THE JAZZ FEST RETURNS WITH ‘BOP SOUL’

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WICHITA – The late, great Count Basie once said: “If a guy is gonna play good bop, he has to have a sort of a bop soul.” Wichita Jazz Festival representative Lisa Sillaway is confident that Wichita has sufficient bop in their soul to enjoy his orchestra Saturday night because they’ve been here twice before. This week, a new generation of Wichitans will have a chance to come to the festival and enjoy that band and other practitioners of America’s great musical creation: jazz.

This year’s fest includes The Legendary Count Basie Orchestra directed by Scotty Barnhart, Bobby Watson and The Delano Jazz Orchestra, Betti O., Carmen Bradford, and a new documentary about Louis Armstrong called Little Satchmo. The festival is celebrating their 50th anniversary with four nights of Jazz greats, Wednesday through Sunday, at Wichita’s Crown Uptown Theatre and at The Bartlett Arboretum.

The Wichita Jazz Festival has welcomed the Orchestra founded by William “Count” Basie, jazz pianist, bandleader, and composer before in 1979 and in 1989. Basie’s Orchestra returns this year with special guest vocalist, 2022 Grammy Nominee, Carmen Bradford. 

Wednesday, April 20
The Ad Astra Concert: Saxophonist Bobby Watson and The Delano Jazz Orchestra kickoff performance is at 8 p.m., Wednesday, at the Crown Uptown Theatre. The group features lyrical saxophonist Bobby Watson and the popular west-side group, The Delano Jazz Orchestra.

Thursday, April 21
The Little Satchmo documentary film, produced by Wichita filmmaker Shawn Rhodes, makes its local premiere at 8 p.m., Thursday at the Crown Uptown Theatre. It chronicles the life of the late, great trumpet player and music icon, told through the eyes of his one and only child. Sharon Preston-Folta is the daughter of the married Armstrong and his longtime mistress Lucille “Sweets” Preston, a vaudeville dancer from Harlem, New York.

“Publicly fawning over a child fathered with his mistress wasn’t exactly an option for Louis Armstrong,” Preston-Folta says during the trailer. “He always wanted to be a father, but we had to keep it all secret.”

Preston-Folta will attend the showing of the film and be present for a Q&A with ticketholders after the documentary. The evening will include a little live jazz, too. The ticket price includes a performance by jazz combo, the Bill Harshbarger Quintet featuring vocalist Betti O.

Friday, April 22
Friday features a fabulous, daylong, double-header. During the day, 9 a.m. – 4 p.m. at Wichita State University Miller Concert Hall/Duerksen Fine Arts Center will feature Leap Day Trio at WSU Invitational. The Leap Day Trio features Jeff Lederer, Mimi Jones with hometown boy and WSU alum Matt Wilson. In the evening, a concert by the Leap Day Trio will begin at 8 p.m. as the group moves to the Crown Uptown Theatre.

Saturday, April 23,
“If you play a tune and a person don’t tap their feet, don’t play the tune.” – Count Basie

They will be playing the tunes and everyone will be tapping their feet as Jazz Royalty takes over Wichita. The Legendary Count Basie Orchestra fires up at 8 p.m. at The Crown Uptown Theatre. The orchestra is an American institution and has won every respected jazz poll in the world at least once, 18 Grammy Awards, performed for Kings and Queens, appeared in several movies, television shows, at every major jazz festival and major concert hall in the world.

Sunday, April 24,
The Wichita Jazz Festival winds down with the band, Daydream, at 4 p.m. at The Bartlett Arboretum. Daydream is a 10-piece horn band from Wichita that plays thoughtful, original compositions that groove, headbang, serenade and everything in between.

Tickets on sale now
Sillaway recommends purchasing tickets in advance since several of the shows may sell out. To do so, visit: 

www.wichitajazzfestival.com/events

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