Media Release: 17 October 2007
Famous Martinique virtuoso Mario Canonge at Wellington International Jazz Festival
The eleventh Wellington International Jazz Festival opens on 6th November for seven nights of exotic and inspiring music
– with everything from Caribbean fusion to sweaty boggy blues and wild big band adventures
Highlights include the acclaimed French piano virtuoso Mario Canonge performing on November 14th. Born in Martinique,
Canonge has been based in Paris since 1979 and has become internationally renowned for his daring fusion of jazz and
traditional music from the French Antilles. His awe-inspiring trio with Mauritian bass player Lynley Marthe and Indian
drummer Chander Sardjoe will be joined by local saxophone legend Lucien Johnson.
Also not be missed is the man considered the trombonist of European jazz - Nils Wogram - performing with his
sought-after quartet Root 70, which includes New Zealanders Hayden Chisholm and Matt Penman. Hailed as the hottest
young band on the German scene, this half German half New Zealand group combine traditional jazz with avant-garde
elements to create a sound that is both original and accessible.
The festival offers a rare opportunity to catch up with some of our most inspiring musical exports. Wellington-born
Edward Ware has been living in New York since 1990, where he’s made a name for himself as a talented percussionist and
composer. He’s worked with a diverse range of players in the downtown New York music scene and recently completed a
masters degree in composition from Brooklyn College. For this return to Wellington he has rearranged the tunes of
Thelonious Monk with a quartet of local musicians – Paul Dyne (bass), Anita Schwabe (piano) and Nick van Dijk (trombone
and euphonium).
UK-based Tom Rodwell has recently been the subject of a BBC documentary about his unique method of recording. His
reappearance in Wellington will see him performing radically rearranged, raw and funky versions of pre-war blues and
19th century slave-time spirituals with his duo Storehouse.
New Zealand born international treasure Mike Nock will be performing solo in the Ilott Theatre. One of the acclaimed
masters of jazz, he spent 25 years working with many of the great names in the United States, before moving to Australia
where he has continued to record and tour internationally. His concert will be a rare opportunity to hear some of his
finest compositions from throughout his career, along with new music to be released later this year.
The festival will also offer the first opportunity to hear three new commissions supported by Creative New Zealand,
including original new work from the esteemed Auckland-based John Bell and The Immaculate Trio. Outstanding pianist and
local darling Jonathan Crayford will also be presenting a new work at Ilott Theatre – which aims to describe the short
and highly eventful life of Evariste Galois, the French revolutionary mathematician who died under murky circumstances.
And at Happy, Wellington’s supergroup, Village of the Idiots will be performing new compositions by saxophonist Lucien
Johnson.
Happy will also host outstanding local acts including The Serpentine Quartet, Vibrant Tongues and Blair Latham, The
Crust, Sign of the Hag, and Punctured Lung.
Festival brochures are now available at information sites, Ticketek, and cafes around Wellington. More information is
available on www.jazzfestival.co.nz,
Mario Canonge is presented in association with Alliance Française de Wellington, with the help of Région Martinique and
the French Embassy. Nils Wogram and Root 70 are presented by The Goethe-Institut.
Wellington International Jazz Festival
6-14 November 2007
www.jazzfestival.co.nz
ends