Auteur/autrice : admin

  • Sceaux Jazz Festival du 30 juin au 3 juillet

    Sceaux Jazz Festival du 30 juin au 3 juillet

    Faire de la contrainte une source d’inspiration.

    Initié en juin 2021 au sortir du confinement, l’envie était forte d’offrir au public et aux artistes l’occasion de se retrouver après la longue parenthèse traversée, en plein air, dans un cadre à la fois majestueux et intime, celui de la cour d’Honneur du château du Domaine départemental de Sceaux. Cette première édition préfigurait le projet d’une nouvelle façon d’ouvrir Les Gémeaux. A d’autres publics, à d’autres modes d’écoute, et de rencontre avec la musique. C’est ainsi qu’est née la première édition de ce qui allait devenir, un an plus tard, le Sceaux Jazz Festival.

    La deuxième édition entre en résonance avec la nouvelle identité sonore des Gémeaux : un jazz accessible à toutes les oreilles, des plus jazzistiques aux non-initiées, un jazz ouvert à toutes les influences musicales et travaillant au renouvellement des esthétiques, enfin, un jazz porté par différentes générations de musiciens, des talents émergents aux monstres sacrés. L’envie aussi de faire se frotter la programmation jazz avec les musiques actuelles.

    Au programme :

    Rover
    Jeudi 30 juin, 21h

    Roberto Fonseca
    Vendredi 1er juillet, 21h

    Lauréat du concours La Défense Jazz Festival 2022
    Samedi 2 juillet, 17h (entrée libre)

    Erik Truffaz
    Samedi 2 juillet, 21h

    Ink
    Dimanche 3 juillet, 17h (entrée libre)

    Co-plateau Mammal Hands / Rouge
    Dimanche 3 juillet, 21h


    Infos & résas

  • Carbon study: What is the impact on jazz venues and festivals?

    Carbon study: What is the impact on jazz venues and festivals?

    A roadmap for the jazz industry to address the climate crisis

    4 venues, 5 festivals in France and Europe: Le Périscope / L’Estran / L’Astrada / Bimhuis (NL)
    Jazzdor / Les Détours de Babel / Oslojazz (NW) / Jazz à Luz / Jazz dans le Bocage

    Methodology


    The
    figures
    of the study


    Comparison of
    venues and festivals


    Travels


    What are the
    outcomes
    ?


    References

    It is now scientifically proven that climate change is the result of anthropogenic greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions and these future emissions will determine the evolution of the climate in the next coming years. In order to not exceed an increase of 1.5°C by 2100, we must rapidly curb our emissions to reach a net zero by 2050. Following the process towards a une Transition Bas Carbone initiée par le Périscopei and the presentation of its carbon strategyii in early 2022, a new cooperation between Le Periscope and the AJC network has started in 2021. The goal of this initiative is to design a carbon study, to measure the impact of our industry on climate change and to create a common trajectory in the field of jazz and improvised music.

    Conducted thanks to a European co-funding, this Periscope-Footprints and AJC carbon studyi aims to determine the carbon footprints of different operators (members of the network or partners), then to identify the most relevant reduction factors for each of them and, more generally, to define reproducible strategies for the other operators in the industry.

    Over the last ten years, the cultural sector has become progressively aware of its impact on the global climate crisis. Pioneers such as Julie’s Bicycle in England and Creative Carbon Scotland are supporting actors in their efforts to decarbonise, using carbon calculation tools designed for the cultural sector and through ongoing studies. In France, the thinking process started in the performing arts sector at the beginning of the 2010s, with the conduct of a series of carbon assessments for a few theatres and large venues. It has especially accelerated since 2020, with the publication of the Shift Project report, a general desire to reorganise post-Covid 19 practices in order to make them fundamentally more sustainable and to finally give easier access to national and European funding for the implementation of carbon audits.

    However, despite numerous experiments and a number of studies, the cultural sector, and the music sector in particular, still lacks a quantified and scientific approach to measure and understand the issues related to its activities. European and French legislation is beginning to evolve, including the obligation to display the environmental impact of its activities, such as the various pressures. In addition to the recognition of the prescriptive role of culture, these measures should lead us to anticipate these questions and to start our transition as soon as possible to contribute to the fight against the climate crisis.

