Saturday, January 3, 2009

Jazz Fest, Panama Style

It's not every day I have the chance to write about two of my favorite topics in a single blog post. In honor of the 6th Annual Panama Jazz Festival held January 12-17, 2009 in Panama City, I can not pass up this opportunity. This year's fiesta promises to be the "largest ever", with legendary saxophonist, Wayne Shorter topping the bill with his quartet which includes Panamanian jazz piano virtuoso, Danilo Perez. Perez, the founder of the Panama Jazz Festival, is the most prominent Panamanian musician on the scene. He has single handedly brought the jazz world's attention to his home turf for the past six years. This year's impressive lineup, includes top names in contemporary and Latin Jazz, and is expected to draw 16,000 jazz fans from around the world. It thrills me to see jazz music taking root in Panama with such a high profile venue.

At first glance, it seems there is little correlation between jazz music and the Republic of Panama. However, upon further examination of these two seemingly unrelated subjects, I've discovered an interesting relationship. Jazz music and the Republic of Panama came into existence at roughly the same time in history. Both were born among the emergence of the 2oth century as a direct result of the industrialization of the West. Jazz emerged as a cross-cultural phenomena in New Orleans, where recently freed slaves sought to retain their West African heritage through weekly congregations in Congo Square. The rhythmic dance and musical gatherings, over time, incorporated distincly American and European influences in musical form and instrumentation.

By the early 1900's, a new musical art form, primarily based on individual expression through improvisation and group support, was born. Although considered primarily African American music, jazz was formed out of eclectic elements of the world's various cultures, perfectly capturing the energy of the maturing industrial democracy, from which it had sprung. The new music was a reflection of the innovation, collaboration and optimism of a new era. As African-Americans migrated from the South to find work in factories, jazz quickly spread to Northern cities and gained widespread acceptance.

Around the same time jazz was emerging as cultural zeitgeist, Theodore Roosevelt, America's young, brash President also embodied the "Can do" spirit of the age. Roosevelt, putting America's industrial ingenuity to the test, vowed to complete an engineering feet since abondoned by the French, a canal project across the narrow Ithsmus of Panama. It would shorten trans-oceanic shipping travel by six months. The ambitious project, massive in scale (even by today's standards), would first require the formation of an independant state. The Republic of Panama was formed in 1903, and the canal opened eleven years later. The strategic importance of the Panama Canal was instrumental in the rise of American prosperity through the 20th century. It remains today of fundamental importance to global trade. The canal has become the crossroads of the world economy, as trillions of dollars worth of trade goods pass through en route to markets around the globe.

Throughout the 20th Century the popularity of jazz ebbed and flowed, but the art form continually evolved, mutated and grew as new generations of artists explored the idiom. Dixieland, Big Band, Be-bop, Modal, West Coast Cool, Avant Garde, Fusion and Acid Jazz, all significant movements in their own right, pushed the art form into new directions. The most enduring and arguably the most popular direction of jazz has been Latin Jazz. The poly-rhythms of the Caribbean, combined with the suave sensuality of Brazilian influence, expanded jazz from a distinctly American musical form to one that encompasses all of "The Americas", or todas Las Americanas.
The popularity of Latin Jazz is not confined to Latin America, but is celebrated around the world, particularly in Asian and European countries. Through an artistic version of manifest destiny, Latin Jazz has inherited the legacy of a truly global musical form. What better location to celebrate this legacy than at the cultural and economic crossroads of the world...Viva Panama!

Reflections on jazz and Panama continues in Part II....

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

Hi there Esteban. I am impressed by your passion for what is happening on the Panamanian Jazz scene.

We in the Woodshed Collective have been eyeing the Panama Jazz Festival just as closely.

It appears that you will be in Panama four days late, yes, but early enough to compile the reviews of it. Right? Right. We hope that you will write a piece of your own that will give us your perspective on how the festival went.

breitbach said...

I will ask around and see what I can find. Does your organization have a website? Thanks for finding and spending time on my blog.

Esteban

Anonymous said...

Hover your cursor over our Username (Israel) at the top of the Comment and that will link you to the Woodshed Entertainment Collective site.

Anonymous said...

lol,so nice

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