The GroovaLottos
Alexus Lee
Vivian Fang Liu
The Matt Savage Groove Experiment
Boston Jazz Fest is a free event taking place on Friday and Saturday, Aug. 30 and 31 at Maritime Park in the Seaport District.
Showcasing local talent as well as performers from outside of Boston, the event, produced by Boss-Ten Productions and Larry J’s BBQ, is an opportunity to experience a range of music. Performers are reaching into the origins of jazz as well using music to express psychological concerns.
Performers include Alana, Pat Braxton, Betty Ding, The GroovaLottos, Alexus Lee, Vivian Fang Liu, Jon Samson and Matt Savage.
“Boston Jazz Fest started 14 years ago when the National Urban League came to Boston, and it was to showcase Boston artists to a diverse group of visitors,” James Braxton, CEO of Boss-Ten Productions, told the Banner. “We try to show jazz in many forms. Both my wife [Pat Braxton] and I are Grammy members, so many non-local artists are people we met at the Grammys.”
Betty Ding brings a mix of Chinese heritage filtered through the jazz idiom. Currently a thirdyear student of voice performance and contemporary writing and production at Berklee College of Music with a minor in Africana Studies, Ding was a contestant on China Central Television’s Avenue of Stars.
“Growing up in a Chinese household, I was simultaneously influenced by the Chinese music my parents played and the R&B I listened to on the radio,” Ding told the Banner. “My music reflects my identity and things I love; it’s a fusion of Chinese traditional folk music and R&B. Featuring an R&B band with Chinese instrumentation, I hope to tell a story at the festival about solidarity, healing and self-love with my band The East West Collective. The band is Ezekiel Freeman-Fanfan on drums, Marco Marcel on bass, Marc Monroe on keyboards, and Leah Liu on Guzheng. ”
Jon Samson, originally from Johannesburg, South Africa, and now a music therapist and performer in Brooklyn, told the Banner he was “captivated by growing up in a region with rich vocal harmonies, polyrhythmic drumming and beautiful counterpoint.”
For
music from closer to home, the festival has Rhode Island-based Alexus
Lee, the Wareham-based GroovaLottos and Bostonians Matt Savage and Pat
Braxton.
The GroovaLottos features
Mwalim on keys and vocals, The ZYG 808 on drums and vocals, Alphonse3
on bass and vocals, and Bishop the Shadowman on vocals, and defines
itself as a “soul-funk-Afrobeats jam band.” The band was nominated for a
Grammy in 2017 for their album, “Ask Yo’ Mama.”
Mwalim
told the Banner that the GroovaLottos’ set “will include a few fan
favorites from our albums, a few new ones from our forthcoming album and
songs from our touring members.” He added, “The Boston Jazz Fest has
become one of our favorite music testing grounds.”
Alexus Lee takes a path guided by music that makes your body move.
“My
band and I perform a variety of music, including the soulful tones of
Marvin Gaye, the smooth stylings of Sade, the feelgood energy of Bob
Marley and, of course, my own original music inspired by these greats,”
Lee told the Banner. “The band is made up of me on lead vocals, Matthew
Marcus on keys, Tony Irons on bass guitar, Matt (Muu) Williams on drums
and Mike Christman on guitar.”
Matt Savage, originally
from New Hampshire, came to Boston via Berklee College of Music. Once a
child prodigy, these days Savage performs with The Matt Savage Groove
Experiment, his “jazz/funk sextet.”
“I’ll
be on keyboards, and band members for the festival will be Aaron
Gratzmiller on tenor and soprano sax, Javier Rosario on electric guitar,
Sam JC Lee on electric bass, Henry Godfrey on drums and Robbie Pate
doing vocals,” Savage told the Banner. “You should prepare for a
powerful and rhythmic set of jazz-funk and jazz fusion music — we try
not to disappoint.”
Pat
Braxton’s new album, out this summer, is “Lady of the Day,” described
by James Braxton as a mix of standards and original songs.
Throughout
the festival, a beer garden will be open and vendors Mahalab Bakery,
LAS Lemonade and Mr. Petisco will be selling food.
You won’t go hungry, you won’t go thirsty, and music may fill your soul.
ON THE WEB
More information at bostonjazzfest.org