    Le Périscope, leader of the Footprints European cooperation project, and the AJC network are affirming their desire to provide a new methodology for the operators, involving all the links in the current music ecosystem- producers, artists, presenters- in order to think collectively and make concrete progress in the low-carbon transition of the jazz world.

    This study should enable the jazz and improvised music sector to first understand its emission factors and then examine how to reduce them. It aims to clearly identify a set of defined and measurable targets that the sector as a whole could adopt in order to play its part in the Paris Agreement on climate change, through a national reflection fuelled by European comparisons and a balanced view of the jazz industry in France and Europe.

    Methodology

    A sample of venues and festivals representative of the diversity of our sector

    To carry out this study, AJC called upon the consulting firm ANOVA, specialised in environment and sustainable development- CSR. With the contribution of Le Périscope, local intermediary of the project, the scope of the study was defined as well as a panel as representative as possible of the jazz and improvised music distributors in France and in Europe, among the members of the network and their European partners.

    The sample consists of:

    • 4 venues (medium to large size) and 5 festivals (small to medium capacity)
      7 French venues and 2 European venues (Norway and the Netherlands)
      4 venues in rural areas and 5 in urban or peri-urban areas
    •  

    Venues and festivals will be referred to by the use of the letter (A to I) corresponding to them in this table.

    Name Code Typology Localisation and inhabitants per urban area
    Le Périscope A Venue, medium FR, city center – metropolis – 1 400 000
    L’Estran B Venue, medium FR, rural – village – 12 000
    L’Astrada C Venue, medium FR, rural – village : 1250 hab. – association of municipalities – 7000
    Bimhuis D Venue, large NL, city center – metropolis – 1 350 000
    Jazzdor E Festival, medium FR, city center – large city – 500 510
    Les Détours de Babel F Festival + venue, medium FR, city center – large city – 450 000
    Oslo Jazz Festival G Festival, medium NO, city center – metropolis – 690 000
    Jazz à Luz H Festival, small FR, rural – village – 1000
    Jazz dans le Bocage I Festival, small FR, rural – nomadic – 1000 inhabitants per village in average

    The reference year chosen is 2019. In fact, following the consequences of the health crisis since March 2020, it represents the last year of « normal » activity and attendance for the operators, and therefore makes it possible to extract data that are relatively consistent with a normal operation.

    A methodology that considers the specific nature of our activities, in particular the travel of our audience and the tours of our performers

    The carbon footprint methodology, published by ADEME in 2004, can be used to measure greenhouse gas emissions, i.e. the impact on climate change of any organisation. It includes all the greenhouse gases defined by the IPCC (Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change) for all its flows, and its fields of application are divided into 3 categories of emissions called scopes 1, 2 and 3. The practicality of the carbon footprint tool and its relative flexibility make it possible to be adapted to the specific characteristics of our sectors of activity.

    The first phase of our methodological work consisted of listing and examining all the topics that have a direct or indirect impact on our sector. According to the different scopes described below, the least relevant ones were discarded. Thus, due to their minimal impact in terms of carbon impact, inputs such as paper and digital activities (emails, internet, etc.) were considered too small to be included.

    Name Description Included emission sources Excluded emission sources
    Scope 1 Emissions from assets held or exploited, i.e. oil heating, gaz furnace, vehicles owned by the structure, generators… – Natural gas combustion
    – Freezing agent leaks
    Scope 2 Emissions from the energy you buy (produced elsewhere), i.e. electricity -Electricity
    Scope 3 Emissions from other sources: professional travels, products and services you buy, travels, food, waste treatment, investments, travels of audiences… – Upstream use of electricity
    – Food, advertising medium, digital
    – Computer equipment (for venues) / Property (amortisation, for venues A, B, C, the only ones affected)
    – Artists / employed professionals / professional visitors travels
    – Travels of audiences
    – Travels home-work of permanent staff and volunteers
    – Packaging / waste (low compared to other sources)
    – Freight and works transport (low more often than not)
    – Assets under leasing (not much affected)
    – End of life (not much affected)
    – Digital broadcast (low compared to other sources)

    This phase revealed a number of difficulties and required us to make some choices in order to be as coherent as possible. It was, for example, complicated to include the premises and their fixed assets for the festivals, the vast majority of which do not own any venues. On the other hand, the entire ecosystem was taken into account for the « venues » participating in the study, which does not allow direct comparisons between the two types of presenters.

