2023 Sydney International Womens’ Jazz Festival lineup announced
A Grammy Award-winning headliner tops the bill for the 12th year of celebration of the rich and diverse contribution of women to jazz.
A Grammy Award-winning headliner tops the bill for the 12th year of celebration of the rich and diverse contribution of women to jazz.
Andrea Keller's ideal mid-week concert allows listeners to indulge in meditative escapism.
Melissa Aldana and her New York quartet provide a relatively constrained performance, while the curtain-raiser by Jo Lawry and Dan Tepfer is full of brilliance.
The Festival celebrates Australia's emerging and eminent female-led jazz with an exciting new program and some heavyweight headliners.
Jessie Tu talks with Tessie Overmyer and Hannah James about playing Charles Mingus's music as part of a nine-piece band at the Sydney International Women's Jazz Festival.
These players in Pharos understood the key to playing great jazz: an invulnerable attachment to the spirit of the music, and the ceaseless tenacity to explore the full range of human dynamics through intuitive collaboration.
After a winter spent locked down in Sydney, guitarist Hilary Geddes is itching to get back to playing gigs again – starting with the Sydney International Women's Jazz Festival this weekend.
With international borders still closed, the festival is celebrating the diversity of the local scene in its tenth year.
Find out what's on stage and streaming online in November from Limelight editors Jo Litson, Angus McPherson and Clive Paget.
The ten-day festival will feature live music from Mahalia Barnes, Elysian Fields, Gai Bryant, Melody Riviera and many more, as well as Brazilian bossa-nova singer and nylon string guitarist Anna Setton streaming in from São Paulo.