The
North Sea Jazz Festival in the Netherlands is said to be the biggest indoor
fest in the world. I have no argument. It's a tremendous event with quality music
from start to finish. Like so many jazz festivals, you'll find rock and pop and
soul music as well. Names like Price and Snoop Dogg and Seal—Hell, even Pal
Simon and Tom Jones were there this year. No question though, jazz was abundant
and in all forms, from big band to traditional to bebop to more modern and
experimental groups.
It also showcased some Dutch jazz musicians, of which a couple are worth mentioning. Bear in mind, there were 13 stages at the event. To see everything was impossible. To see all Dutch jazz was just as impossible as it was to see all other kinds. It was a dizzying experience in some respects—so much goes music missed. SO MUCH good music experienced and savored.
North Sea Jazz is something fans should try and see. The host city of Rotterdam is warm and welcoming. Friendly. Easy to get around. Laid back. Plenty for tourists to take in. Shopping. Night life. A nice arts community. Dining of all kinds. It's a perfect host city for this huge event and the venue—a huge facility dubbed Ahoy—is unique and impressive.
There's no predicting how the careers of musicians will go. No formula for success. Why this person “made it" and that person didn't, in terms of public recognition, is largely a mystery. The famed jazz producer Orrin Keepnews once told me that some musicians were “inevitable," meaning that regardless of what he did as a producer, or anyone else, that cram was going to rise to the top. The talent was too immense. Coltrane, Monk. Sonny Rollins. That's true.
What becomes of so many others, why some rise and some don't .. who knows. Good fortune certainly plays a role. But it remains a mystery. Just like individual songs. Why this one makes it and that one doesn't. Who knows.
A noteworthy discovery in Rotterdam was Ntjam Rosie, a resident there for a while now, but originally from Camaroon. She's a singer in the manner of perhaps a Lizz Wright or Angelique Kidjo. Soul, world music, jazz, R&B all have a place in her music, as does, certainly, sounds she's heard in Camaroon. She's a trained vocalist who writes just about all of her own material and is bent on carving a career based on that. Her latest album Elle exhibits her songwriting. It's a good disk, but in performance, like most good artists, she is more dynamic and engaging. It should be that way and not the other way 'round.
Performing at Ahoy, she exhibited charm and a relaxed ease, fronting a larger ensemble with percussion, flute and vibes to go with the basic rhythm. She was energized and so was the crowd. Her voice is pristine and she communicates her lyrics directly and clearly. A fine sense of rhythm and harmony. Her influences she channels through her own filter and it comes out a mixture of pop, soul and world music, with underpinnings of jazz harmony. She's not pushing pop hooks in order to be heard. Very musical
It also showcased some Dutch jazz musicians, of which a couple are worth mentioning. Bear in mind, there were 13 stages at the event. To see everything was impossible. To see all Dutch jazz was just as impossible as it was to see all other kinds. It was a dizzying experience in some respects—so much goes music missed. SO MUCH good music experienced and savored.
North Sea Jazz is something fans should try and see. The host city of Rotterdam is warm and welcoming. Friendly. Easy to get around. Laid back. Plenty for tourists to take in. Shopping. Night life. A nice arts community. Dining of all kinds. It's a perfect host city for this huge event and the venue—a huge facility dubbed Ahoy—is unique and impressive.
There's no predicting how the careers of musicians will go. No formula for success. Why this person “made it" and that person didn't, in terms of public recognition, is largely a mystery. The famed jazz producer Orrin Keepnews once told me that some musicians were “inevitable," meaning that regardless of what he did as a producer, or anyone else, that cram was going to rise to the top. The talent was too immense. Coltrane, Monk. Sonny Rollins. That's true.
What becomes of so many others, why some rise and some don't .. who knows. Good fortune certainly plays a role. But it remains a mystery. Just like individual songs. Why this one makes it and that one doesn't. Who knows.
A noteworthy discovery in Rotterdam was Ntjam Rosie, a resident there for a while now, but originally from Camaroon. She's a singer in the manner of perhaps a Lizz Wright or Angelique Kidjo. Soul, world music, jazz, R&B all have a place in her music, as does, certainly, sounds she's heard in Camaroon. She's a trained vocalist who writes just about all of her own material and is bent on carving a career based on that. Her latest album Elle exhibits her songwriting. It's a good disk, but in performance, like most good artists, she is more dynamic and engaging. It should be that way and not the other way 'round.
Performing at Ahoy, she exhibited charm and a relaxed ease, fronting a larger ensemble with percussion, flute and vibes to go with the basic rhythm. She was energized and so was the crowd. Her voice is pristine and she communicates her lyrics directly and clearly. A fine sense of rhythm and harmony. Her influences she channels through her own filter and it comes out a mixture of pop, soul and world music, with underpinnings of jazz harmony. She's not pushing pop hooks in order to be heard. Very musical
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