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FESTIVAL

Tickets on sale for Montreux Jazz 50th birthday bash

Folk rock icon Neil Young will top the bill at this year's Montreux Jazz Festival, as its celebrates its 50th edition with other big names including Deep Purple and PJ Harvey, organizers said on Thursday.

Tickets on sale for Montreux Jazz 50th birthday bash
Montreux Jazz celebrates its 50th edition this year. File photo: Jean Christophe Bott/Pool/AFP

The programme for this year's festival, which kicks off on the evening of June 30th and runs through July 16th, “has been drawn up to echo the festival's layered history, dense and lively,” festival director Mathieu Jatton told reporters.
   
Speaking in the Swiss town of Montreux, on the shores of Lake Geneva, Jatton said the organisers had strived for the anniversary edition to “return to the festival's true values.”
   
“We are thus presenting today's big names, but also friends of the festival who have helped make it great,” he said.
   
Montreux has over the past half century become a magnet for big names of the music business and rising stars alike.
   
It has retained its jazz label despite dramatically expanding its repertoire over the years.
   
This year, Canadian singer-songwriter legend Neil Young will be one of the top attractions when he hits the main stage on July 12th, 15 years after his only previous appearance at the festival.
   
Describing him as the “godfather of the punk movement, then of grunge”, organizers hailed Young as “a truly monumental figure on the music scene.”
   
He is joined on the marquee by other industry giants like British experimental rocker PJ Harvey, who is set to release a widely anticipated new album on Friday, and US punk icon Patti Smith.

Funky Claude

The 2016 edition will also feature US rock band ZZ Top, with their recognizable long beards, and Northern Irish singer-songwriter Van Morrison.
   
Legendary American producer and composer Quincy Jones will also be there, as will British soul and pop band Simply Red and archetypal guitar hero Carlos Santana.
   
Also on the ticket is influential English hard rock band Deep Purple, who have a deep connection to the festival.
   
The band's iconic “Smoke on the Water” tells the story of a fire that took place during a Frank Zappa concert at Montreux in 1971.
   
Festival founder Claude Nobs, who died in 2013, rescued a number of people from the flames and was immortalised in the song as “Funky Claude”.
   
Fans of the festival's original jazz genre should not be disappointed either, thanks to performances by stars like American jazz musician Charles Lloyd, who headlined the first ever edition of the festival in 1967.
   
Legendary jazz pianist Monty Alexander will also be there, as will Alfredo Rodriguez, a Cuban Quincy Jones prodigy considered the new prince of piano jazz.
   
“This anniversary is the occasion to underscore what drives the Festival: an insatiable desire to 'be there', up close and personal, under the spell of music,” the organizers said in a statement.

Tickets go on sale today, Friday April 15th, at 10am. For more information visit the festival website.

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FESTIVAL

France’s Fête de la musique ‘will go ahead, with masks and a curfew’

France's famous summer music festival the Fête de la musique will go ahead, but with health restrictions in place, says the culture minister.

France's Fête de la musique 'will go ahead, with masks and a curfew'
Photo: ABDULMONAM EASSA / AFP

Culture minister Roselyn Bachelot, taking part in a Q&A session with readers of French newspaper le Parisien, confirmed that the annual summer festival will go ahead this year on its usual date of June 21st.

The festival date is normally marked with thousands of events across France, from concerts in tiny villages to huge open-air events in big cities and street-corner gigs in local neighbourhoods.

Last year the festival did go ahead, in a scaled-down way, and Bachelot confirmed that the 2021 event will also happen, but with restrictions.

She said: “It will be held on 21st June and will not be subject to the health passport.

“People will be able to dance, but it will be a masked party with an 11pm curfew.”

Under France’s phased reopening plan, larger events will be allowed again from June 9th, but some of them will require a health passport (with either a vaccination certificate or a recent negative test) to enter.

The Fête de la musique, however, is generally focused around lots of smaller neighbourhood concerts.

The curfew is being gradually moved back throughout the summer before – if the health situation permits – being scrapped entirely on June 30th.

Bachelot added: “I appeal to everyone’s responsibility.

“The rate of 50 percent of people vaccinated should have been reached by then, so we will reach an important level of immunity.”

The Fête de la musique is normally France’s biggest street party, with up to 18,000 events taking place across the country on the same day.

It’s hugely popular, despite being (whisper it) the idea of an American – the concept is the brainchild of American Joel Cohen, when he was working as a music producer for French National Radio (France Musique) in the 1970s.

By 1982 the French government put its weight behind the idea and made it an official event and it’s been a fixture in the calendar ever since. 

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