    To guide venues and festivals in collecting data in the most coordinated and consistent way possible, a collection file has been created. It consists of a questionnaire to be filled in, with cumulative data for 2019, the reference year:

    • Purchases of electricity, natural gas
      – Estimation of paper/cardboard consumption, meals distributed and digital activity
      – Estimation of various types of travel (in-season audiences, out-of-season audiences, artists, regular staff, volunteers, visitors, inbound and outbound freight)
      – Balance sheet of fixed assets as at 31 December: buildings owned (rooms A, B and C) + computer equipment
    Artists’ travel: a high accuracy measurement method for a key issue in the various projects

    A calculation tool has been created to record all travel for each scheduled concert date:

    The calculation formula (to be calculated separately for each different means of transportation used within the team), allows the addition of 2 types of travel:

    – The round trip from the city of origin: Number of artists x estimated round trip distance / number of stops on the tour
    – Travel between tour stops: Number of artists x estimated average distance between 2 stops

    Public mobility: a statistical analysis as close as possible to the reality of the territories
    • Regarding public travel, a distance calculation tool listing all the trips for each type of travel (urban, regional, national, international) was also sent to the organisations participating in the study. The calculation method, for each typology of travel determines:
    • – The average distance travelled per trip category
      – The modal share, i.e. the part taken by the different modes of transportation (walking, cycling, bus, metro, TER, train, TGV, car…), as a % of the km travelled
      Calculation by mode of transportation and by type of trip: number of spectators * average distance travelled * % modal share = number of passengers.km

    It should be noted that there is some uncertainty in the total distances calculated, due to two main factors:

    • – Uncertainty on the average distance per trip type: statistical data or estimates by the different venues/festivals
      – Uncertainty on the modal share per trip type (statistical data or estimates by the different venues/festivals)

    This aspect underlines the importance of conducting studies on the mobility of the public, by site or typology of site, in order to refine the data and the related emission rates.

    Once all the data have been collected, they are verified and then processed to calculate the results. The calculation of the GHG balance was performed using the Association Bilan Carbone v8 (2020) spreadsheet, which takes into account the emission factors (coefficients used to convert activity data into GHG emissions) 2018-19iii. This preparatory work was carried out between April 2021 and November 2021.

    It is this initial phase, and the exchanges made between December 2021 and today, that make this type of joint study so rich: understanding an issue by highlighting the different realities and being able to extract measurable data.

    The
    figures
    of the study

    The carbon footprints of the various festivals and venues show great disparities between the sites. For the year 2019, it goes from 39t CO2eq for a nomadic festival in a rural area to 546t CO2eq for a venue in an urban area.

    Name Typology Emissions in 2019 Spectators per year Missing data
    Le Périscope Venue, medium 63 tonnes CO2e 11 498
    L’Estran Venue, medium 141 tonnes CO2e 10 031
    L’Astrada Venue, medium 193 tonnes CO2e 13 663
    Bimhuis Venue, large 546 tonnes CO2e 50 659
    Jazzdor Festival, medium 90 tonnes CO2e 8 366 Food and venues
    Les Détours de Babel Festival + venue, medium 68 tonnes CO2e 20 857 Food and venues
    Oslo Jazz Festival Festival, medium 318 tonnes CO2e 20 146 Food and venues
    Jazz à Luz Festival, small 77 tonnes CO2e 7 543 Venues
    Jazz dans le Bocage Festival, small 39 tonnes CO2e 5 409 Venues

    On average, the French venues studied have a balance of about 100t CO2eq, which remains a rather low level of emissions. For comparison, since the last update in October 2021 by the Ministry of Ecological Transitioniv, the average carbon footprint in France in 2019– the last year of calculation before COVID-19- is 9.0t CO2eq per person.

    The average balance of the European sites is 430 t CO2eq, which is about four times higher than the French sites. This difference is partly explained by the low carbon proportion of the electricity mix in France.

