Michigan the 2003 Detroit International Jazz Festival Term Paper

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Michigan

The 2003 Detroit International Jazz Festival gave me a welcome introduction to the complexity and variety of jazz music. Prior to the Festival, my exposure to jazz was limited, but Festival acts like the Caribbean Jazz Project revealed that jazz could be exciting and contemporary. Overall, I would highly recommend the Festival to anyone from a newcomer to jazz to a long-time jazz fan.

Officially titled the Ford Detroit International Jazz Festival, the Festival began in 1980. It was founded by the Detroit Renaissance, and has seen tremendous success since that day. Since 1994, the Festival has been produced by the Music Hall Center for the Performing Arts. The Festival was originally called the Ford Montreux Detroit Jazz Festival (Ford Detroit International Jazz Festival).

The festival aims to provide exposure for a wide number of artists, from international stars to emerging artists to high school and college music groups. Musical styles include a "wide spectrum of styles, disciplines and genre's, including swing, bop, Latin, modern, contemporary, smooth, avant garde and straightahead jazz" (Ford Detroit International Jazz Festival).

In 2003, over 500,000 people attended the Festival over the Labor Day weekend to take in close to 1000 musicians and 100 separate performances. The festival's success has marked it as "The Largest Free Jazz Festival in North America" (Ford Detroit International Jazz Festival). Festival events take place within Hart Plaza, and incorporate a number of different settings, including a small night club to a large arena in the outdoors (Ford Detroit International Jazz Festival).
For me, the Jazz Festival was a unique chance to explore a type of music with which I was not greatly familiar. The Festival provided me with an opportunity to broaden my musical horizons, so its greatest obvious significance was in expanding my musical education and understanding.

Like most North Americans, I was raised on a steady diet of mainstream pop and rock and roll music, with limited exposure to jazz in private or public spheres. I occasionally heard jazz played in a nice restaurant, or upscale shopping centers, but neither my close friends nor family were fans of jazz music. As such, my understanding of jazz music was largely limited to the types of soothing jazz played in commercial environments like restaurants or shopping malls. Before attending 2003 Detroit International Jazz Festival I had no idea of the diversity of jazz styles, or the incredible complexity of some of the music.

The Festival provided a number of unique insights into jazz. At the Waterfront stage, the Caribbean Jazz Project introduced me to a style of jazz that was much more energetic and hard-hitting than the soft sounds I had heard in restaurants and shopping malls. The band's music had a definite Latin rhythm and influence, and kept my foot tapping. The trumpeter was especially talented, giving a number of long solos that would have left an ordinary human gasping for breath. As C. Andrew Hovan notes in his review in All About Jazz, the drummer.....

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