History
The San Sebastián Jazz Festival - Donostiako Jazzaldia, better known as Jazzaldia, takes place every year around the third week in July in the Basque city of Donostia/San Sebastián. Founded in 1966, it is Spain’s oldest Jazz Festival and one of the longest running in Europe.
Presentation
The 5 days of the Jazzaldia feature around a hundred concerts on more than a dozen stages while infusing the city with a festive atmosphere. The programme is varied, with both paying and free events, taking place in covered venues including theatres, museums and auditoriums, and outdoors, on beaches, in squares and parks. The most popular events are the free concerts on the Zurriola Beach and the Kursaal terraces. At the 2023 edition, total attendance was estimated to stand at some 191,000 people.
The San Sebastián Jazz Festival is a global reference among Jazz festivals. Over the decades, almost all of the big names in the history of Jazz have taken to its stages, while it has also provided a launch pad for myriad emerging and local talents. A yearly rendezvous which has, since 1966, brought world-famous artists to thousands of music lovers, many of them from in and around San Sebastián, while hordes of others flock in from other parts of the world to enjoy the music and the city.
Festival´s history
The San Sebastian Jazz Festival or, Donostiako Jazzaldia, began on September 10th, 1966, and is, today, the oldest jazz festival in Spain and one of the oldest in all Europe. In over fifty years, all the great international jazz musicians have passed through this Festival.
The Festival has earned several very important awards in recognition of its activity in the domain of the development of culture; the Premio a la Difusión de la Música (Music diffusion Award), at the XII edition of the Fundación SGAE Music Awards; the Premio Euskadi de Turismo a la Competitividad (award for competitiveness), in 2015, granted by the Basque Government; the Fine Arts Medal of Merit, in the person of the Director of the Festival, Miguel Martin, ordained by the Spanish Government at the Cabinet Meeting of December 23rd, 2016, in which it was declared that The San Sebastian Jazz Festival, which is half a century old this year, has brought to us the most important artists of this genre and has become an international reference.
The specialised press continues, today, to speak in glowing terms about the festival’s programming and the aura Jazzaldia brings to the city. Thanks to the free concerts the Festival offers, over 150,000 people go every year to the different venues across the city where festival events take place.
The initial idea behind the festival came from Imanol Olaizola, Head of the Music Commission at the Centro de Atracción y Turismo (CAT, Tourist Office). In May 1964, he attended a Count Basie concert, with his Big Band, at the Salle Pleyel in Paris. Seeing the enthusiasm of the crowd, he thought that kind of music had to be brought to San Sebastian. He mentioned it to Ramón Peironcely, President of the Permanent Commission of CAT. The latter decided to include a jazz festival project among the activities to be proposed for 1965.
At that time, the jazz festivals of reference in Europe were the Antibes Juan- les-Pins festival in France, which is still going, and the Comblain-la-Tour festival, in Belgium, a longish hiatus between 1967 and 2009 notwithstanding.
There was some opposition to the initiative at the beginning, which led to the festival not being held in 1965. In 1966, circumstances were more favourable and dates and venues were sought. The initial idea was for it to take place in August, but with an already heavily packed programme of activities for that tourist month par excellence, it was decided that the weekend coinciding with the second day of the fishing boat rowing race at La Concha bay would be the time. It is the only time the Festival has ever been held in September. Since then, it has always been in July.
With regard to finding a venue for the Festival, the organisers had a great idea: Plaza de la Trinidad, built in 1963, to commemorate the centenary of the breaking down of the walls of the city, following the project by architect Peña Ganchegui. The square is in the heart of the Old Quarter and there is a special air to the place, lying as it does between a renaissance building (San Telmo) the Basilica of Santa María, an XVIII century edifice, the shoulders of Mount Urgull, and the charming houses and buildings of the Old Quarter.
Plaza de la Trinidad has, over the years, embodied the essence of Jazzaldia. Musicians, without exception, praise the venue, truly singular in Europe, as well as the proximity it allows between stage and audience.
For many people, especially the young, the birth of the Festival represented a breath of freedom. Those were the Franco years, times of censorship and zero enthusiasm for music such as jazz, coming out of the Anglo Saxon world. It was also the era of the “cold war”, the confrontation between eastern and western Europe. For that reason, the Festival was a great opportunity to get together to show alternative culture and demonstrate that the Polish, Hungarian and Czech musicians who came to perform in San Sebastian were just as European as we were, if not more.
The paucity of economic means at our disposal at the beginning meant we couldn’t bring the great figures. Thought was given to the idea of inviting Ella Fitzgerald, but the cost of doing so, 900,000 pesetas at the time, tripled the budget, so we had to wait till 1975, by which time the Festival was firmly launched and consolidated, before San Sebastian could see her live.
It was then decided to make a firm bet for the Concurso de Aficionados (Amateurs’ contest). It took three years for the festival to become famous across Europe: in the fourth edition (1969), 28 groups from nine countries performed. There came a point when selection was not easy, with over one hundred bands wanting to participate.
The present director of the Festival, Miguel Martín, became a member of the Organising Committee in 1978. By then, the great figures had started coming, so we had to start thinking of venues bigger than Plaza de la Trinidad. The Festival was shifted to the Sports Complex, then the Velodrome, before eventually returning to its original headquarters, at the beginning of the 1990s.
Since then, greater and greater emphasis has been placed on making Heineken Jazzaldia a more festive event, bringing jazz even closer to people. To that end, in addition to making the most of Plaza de la Trinidad again, taking advantage of the magnificent acoustics of the Kursaal Auditorium and enjoying the charm of the recently restored Victoria Eugenia Theatre, many free concerts are also programmed at places that are ideal for people to enjoy such events, such as the Kursaal Terraces, Zurriola Beach and the Nautic Club. Over twenty of the city’s most emblematic places have hosted Festival events at some time or other, among them the San Telmo Museum, the Plenary Sessions Hall of the City Council, the Paseo Nuevo, Chillida-Leku, The Basque Culinary Center, El Peine del Viento (Comb of the Winds) and the Eureka! Zientzia Museoa, Tabakalera, Alderdi Eder ...