    Even though the use of nuclear energy raises other environmental challenges, it has very low carbon emissions, unlike the energy mix in other European countries, including Norway and the Netherlands, which still relies heavily on fossil fuels (natural gas, oil, coal). The European venues studied also host a large number of events and spectators. The travel of spectators by car and artists by plane have a strong impact on their balance. While the Netherlands is very well served by rail, connections with Norway are more likely to be by air, and the size of the country means that there are long distances to cover.

    Once the figures have been compiled, it is relevant to convert them into a common reference unit in order to provide the first elements of comparison. Three benchmarks have been chosen: the annual budget, the number of operating days and the number of performances. Other criteria are also possiblev.

    The sites with the greatest impact are those with the highest number of audience trips by car, or the lowest number of operating days. On the other hand, there is no direct proportionality between the operators’ annual budget and their carbon footprint: its intensity varies between 0.1 and 0.4 t CO2eq per k€ of budget.

    Comparison of
    Venues
    Festivals

    The 4 venues studied have an average carbon footprint of 236t CO2eq, with the following repartition:

    For venues, there is a major impact of travel (mainly of audiences by road and artists by air). Fixed assets, which include those of the premises and are calculated on the basis of work carried out over the last 20 years, also account for a large share.

    Inputs, on the other hand (mainly meals, paper and digital activities), account for only a small part of the carbon footprint.

    Repartition of emissions – Venues
    Infogram

    The 4 festivals observed have an average carbon footprint of 118t CO2eq, with the following repartition:

    For the festivals, we also observe, not surprisingly, a major impact of travel, mainly by car (audiences). The impact of energy 1+2 is relatively low, as the data were not available for the Norwegian festival, and the other festivals operate on 100% electric power (a highly decarbonised mix, as mentioned earlier).

    The non-energy impacts do not apply to this type of site. The impacts of inputs remain relatively minor (62% of them concern food, 31% paper and 7% digital activities). Fixed assets only concern IT equipment.

    Without pitting venues against festivals, this last point highlights the energy impact of the premises and this issue is therefore very important for the venues.

    Repartition of emissions – Festivals
    Infogram
    The average repartition of emissions – Venues and festivals
    Infogram

    For French venues, fixed assets represent on average 19% of the carbon footprint.

    The analysis needs to be completed for festivals, with refined data collection on the facilities they use.

    Travels

    Unsurprisingly, travel is the largest source of emissions from our activities.. On average, they represent 83% of the carbon footprints in the study (69% for venues, 94% for festivals).

    However, it is necessary to differentiate the mobility of artists and the mobility of audiences in order to correctly assess their respective impacts and to activate the appropriate levers, while preserving the core of the operation. The contextualisation, particularly around « white zones » and modal shift, is crucial when looking at the panel in rural areas.

    Artists’ travel (including professional artists and their staff) represents 27% of all trips. 67% of travel is by audiences and 6% is by employees travelling to and from work.

    In rural areas, audience travel accounts for 74% of all travel (mostly by car), compared with 17% by artists and 9% for home-to-work travel. In urban areas, 62% of the trips are made by audiences, 34% by artists, and another 4% by commuting.

    Travel (% of emissions – tCO2)
    Infogram

    The comparison of transport emissions provided by ADEME, which compares the impact of transportation by air, car and train, helps to understand the strong impact of air travel on a study like ours.

    The car is the means of transportation used the most by the public while the plane is the one used the most by the artists, with the exception of a place like L’Estran (few international artists in 2019).

    Travels on national distances – CO2 emissions
    Infogram

    As some venues and festivals are very far from public transportation infrastructures, the modal shift from air or car to train is often impossible or very difficult.

    Travel – Artists (% of emissions – tCO2)
    Infogram

    What are the
    outcomes
    ?

    Means of action and studies to be continued

    This first study highlights the continuing requirements in terms of data collection and refinement.

    It outlines a few possible guidelines for work and levers for actions.

