Lineup Announced for 46th Annual Tri-C JazzFest
An eclectic artist roster brings exciting music to Cleveland June 26 ̶ 28
CLEVELAND — Cuyahoga Community College (Tri-C®) announced the lineup for the 46th annual Tri-C JazzFest Cleveland, presented by KeyBank, from June 26 – 28 at Playhouse Square.
This year's festival features eight concerts inside Playhouse Square's historic venues. The lineup includes five-time Grammy winner Dianne Reeves, Grammy-winning saxophonist Kirk Whalum, Trombone Shorty and tributes to music legends Oscar Peterson, Chick Corea and Gary Burton.
"This year’s festival shows its respect for the wide spectrum of jazz traditions." said festival director Terri Pontremoli. "We’ll take the audience on an eclectic musical journey with stops in Cuba, South Africa, New Orleans and beyond."
Below is the indoor concert schedule with showtimes, locations and artist bios:
Thursday, June 26
Trombone Shorty & Orleans Avenue
Born Troy Andrews, Trombone Shorty got his start (and nickname) earlier than most: at age 4, he made his first appearance at the New Orleans Jazz Festival, performing with Bo Diddley. At age 6, he was leading his own brass band, and by his teenage years, he was hired by Lenny Kravitz to join the band he assembled for his Electric Church World Tour. He is well known for his magnetic charisma and showmanship. Since 2010, he has released five chart-topping studio albums. His most recent album, 2022's Lifted, finds the Grammy-nominated NOLA icon and his bandmates tapping into the raw power and exhilarating grooves of their legendary live show, channeling it all into a series of tight, explosive performances that blur the lines between funk, soul, R&B and psychedelic rock. Trombone Shorty has collaborated across genres with Pharrell Williams, Bruno Mars, Mark Ronson, the Foo Fighters, Ringo Starr and countless more.
Friday, June 27
Centennial Tribute to Oscar Peterson with the Clayton-Hamilton Jazz Orchestra featuring Benny Green and Dan Wilson
Oscar Peterson, a Montreal-born virtuoso often hailed as jazz's greatest pianist, composed the Africa Suite in the 1980s. Largely unperformed during his lifetime, the suite included "The Fallen Warrior," inspired by Nelson Mandela while imprisoned. Peterson met Mandela in 1998, though his music had been banned under apartheid. After Peterson's death, his widow, Kelly, worked to share the suite globally, culminating in its 2020 premiere in Toronto's Koerner Hall, arranged by John Clayton.
John Clayton, the co-founder of the Clayton-Hamilton Jazz Orchestra with Jeff Hamilton and Jeff Clayton, crafted the ensemble's signature blend of influences from Duke Ellington, Count Basie and Thad Jones. The 19-piece orchestra tours internationally, collaborating with icons like Diana Krall.
Peterson's protégé Benny Green and Ohio-raised guitarist Dan Wilson continue jazz's rich traditions. Green toured with legends like Art Blakey, while Wilson, mentored by Christian McBride, gained acclaim for his innovative, genre-spanning artistry.
Sun Ra Arkestra
The Sun Ra Arkestra is known worldwide for its live shows that combine big-band swing, space-age free jazz, bebop, singing, dancing, chanting and Afro-pageantry. The Arkestra has been at the forefront of Afrofuturism since its inception. Herman Poole Blount — better known by his stage name, Sun Ra — founded the Sun Ra Arkestra in Chicago in the mid-1950s. Sun Ra, a jazz composer, bandleader and pianist, is considered one of the earliest pioneers of the synthesizer and the free jazz revolution of the 1960s. He had sent a strong spiritual and musical message to his Arkestra, wanting them to help make the universe better through positive vibrations and music. The group has recorded over 100 albums, including the Grammy-nominated Swirling (2020). After more than 60 years, the band continues to tour worldwide, performing at prestigious venues like the Kennedy Center, Radio City Music Hall and the Berlin Opera House.
Stanley Clarke N•4EVER
Four-time Grammy-winning bassist Stanley Clarke is one of the most celebrated acoustic and electric bass players in the world. What's more, he is equally gifted as a recording artist, performer, conductor, arranger, producer and film score composer. A true pioneer in jazz and jazz fusion, Clarke is particularly known for his ferocious bass dexterity and consummate musicality. In 2022, Clarke was selected by the National Endowment for the Arts as one of its four new Jazz Master honorees. Clarke was honored with Bass Player Magazine's Lifetime Achievement Award and is a member of Guitar Player Magazine's "Gallery of Greats."
Saturday, June 28
One Concert, Two Acts: Kirk Whalum/ Jonathan Butler
Kirk Whalum: For nearly four decades, Grammy-winning saxophonist Kirk Whalum has helped define "cool," whether blazing trails in contemporary jazz or infusing hits by Luther Vandross or Whitney Houston with an extra jolt of soul. Whalum has more than 25 albums under his own name, including a Grammy-nominated collaboration with pianist Bob James, his faith-and-soul melding Gospel According to Jazz series, and a trio of albums with the supergroup BWB, alongside guitarist Norman Brown and trumpeter Rick Braun. That's in addition to his work alongside such legends as Barbra Streisand, Quincy Jones, Al Jarreau and Larry Carlton.