By clearly vouching for the democratization of music, attendance figures for some Festival events have been truly remarkable: 50,000 people to see Jamie Cullum (2013), 45,000 for Gloria Gaynor (2016), 41,000 for B.B. King (2011), 20,000 for Patti Smith (2010), 18,000 for Bobby McFerrin with the Orfeón Donostiarra (2008). Before that, the record had been held by Chick Corea, who brought 14,000 people to the Velodrome in 1981.
In 1994 the Festival introduced the Donostiako Jazzaldia Award, to pay tribute to one of the historical figures coming to perform every year. The list of winners of that prize, beginning with Doc Cheatham in 1994, with Jorge Pardo, Chano Domínguez and Iñaki Salvador slated for 2017, as the latest, is indeed a most impressive run-down of the greatest.
Documentary and book
Jazzaldia 50 documentary
El Festival de Jazz de San Sebastián, resume sus 50 años de historia en el documental #jazzaldia50, mediante los testimonios de algunos de sus protagonistas y las imágenes de extraordinarios conciertos que perdurarán siempre en la memoria.
Con sus más de 50 ediciones, el Jazzaldia es el festival más antiguo del Estado y está también entre los más veteranos de Europa. Todos los grandes nombres del Jazz, sin excepción, han pasado por San Sebastián, algunos varias veces. Por eso, el documental no es sólo la historia del Festival, sino la de todo el Jazz contemporáneo.
El documental está realizado por Morgancrea y coproducido por Televisión Española, Euskal Telebista y Donostia Kultura, con guión y dirección de Carlos Rodríguez. La duración es de 56 minutos.
Para llevar a cabo el documental, se han efectuado más de cincuenta entrevistas con músicos, promotores, periodistas, colaboradores y aficionados, y se han recuperado archivos gráficos y audiovisuales que permanecían, en muchos casos, inéditos.
#jazzaldia50 cuenta con un importante material de archivo que debemos agradecer a numerosas fuentes documentales. Citamos las más destacadas:
- TVE, cuyas primeras grabaciones conservadas se remontan al año 1967 y que desde 1970 ha grabado gran parte de los conciertos que han tenido lugar en los escenarios principales del Festival.
- EiTB, cuyo archivo documental ha permitido retratar el aspecto más social y local del Jazzaldia, así como los distintos espacios y escenarios que ha ocupado durante estos 50 años.
- KUTXATEKA, que conserva un legado fundamental de fotografías de las primeras décadas, muchas de ellas procedentes de periódicos ya desaparecidos como La Voz de España y Unidad.
- EL DIARIO VASCO, que reúne un material de un valor excepcional (artículos y fotografías) no recogido en otros medios audiovisuales.
- JAZZALDIA. La propia organización del Festival ha recopilado minuciosamente, a lo largo de estos años, toda la información histórica del Jazzaldia: programación, anécdotas, fotografías, carteles…
Por lo que se refiere a los personajes entrevistados, destacan músicos internacionales de la talla de Chick Corea, Bobby McFerrin, Stanley Clarke, John Scofield, Dee Dee Bridgewater, Dave Holland, Toshiko Akiyoshi, Nicholas Payton, Bugge Wesseltoft, Enrico Rava y Nicholas Payton, así como los vascos Iñaki Salvador, Gonzalo Tejada, Mikel Azpiroz, Makala y Mikel Erentxun.
Aparecen también tres de los cinco músicos que formaban parte del primer grupo vasco que tocó en el Festival (Alvaro Gurrea, Eugenio del Río y Miguel Angel Urrutia), algunos de los primeros organizadores (Imanol Olaizola, Ramón Peironcely, Rafael Aguire Franco, Francette Lafont y Rafael Briz).
Entre los periodistas, dan su opinión los principales críticos de Jazz de los medios de comunicación españoles y también los de algunos medios de Estados Unidos, Francia y Noruega.
El documental está dedicado a aquellas personas que contribuyeron a la historia del Festival y ya no están con nosotros:
- Trabajadores y colaboradores
Charo Fernández, Esther Casares, Carola Ciriza, Renato Valeruz, Pedro Lafont, Francisco Antín, Xabier Portugal, Santiago Ugarte - Musika kritikariak / Críticos musicales
Federico González, Xabier Rekalde, Javier de Cambra, Raúl Mao, Juan Claudio Cifuentes
Jazzaldia 50 book
Jazzaldia 50 documenta las cinco décadas de historia del Festival de Jazz de San Sebastián, el más longevo con diferencia de todos los festivales del Estado y uno de los más veteranos de toda Europa.
Jazzaldia 50 contiene la crónica, el cartel y los artistas de cada una de las cincuenta ediciones, ilustradas con abundantes fotografías de calidad. Destacan los excelentes retratos a toda página de las numerosas figuras que han desfilado por el Festival: Charles Mingus, Ella Fitzgerald, Dizzy Gillespie, Art Blakey, Miles Davis… Como puede apreciarse, la historia del Festival de Jazz de San Sebastián es la historia de todo el jazz contemporáneo.
Cuenta con un índice con más de 5.000 nombres, así como el año de su actuación, por lo que es un instrumento muy útil, especialmente para los aficionados al jazz.
El libro, de tapa dura y 288 páginas en papel couché de alta calidad, tiene un precio de 15 euros.
Si desea comprar el libro Jazzaldia 50, póngase en contacto con la siguiente dirección: [email protected]. Gracias.