival. As no censorship or artistic restraint has ever been imposed on works presented in Grahamstown, the Festival served as an important forum for political and protest theatre during the height of the apartheid era, and it continues to offer an opportunity for experimentation across the arts spectrum. Its significance as a forum for new ideas and an indicator of future trends in the arts cannot be underestimated.

KEEP IN TOUCH

National Arts Festival

Website: http://www.nationalartsfestival.co.za and http://www.youthjazz.co.za

Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/nationalartsfestival

Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/artsfestival

Three UKZN shows heading to the National Arts Festival

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THREE shows from the University of KwaZulu-Natal will be presented at the National Arts Festival in Grahamstown this year.
They are: the highly successful and acclaimed productions of Woza Albert! and The Island which have been touring around KwaZulu-Natal and the Great Karoo, where The Island was seen and enjoyed by playwright, Athol Fugard, himself.
The Island is also being presented at the National Schools’ Festival later in July.
The other show from UKZN, Match Girl, has been selected to represent the Pietermaritzburg campus at the annual student drama festival at the National Arts Festival.
Match Girl is a modern South African adaptation of the Hans Christian Anderson tale of The Little Match Girl.
The story is told through a fusion of performance art, mask work, shadow play, puppetry and physical theatre.
It highlights how we, as a society, have become inured to suffering and poverty, or simply don’t want to acknowledge it.
The production retains the innocence and sentiment of the original story through the use of highly visual theatrical imagery combining modern technology with artistic simplicity.
It is directed by masters student Jessica Killerby, who was responsible for the beautiful environmental piece Her Cradle, which wowed audiences at the Hexagon and Hilton Arts Festival last year.
The cast includes Nompilo Jili, Monique Schoeman, Bongeka Ngubane, Musa Shozi and Sabelo Cele.
Woza Albert! is one of the plays for which South African theatre is best known internationally.
Its style of storytelling has inspired and influenced theatre companies around the world, and it remains one of the most vibrant examples of satirical anti-apartheid South African theatre.
The play asks what would happen if Christ (Morena) came back to 1980s apartheid South Africa. It is primarily a satire that highlights the absurdities of apartheid and displays the talents of two dextrous actors, in this case TQ Zondi and Mpilo Nzimande, who play a range of ordinary characters on the street.
Directed by Peter Mitchell, the production is a high energy explosion of creativity and humour with a dark edge as Morena’s life is relived in an apartheid context.
Pietermaritzburg audiences will be able to see previews of Match Girl and Woza Albert! at the Hexagon Theatre at 6 pm on June 25 and at 6 pm and 7.15 pm on June 26.
A musical duo called Acoustic Assassins, which is also Grahamstown bound, will entertain in The Dive on June 26 at 8.30 pm.
Tickets are R40 (R25 concession) for each show.
— Weekend Witness eXplore Reporter
Where to see these shows in Grahamstown:
• The Match Girl will be staged in the rehearsal room at 11.30 am on July 2 and 5 pm on July 3. Tickets are R45 (R35 concessions).
• Woza Albert! can be seen at the Masonic Back at 4 pm on July 7, 12 noon on July 8, 4 pm on July 9, 2 pm and 10 pm on July 11 and at 10 am on July 12. Tickets are R50 (concessions R45).
• The Island is at the Masonic Back at 4 pm on July 2, 12 noon and 8 pm on July 3, 10 pm on July 4, 2 pm on July 5 and 6 pm on July 6. Tickets are R50 (R45 concessions).
• Acoustiq Assassins are performing at The Vic at 12 noon on July 8, 1 pm on July 9 and 5 pm on July 10. Tickets R50.
TQ Zondi and Mpilo Nzimande star in Woza Albert!

TQ Zondi and Mpilo Nzimande star in Woza Albert!

Nompilo Jili in Match Girl.

Nompilo Jili in Match Girl.

TQ Zondi and Mpilo Nzimande star in The Island.

TQ Zondi and Mpilo Nzimande star in The Island.