Événements

Standard Bank National Youth Jazz Festival 2011
Édition 2011

Français

Devenu une vitrine de la création africaine, ce festival de jazz apparu en 1991 à l’initiative d’un enseignant expose les talents des universités de musique. Enseignants et étudiants se retrouvent dans ce festival qui fait office de tremplin pour certains jazz bands.

Le programme dans les prochains mois…

English

Standard Bank National Youth Jazz Festival, Grahamstown: a barometer of South African Jazz

The Standard Bank National Youth Jazz Festival has become one of the most significant jazz development programmes in the country, annually bringing together over 300 students and 40 teachers from diverse backgrounds all over South Africa, with nearly 60 professional jazz musicians and educators. The festival lasts nearly a week, incorporating innovative jazz performance, rehearsals, workshops, lectures, networking and an opportunity for South Africa’s future jazz stars to interact personally and musically with their peers and the country’s top performers.
Get Flash now!

In order to listen or view this content you will have to upgrade your version of Flash.


The SBNYJF has hosted most of South Africa’s leading jazz musicians over the past 16 years, as well as musicians and teachers from Argentina, Australia, Austria, Britain, Canada, Costa Rica, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Israel, Mexico, Mozambique, The Netherlands, Norway, Portugal, Serbia, Sweden, Switzerland, the US and Zimbabwe.

The top jazz students in South Africa audition for places in the Standard Bank National Schools Big Band and the National Youth Jazz Band (NYJB) and these national bands are conducted by some of South Africa’s leading jazz educators and performers. The NYJB performs regularly at major festivals around South Africa – Grahamstown, Cape Town, Johannesburg, Durban – and has performed in New York, Sweden and the North Sea Jazz Festival, The Netherlands.

The philosophy of the SBNYJF is to promote the development of jazz in South African by providing vibrant, excellent educational opportunities for young players; by encouraging artistic integrity and creativity on the world-class Main Jazz Stage; by acknowledging our country’s jazz heritage; by creating a forum for South African musicians to network with peers from around the country and the world; and by providing audiences with unique, quality jazz.
Partager :