    CO2 emissions sources Plan for action Difficulty of implementation Estimated budget Estimated CO2 reduction and concerned source
    Travel (audiences) Offer a platform to carpool, to decrease the number of cars by 30-50 % (3 passengers/car). Medium 5k € -20 à -30% on « travel audiences »
    Travel (artists) Concerning national and European artists: replace 50 % of travels by car or plane with travels by train. Medium Significant increase of travel expenses (train VS car) -30% à -40% on « travel artists »
    Concerning foreign artists: avoid exclusitivity and mutualise the tours with other venues/festivals OR offer more dates. Difficult NC -20% à -30% on « travel artists »
    Energy Change your electricity supplier for a more decarbonized mix. Easy +5 à +20% per kWh -50 à -80% (depending on the mix) on « electricity » or « gas »
    Turning down the heating by 2°C during winter and the air conditioning by 2°C during summer. Medium Consumption: -5 à 10% -10% on « electricity » or « gas »
    Purchases Reduce print communication by 20 %. Medium -20% paper costs -20% on « paper »
    Offer more vegetarian (2/3) and local meals. Easy -20% meals costs -50% on « meals »
      • Venues, festivals and producers can act collectively on the mobility of artists. On the other hand, their means of action remain limited when it comes to the mobility of audiences, the most important emission source. Local authorities and public policies must act in this direction to support the decarbonisation of our industry.
        Presenters have different levers of action to act on the following inputs: audiences, purchases, energy, artists, food. These decarbonisation measures are also presented in the Shift Project report, with quantified reduction potentials.
      • They offer interesting approaches to work on, even if they are not necessarily all adapted to our realities on the ground, for example regarding the freightvi.
      •  
      • For the AJC network and Periscope, the work of collecting and refining data must be continued, particularly on audience travel (through mobility studies), the use of premises by festivals, and catering.
    Collective actions for the worlds of jazz and the entire cultural sector

    In order to achieve their transition objectives and make the necessary transformations, the protagonists of the music ecosystem will have to change the practices in their respective fields.

    By working collectively, in cooperation with networks and partner organisations, and using existing resources, the aim is to strengthen existing approaches and develop action plans to support and implement the decarbonisation of the sector. The entire ecosystem has a role to play in encouraging public policies and local authorities to work in this direction.

    The prescriptive role of the cultural sector, its capacity for experimentation and creativity, are undeniable assets that must be harnessed in conjunction with the sector’s recovery from the pandemic.

    This collaborative work raises issues related to a policy framework that we must collectively grasp:

            • – Deepening the connection between the size of our facilities, the proximity issues that we carry with environmental issues
              – Linking ecology and societal economy to cultural issues in a more significant way in order to control our carbon costs, and to maintain a societal/cultural efficiency that is essential today.

    This work demonstrates once again the value of observation in setting up coherent strategies. It is essential today to know and assume the ecological impacts of our projects.

    One of the solutions to complying with our ecological commitments is that the venues and events that we support should be adapted in size to the territories and their networks, that they should be involved in a process of sharing tours, defending the widest possible artistic diversity and sharing music with as many people as possible, and with a relatively low carbon cost.

    Written by Gwendoleen Sharp
    Translated by Aurore Bunel

    References

    [i] Le Périscope (FR) and International Jazz Platform (PL) also initiated the Footprints Project, funded by the Europe Créative program, to work on ecological, economic and socials aspects of European tours.

    [ii] Le Périscope’s carbon strategy is available at this link

     [iii] Main hypothesis:

    – Electricity: French mix EDF 2019 or national mix 2019 for foreign countries 
    – Natural gas: average national mix (consumption)
    – Modal mix for travels: hypothesis or national/regional official numbers (great uncertainty)
    – Travel by car: average motorisation, 2018, France
    – Travel by air: long-haul flight and short-haul flight, with drag, France
    – Travel by regional trains: TER 2019 or TGV 2019, France
    – Real estate: hypothesis concrete building (amortisation: 20 years or 50 years if specified) or light metal structure (amortisation: 5 years)

    [iv] https://www.statistiques.developpement-durable.gouv.fr/edition-numerique/chiffres-cles-du-climat-2022/pdf/chiffres-cles-du-climat-2022-integral.pdf

    [v] For other criteria, p.17 of Le Périscope’s carbon strategy

    [vi] Shift Project, « Décarboner la Culture », pp. 50 à 72

    Footprints is funded by the Creative Europe Programme
    of the European Union .

