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  • BEIRUT: Byblos International Festival presents world-class music for

    The Daily News, Lebanon
    June 30 2005

    Byblos International Festival presents world-class music for all
    tastes
    Ancient Phoenician town to be transformed in late July, August by
    top-notch jazz, pop and classical sounds

    By Ramsay Short
    Daily Star staff
    Thursday, June 30, 2005


    BEIRUT: It hasn't been easy for Naji Baz and his Buzz Productions
    company to put together the Byblos International Festival in the
    northern Lebanese town of Jbeil this year. First his preferred dates
    to hold the festival in the cooler month of June had to be dropped in
    favor of late July due to Lebanon's four-week long elections, thus
    bringing him into direct competition with the Beiteddine and Baalbek
    Festivals making it more difficult to put bums on seats.

    Second, he has had to face - like all the other festivals - questions
    of ensuring his acts' safety after the spate of bombings which began
    with the Valentine's Day killing of former Premier Rafik Hariri and
    the weeks of political uncertainty that have ensued. Persuading some
    acts that Lebanon was a safe place has not been easy.

    Third, Baz dealt with the most painful situation for any promoter and
    that was the confirmation of the Scottish punk-rock band Franz
    Ferdinand for the festival and then, as word spread, the announcement
    of their cancellation due ostensibly to recording commitments.

    Finally, on the day of the Byblos Festival Program announcement last
    Tuesday, the Lebanese politician George Hawi was brutally murdered in
    a car bomb and though no one would ever give more importance to a
    musical event over the assassination of a respected man, the press
    conference was cancelled. The same had happened on the day of the
    Beiteddine Festival's program announcement when the outspoken
    journalist Samir Kassir was similarly killed.

    And so rather than the excitement normally generated by the
    announcement of the summer festivals' line-ups, in 2005 the programs
    have gone off with a mere pop.

    Despite all of this, Baz and his team have come up with a festival of
    world music that, though not on par with last year's hugely
    successful edition featuring reggae legend Jimmy Cliff, pop-rocker
    Bryan Ferry and glam-rockers Placebo, is still a celebration of music
    that is rarely witnessed in Lebanon.

    "It has been a nightmare but I am confident we have put together now
    a tight line-up that is worthy of the Byblos Festival brand," Baz
    told The Daily Star.

    For the two nights of July 22 and 23 a Lebanese audience will have
    the opportunity to witness the popular rock of Roger Hodgson, the
    lead singer and guitarist of 1970s and 80s band Supertramp. They will
    have the chance to listen to the brilliant abstract jazz of pianist
    Brad Mehldau and his trio, (July 24), as well as the Cuban sounds of
    Omara Portuondo - one of the few remaining living stars and only
    female one, of the now legendary Buena Vista Social Club (July 29).

    Add to that the 20-string Armenian Serenade Chamber Orchestra with a
    deep and haunting classical program (July 31), and the oriental jazz
    of the stunning Azerbaijani pianist and singer Aziza Mustafa Zadeh
    (August 4) followed by a Rahbani family musical based on Gibran
    Khalil Gibran's famous book "The Prophet" (August 17-20).

    Baz is also putting on, as he does every year, a show of the Arab
    Star Academy kids though this is not strictly part of the Byblos
    Festival on July 15.

    Perhaps the best thing, though, about Byblos is the setting. All the
    performances take place in the heart of the ancient town's old
    quarter with the backdrop of the fantastic Crusader Citadel magically
    lit against the night sky. The whole experience of Byblos, like
    Beiteddine and Baalbek, is one of elegant beauty and singular moments
    with the buzz of the modern-day souk surrounding the festival and
    fine foods available at the restaurants in the old port and town
    center. Go for a weekend, stay the night and enjoy the city's beaches
    during the day. A great advantage of Byblos is that it is just
    half-an-hour's drive from Beirut, a much shorter journey than those
    to Baalbek and Beiteddine.


    In the end, however, it is for the music that you will go and though
    the caliber of performers this year is second to none in their
    fields, the lack of a superior name may well affect sales. The
    program is also not one that will attract the younger generation that
    Byblos has so actively pursued in recent years. That plan was dented
    by Franz Ferdinand's cancellation, although Baz and the band's agent
    at Helter Skelter in London insisted they would come in 2006 fresh
    off the release of their new album later this year.

    The highlights of Byblos 2005 though, without question are Mehldau
    and Portuondo. The former is an American jazz piano virtuoso who can
    fill venues as prestigious as London's Wigmore Hall and with his trio
    is reminiscent of a quietly reflective Ahmad Jamal. Mehldau makes no
    concessions to the audience, rarely communicates with them and simply
    plays brilliant original music. There are no electronics, fusion or
    smooth-jazz singers, just powerful composition and long
    improvisations. On the Byblos stage it is likely to be an immensely
    satisfying performance.

    The septuagenarian Omara Portuondo will be very different and perhaps
    more accessible to an unquestioning audience - a diva of great
    presence, she will perform with 12 Cuban musicians and transform
    Byblos into Havana for a night of traditional Latin sounds. In the
    1940s and 1950s hers was the velvet voice of the jazz/bossa
    nova-inspired genre known as filin. Today Portuondo's show is a
    translucent one made up of 5 decades of Afro-Cuban artistry seasoned
    with strings, woodwinds, guitars, and background vocals, all about
    love.

    Aziza Mustafa Zadeh, though less well-known, has been performing for
    many years and has played to audiences around the world. Her father
    was the leader of the Azerbaijan Jazz movement until he died in 1979
    and she has continued his legacy playing a brand of world jazz on her
    piano, scatting like Ella Fitzgerald and incorporating the
    traditional Azerbaijan form of Mugam into her jazz. A highly
    improvisational style, Mugam refers to a modal system of music of
    which there exist over 70 types, all defined by their specific
    pattern of intervals, range, as well as direction of melodic movement
    and rhythm. This will be a fascinating show.

    For lovers of classical music the Armenian Philharmonic Orchestra
    presenting the Serenade Chamber Orchestra from Yerevan will be an
    elegant evening of pure string pleasure, while Oussama, Mansour and
    Marwan Rahbani's latest musical play telling the story of Gibran's
    "The Prophet" features the artwork of over 80 Lebanese artists.

    The show that will pack the Byblos Festival, however, will be that of
    Hodgson. Famed for his unique alto voice, Hodgson's former band
    Supertramp achieved global fame with the soft rock of songs like
    "Dreamer" and "Breakfast in America," and his many fans in Lebanon
    are unlikely to let him leave the stage without at least three
    encores.


    For more information or tickets for the Byblos Festival go to
    www.byblosfestival.org or contact the Virgin Megastore Ticketing
    Office on +961 1 999666
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