Hancock: Musicians hope to bring uplifting message to Paris on International Jazz Day

By Charles J. Gans, The Associated Press

NEW YORK, N.Y. – Jazz musicians from around the world will gather this April in Paris for International Jazz Day, an event UNESCO Goodwill Ambassador Herbie Hancock hopes will bring an uplifting “positive message” to a city still reeling from last month’s terrorist attacks.

Hancock and UNESCO Director-General Irina Bokova announced Wednesday that Paris had been selected to be the global host city for the fourth annual International Jazz Day on April 30.

Hancock said organizers initially considered Paris as the host city to celebrate its legendary place in jazz history, dating back nearly a century to World War I when African-American troops brought the music to France.

But the deadly January attacks on the French satirical newspaper Charlie Hebdo and a Jewish food market have given this year’s event added significance, the jazz pianist said.

“Jazz has been a bridge for bringing people together,” Hancock said in an interview. “It’s not sectarian and it’s not just for people of a particular ethnic group. It’s for human beings. We need to recognize that which makes us similar, while at the same time honouring that which makes us different.”

Bokova said the event was also intended to be a highlight of yearlong observances of the 70th anniversary of the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization.

She said that in these turbulent times, the All-Star Global Concert at UNESCO’s Paris headquarters, to be offered on live stream around the world, offers a vital message.

“Jazz is not simply music. Jazz is about civil rights, human dignity and dialogue among cultures,” said Bokova, interviewed by telephone from Paris. “Jazz emphasizes the importance of creativity and freedom of expression.”

Hancock, Wayne Shorter, Dee Dee Bridgewater, Dianne Reeves, Al Jarreau and Marcus Miller will be among the American jazz stars performing at the concert climaxing Jazz Day celebrations. The international contingent includes trumpeters Hugh Masekela (South Africa) and Claudio Roditi (Brazil), saxophonists Igor Butman (Russia) and Guillaume Perret (France), and oud master Dhafer Youssef (Tunisia).

The daylong program will include jazz education programs and performances in all 20 districts of Paris, said Tom Carter, president of the Thelonious Monk Institute of Jazz, which is presenting the event in partnership with UNESCO.

Jazz Day events are also planned in nearly all 196 U.N. member states. Bokova said the initiative has spread quickly since its launch in 2012 when about 70 countries participated. Last year, Jazz Day even reached Antarctica, where staff at the McMurdo and Palmer research stations performed standards.

For Hancock, who won an Oscar for best original score for the 1986 film “Round Midnight” about expatriate American jazzmen in Paris, the French capital is a most appropriate host city given its rich tradition.

“The feeling you get in Paris … is of deep respect and honour from the French people,” said Hancock. “They really look up to jazz as being a great art music.”

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