  • Summer festivals

    Summer festivals

    June



    Chinon en jazz

    June 1 – 5


    Buisme – Jazz à Poitiers

    June 23 – 26


    Jazzdor Strasbourg – Berlin – Dresden

    June 7 – 10


    Des Rives et des Notes – Jazz à Oloron

    June 24 – July 3


    La Défense Jazz Festival

    June 20 – 26


    Paris Jazz Festival

    June 29 – September 7

    July



    Charlie Jazz Festival

    July 1 – 3


    Jazz à Couches

    July 6 – 9


    Jazz à Porquerolles

    July 9 – 13


    Souillac en jazz

    July 16 – 23


    Crest Jazz

    July 31 – August 6


    Radio Terrasse

    July 5 – 8


    Jazz à Juan

    July 6 – 19


    D’Jazz au jardin

    July 11 – 15


    Millau en jazz

    July 17 – 23


    Jazz à Junas

    July 19 – 23


    Jazzpote

    July 5 – 19


    Marseille Jazz des Cinq Continents

    July 7 – 23


    Jazz à Luz

    July 13 – 16


    Vague de Jazz

    July 20 – August 5

    August



    Gaume Jazz Festival

    August 12 – 14


    Caph’Arts’Naüm

    August 25 – 27


    Les Rendez-vous de l’Erdre

    August 22 – 28


    Météo

    August 23 – 27

  • Table ronde : « Rendre visible l’émergence »

    Table ronde : « Rendre visible l’émergence »

    Mardi 21 juin – 10h

    L’émergence des musiciens et musiciennes de jazz et leur accompagnement sont devenus des thèmes d’intérêt pour une très large partie de la filière : développement des tremplins et concours, dispositifs d’accompagnement en local comme en national, etc. De la presse aux diffuseurs, aux artistes et à leur entourage, beaucoup travaillent ces thèmes au quotidien et cherchent à donner une meilleure et plus importante visibilité à la scène jazz de demain en France.

    Comment ces différents métiers s’emparent-ils de ces questions ? Avec quels objectifs, quels moyens et quels outils ? Quels effets sur ces jeunes artistes et sur l’écosystème à court comme à long terme ?

    Intervenant·e·s :

    Marie Persuy – AJC / Jazz Migration

    Mathieu Durand – FIP

    Damien Besancon – I See Colors

    Jean-Guillaume Selmer – DuNose Productions

    Severine Bouisset – Les Gémeaux

    Sébastien Vidal – TSF Jazz

    Delphine Deau – Musicienne / Nefertiti Quartet


    S’inscrire

    Cette table ronde sera suivie du concert de Coccolite, groupe lauréat Jazz Migration #7, à 12h15.



    → En savoir plus

  • Newsletter – Juin 2022

    Newsletter – Juin 2022

    Bonjour à toutes et tous,

    Le 21 juin matin, nous vous donnons rendez-vous avec La Défense Jazz Festival autour d’une table-ronde dédiée à l’émergence. Accompagnés de plusieurs intervenant·e·s professionnel·le·s, nous nous interrogerons sur comment rendre visible la jeune création aujourd’hui. Ce temps de réflexion professionnel sera suivi des concerts de Daïda et de Coccolite, Jazz Migration #7.

    En juin, la tournée se poursuit donc pour les lauréats Jazz Migration #7, que l’on pourra entendre jusqu’en Allemagne ! Cette année, le festival franco-allemand Jazzdor s’étend de Berlin à Dresden et les deux villes accueilleront Nout et Suzanne.

    Au sein du réseau, cinq festivals au total rythmeront ce mois de juin, aux côtés, toujours, des nombreux concerts organisés par nos adhérents. À lire aussi dans cette newsletter : les inscriptions pour le Concours National de Jazz de La Défense qui se closent très bientôt et l’ouverture d’un nouveau lieu culturel à Dijon porté par l’un de nos adhérents, Zutique.

    Bonne lecture !

    Lire la newsletter


    Si vous souhaitez recevoir les newsletters du réseau AJC, vous pouvez vous inscrire via le formulaire ci-dessous.

