If you missed the Jazza Music Festival on Tuesday 12th and Wednesday 13th October, you just missed what turned into the most exciting musical event of 2010 in London.
The two day Jazza Festival's aim was to raise awareness of the plight of the Palestinian people, and particularly so in Gaza, and hopefully to raise funds for humanitarian causes. In the just under four hours of the show each night, this was undertaken with barely a hint of rhetoric but rather, through an incredibly varied programme of music and through the often tender, sometimes sad, occasionally anguished and even angry, often joyful, sometimes humourous, emotions purveyed by the music, and above all its genuine compassion.
To read more: http://www.rainloresworldofmusic.net/Reviews/Revws_E-K/JazzaFestival20101012+13-p1.html
The two day Jazza Festival's aim was to raise awareness of the plight of the Palestinian people, and particularly so in Gaza, and hopefully to raise funds for humanitarian causes. In the just under four hours of the show each night, this was undertaken with barely a hint of rhetoric but rather, through an incredibly varied programme of music and through the often tender, sometimes sad, occasionally anguished and even angry, often joyful, sometimes humourous, emotions purveyed by the music, and above all its genuine compassion.
To read more: http://www.rainloresworldofmusic.net/Reviews/Revws_E-K/JazzaFestival20101012+13-p1.html
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