The Standard Bank National Youth Jazz Festival (NJYF) is a regular highlight at the Standard Bank Jazz Festival, Grahamstown, and this year will be no different.

The Standard Bank National Youth Jazz Festival (NJYF) is a regular highlight at the Standard Bank Jazz Festival, Grahamstown, and this year will be no different.

It is part of the festival’s exciting programme, which includes Mainstream, Blues/Funk/World Music, Afro Jazz, Modern Jazz, and the Standard Bank Jazz and Blues Café.

Running alongside the Standard Bank Jazz Festival, Grahamstown, the NJYF is intended as a national meeting point for South African musicians, jazz teachers and students, and is an excellent opportunity for networking and seeing what is happening in the jazz world, locally and internationally.

It runs from 2 to 7 July, at DSG, Grahamstown, and is open to musicians and jazz educators.

The Standard Bank National Youth Jazz Band presents a selection of the top young jazz musicians in the country between the ages of 19 and 25 years. This year the band is under the musical direction of South African pianist, saxophonist, composer, arranger and producer Mark Fransman.

The Standard Bank National Schools’ Big Band consists of the top young jazz musicians in the country up to the age of 18 years. Under the musical direction of Professor Mike Campbell – Head of Jazz Studies at UCT and renowned Big Band conductor – the band performs material worked on over the seven days of the Standard Bank National Youth Jazz Festival.

A celebration of school and university jazz choirs and vocal soloists from around the country will be directed by top professional vocalists Melanie Scholtz and Katharine Cartwright.

Programmes of School/Youth Bands allow exuberant young players to hone their craft on the Grahamstown stages. These bands include: the Johannesburg Youth Jazz Ensemble, Rondebosch Boys High School (Cape Town), Stirling High School (East London) and South African College Schools (SACS) (Cape Town); Lasses Lakejer, a band of young Swedish musicians from Gothenburg who were winners of the Swedish Jazz Federation Youth Competition 2013; and the UCT Big Band, now heading into its third decade of jazz excellence.

There is such stiff competition for places in the National Bands that an opportunity has been provided for those who just missed selection – effectively a National B Band. Drawn from around the country and with a selection of guest conductors, this new Band is guaranteed to sparkle with enthusiasm and creativity.

A new Jazz Festival venue – the Standard Bank Jazz & Blues Cafe at St. Aidan’s – will offer a great jazz show every night at 9.30pm with a 11.30pm jazz jam session, where professional and student musicians drawn from across the Jazz genres will be jamming, improvising and letting loose late into the night.

The 40th edition of the National Arts Festival, Grahamstown will take place 3 – 13 July 2014.

For more information check www.standardbankarts.co.za or www.youthjazz.co.za.

To book, go to www.nationalartsfestival.co.za.

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