  • Les festivals de l’été

    Les festivals de l’été

    Juin



    Chinon en jazz

    1 – 5 juin


    Bruisme – Jazz à Poitiers

    23 – 26 juin


    Jazzdor Strasbourg – Berlin – Dresden

    7 – 10 juin


    Des Rives et des Notes – Jazz à Oloron

    24 juin – 3 juillet


    La Défense Jazz Festival

    20 – 26 juin


    Paris Jazz Festival

    29 juin – 7 septembre

    Juillet



    Charlie Jazz Festival

    1 – 3 juillet


    Jazz à Couches

    6 – 9 juillet


    Jazz à Porquerolles

    9 – 13 juillet


    Souillac en jazz

    16 – 23 juillet


    Crest Jazz

    31 juillet – 6 août


    Radio Terrasse

    5 – 8 juillet


    Jazz à Juan

    6 – 19 juillet


    D’Jazz au jardin

    11 – 15 juillet


    Millau en jazz

    17 – 23 juillet


    Jazz à Junas

    19 – 23 juillet


    Jazzpote

    5 – 19 juillet


    Marseille Jazz des Cinq Continents

    7 – 23 juillet


    Jazz à Luz

    13 – 16 juillet


    Vague de Jazz

    22 juillet – 5 août

    Août



    Gaume Jazz Festival

    12 – 14 août


    Caph’Arts’Naüm

    25 – 27 août


    Les Rendez-vous de l’Erdre

    22 – 28 août


    Météo

    23 – 27 août

  • Appel à candidature

    Appel à candidature

    Jazz dans le Bocage défend le jazz contemporain dans ses activités et souhaite soutenir la création, puisque bien sûr, sans soutien à la réflexion, la composition, la répétition, la mise en scène… point de concert !

    Au cours des dernières années, ce sont les XX Elles, Cycles, ou bien Eym Trio avec Marian Badoï qui ont été accueillis. Pour sa 22e édition, l’association recherche le groupe qu’elle accompagnera, en partenariat avec Yzeurespace, pour 2 semaines de résidence et une programmation en mai 2023. Le temps de résidence sera également l’occasion de rencontres et d’échanges périphériques avec les habitants.

    Critères de sélection

    Cet appel à candidature est ouvert aux artistes et groupes réunissant les critères suivants :

    · musiciens professionnels
    · proposant des compositions de jazz (ou un répertoire de reprises travaillées de façon tout à fait originale)
    · avec un besoin identifié de travailler sur scène

    Bien que centré sur l’esthétique jazz, nous regarderons les projets dans toute leur diversité. Il peut y avoir un croisement des esthétiques ou disciplines artistiques et/ou s’agir de propositions aussi bien tout public que jeune public.

    Le nombre de musiciens n’est pas limité mais influencera nécessairement les considérations budgétaires du projet s’il s’agit d’une grande formation.

    Une attention particulière sera portée aux groupes issus de la région Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes.

    La résidence

    Jazz dans le Bocage et Yzeurespace proposent d’accueillir une formation pour 2 semaines de résidence, l’une à définir ensemble dans la salle équipée de Rocles, l’autre soit la semaine du 7 au 12 novembre, soit celle du 28 novembre au 3 décembre 2022, dans le théâtre d’Yzeurespace.

    Au cours de ces temps de travail, les artistes sont hébergés, nourris, défrayés pour leur déplacement et rémunérés sur les temps de répétition sur la base des minimas de la CCNEAC. Les partenaires souhaitent que ces temps de résidence puissent être ponctuellement ouverts aux habitants (notamment public scolaire) et que la présence des artistes sur le territoire puisse se traduire par quelques rencontres périphériques et occasionnelles (atelier ponctuel ou master-class…). Un travail préalable pour co-construire les temps de résidence et les rendez-vous périphériques sera nécessaire et une convention entre Jazz dans le Bocage, Yzeurespace et le groupe retenu fixera les engagements de chacun.

    La proposition retenue sera également programmée lors du 22e festival Jazz dans le Bocage, se déroulant du 12 au 20 mai 2023 à Tronget et dans les communes alentour. 