Jonathan Butler: In a time when artists of optimism are at a premium, Jonathan Butler is a shining example of purposeful excellence. From recording local hits as a teenager during the apartheid of South Africa, Butler went on to become a world-renowned singer, guitarist and songwriter, delivering soulful salvos of R&B, gospel, jazz and pop. Touring professionally by age 7, Butler's first single, "Please Stay," was the first by a Black artist to be played on white radio in segregated South Africa. It won a Sarie Award, the country's equivalent to a Grammy. Committed to conveying stirring messages of freedom and unity through his music, Butler became a national icon. Nelson Mandela told Butler that listening to his music had helped him endure time in prison.
Dianne Reeves With Romero Lubambo
Five-time Grammy winner Dianne Reeves is the world's preeminent jazz vocalist. As a result of her virtuosity, improvisational prowess and unique jazz and R&B stylings, Reeves received the Grammy for Best Jazz Vocal Performance for three consecutive recordings — a Grammy first in any vocal category. Reeves has performed with Wynton Marsalis and the Lincoln Center Jazz Orchestra, the Chicago Symphony Orchestra and the Berlin Philharmonic. She was the first creative chair for jazz for the Los Angeles Philharmonic and the first vocalist to ever perform at the famed Walt Disney Concert Hall. Featured in George Clooney's Academy Award-nominated Good Night, and Good Luck, Reeves won the Best Jazz Vocal Grammy for the film's soundtrack. In 2022, Reeves was the featured vocalist on the soundtrack of The Woman King, starring Viola Davis. Reeves has been designated a Jazz Master by the National Endowment for the Arts.
One Concert, Two Acts: Dominick Farinacci and Friends/Celebrating the Music of Chick Corea and Gary Burton With Taylor Eigsti and Christian Tamburr
Dominick Farinacci & Friends: Trumpeter Dominick Farinacci served as ambassador to Jazz at Lincoln from 2013-2015 in Doha, Qatar, working to further integrate music into communities around the world in culturally collaborative ways. He is a 2022 recipient of the Cleveland Arts Prize, an honor previously awarded to author Toni Morrison and Cleveland Orchestra conductors George Szell and Franz Welser-Möst. Farinacci graduated from The Juilliard School in 2005, launching his career in Japan with a prolific run of eight albums, later releasing four more globally. He has been profiled in Vanity Fair. Farinacci is the director of the Tri-C JazzFest Academy, a year-round pre-college program of Tri-C, housed at the Gill and Tommy LiPuma Center for Creative Arts. In 2024, Farinacci's newest group, TRIAD, released a self-titled debut album. In his very special way, he will bring together generations of Cleveland artists with national guests to celebrate Cleveland's jazz legacy.
Taylor Eigsti and Christian Tamburr Celebrate Chick Corea and Gary Burton: The collaboration between Chick Corea and Gary Burton spanned over 40 years, raising the bar for the art of the duo in the jazz idiom. To celebrate Corea's birthday and the music crafted between these two icons, Grammy-winning pianist Taylor Eigsti and award-winning vibraphonist Christian Tamburr come together to pay homage to one of jazz's longest-lasting small groups. Eigsti started playing the piano when he was 4 years old. Growing up in Menlo Park, California, Eigsti was quickly labeled a prodigy and has since released nine albums as a bandleader and appeared on over 70 albums as a sideman. Tamburr is an internationally renowned vibraphonist, pianist, composer and arranger with performances in over 75 countries. Downbeat Magazine recognized him with the Outstanding Solo Jazz Performance award, and he is a multiple-time Critics Choice Top Rising Star award recipient on vibraphone.
Pedrito Martinez
Pedro Pablo "Pedrito" Martinez, born and raised in Havana, Cuba, began his musical career at age 11. After moving to New York City in 1998, Martinez became a sought-after artist, collaborating with Wynton Marsalis, Eddie Palmieri, Paul Simon and Sting, among others. He has contributed to over 100 albums. He is known worldwide for his mastery of the batá drum and is a leading figure in Cuban rumba. Martinez was a founding member of Yerba Buena, an Afro-Cuban/Afrobeat band that gained international success in the 1990s. His career as a leader began in 2005 with the formation of the Pedrito Martinez Group. The group's first self-titled studio album was nominated for a Grammy and was among NPR's Favorite Albums of 2013 and The Boston Globe's Top 10 Albums of 2013.
Festival passes — which offer VIP seating to all eight ticketed concerts, plus other benefits — are on sale through 10 a.m. on April 4 for $300. Visit tri-cjazzfest.com to purchase a pass.
Individual concert tickets go on sale on April 4 through the Playhouse Square box office.
The 2025 JazzFest also includes free outdoor concerts on the plaza at Playhouse Square on Friday and Saturday of the festival weekend. The performances will feature local and regional talent selected by a panel of music industry experts.
The festival regularly draws tens of thousands of people downtown for the three-day family-friendly experience. For a full roster of Tri-C JazzFest events, visit the Tri-C JazzFest website.
Tri-C JazzFest Cleveland is made possible by KeyBank, Fran and Jules Belkin, Char and Chuck Fowler, the George Gund Foundation, the Roy Minoff Family Fund, the National Endowment for the Arts, the Ohio Arts Council, SeibertKeck Insurance Partners, Debbie and Jim Strassman, William M. Weiss Foundation, Margaret W. Wong & Associates LLC and a growing list of donors and vendors.
February 08, 2025
MEDIA CONTACT: Anthony Moujaes, 216-987-3068 or anthony.moujaes@tri-c.edu