    Constitution de la candidature

    Le groupe adressera à Jazz dans le Bocage un dossier qui devra présenter :

    · le groupe, son univers musical, ses choix artistiques et influences
    · chacun des membres
    · des liens d’écoute ainsi que des liens vidéo
    · le besoin d’un travail en résidence sur deux semaines (en précisant la semaine de résidence choisir à Yzeurespace)
    · les besoins techniques (fiche technique exhaustive)
    · les possibilités envisagées en termes de rencontres avec les habitants

    Les éléments sont à adresser avec le 30 juin 2022 à Sabine Dauchat – coordination[arobase]jazzdanslebocage[point]com

    Modalités de sélection

    Jazz dans le Bocage réunira un jury composé de membres de l’association et du programmateur d’Yzeurespace pour la sélection d’une candidature en juin 2022. Les délibérations du jury sont confidentielles et ne seront pas communiqués.

    Les candidatures incomplètes, ne respectant pas les critères précités ou arrivées hors-délai ne seront pas retenues.


    Postuler

  • Paris Jazz Festival du 29 juin au 7 septembre

    Paris Jazz Festival du 29 juin au 7 septembre

    Les trois festivals historiques Paris Jazz Festival, Classique au Vert et Pestacles vous proposent des concerts inoubliables dans le cadre bucolique du Parc Floral !

    Le programme

    ANA CARLA MAZA

    03/07/2022

    YISSY GARCIA Y BANDANCHA

    03/07/2022

    ANGEL BAT DAWID & THE SISTAZZ OF THE NITTY GRITTY • THOMAS DE POURQUERY & SUPERSONIC

    07/07/2022

    NOE CLERC TRIO

    09/07/2022

    AMBROSE AKINMUSIRE QUARTET

    09/07/2022

    HOMMAGE À ASTOR PIAZZOLLA • SHAI MAESTRO QUARTET

    16/07/2022

    GLOWING LIFE (SYLVAINE HÉLARY)

    17/07/2022

    SONS OF KEMET

    17/07/2022

    MARION RAMPAL • CECILE MCLORIN SALVANT

    21/07/2022

    CHELSEA CARMICHAEL

    23/07/2022

    SÉLÈNE SAINT-AIMÉ SEPTET • RHODA SCOTT & LADIES ALL STAR

    23/07/2022

    BRAD MEHLDAU & IAN BOSTRIDGE • YOM & LÉO JASSEF

    25/07/2022

    AGOGO

    14/08/2022

    NEUE GRAFIK ENSEMBLE

    14/08/2022

    NOUT

    21/08/2022

    FLORIAN PELLISSIER QUINTET

    21/08/2022

    COCCOLITE

    28/08/2022

    SEED ENSEMBLE

    28/08/2022

    17h00

    MURIEL GROSSMANN QUARTET

    04/09/2022

    ANTHONY JOSEPH SEPTET

    04/09/2022


    Toutes les infos

  • Des Rives et des Notes du 24 juin au 3 juillet

    Des Rives et des Notes du 24 juin au 3 juillet

    Après 2 années difficiles, ce 28e festival nous promet de belles nouveautés musicales avec des figures du jazz, mondialement connues, et de nombreux artistes primés en 2021 pour la qualité et l’originalité de leurs créations.

    Le programme

    Vendredi 24 juin à 21h

    Natalia M King “Woman Mind Of My Own”

    Samedi 25 juin à 17h

    Coccolite

    Samedi 25 juin à 21h

    Yilian CAÑIZARES “Résilience Trio”

    Dimanche 26 juin à 17h

    Nicolas GARDEL, Arthur GUYARD

    Dimanche 26 juin à 21h

    Michel PORTAL “MP85”

    Mercredi 29 juin à 20h30

    Concerts du Funky Style Brass Band et des classes jazz

    Vendredi 1er juillet à 21h

    Airelle Besson Quartet “TRY !”

    Samedi 2 juillet à 17h

    Lorenzo Naccarato Piano solo

    Samedi 2 juillet à 21h

    Belmondo Quintet

    Dimanche 3 juillet à 17h

    Nik Bärtsch’s Mobile « Continuum »

    Dimanche 3 juillet à 21h

    Rymdem “Space Sailors”


    Toutes les infos