Tampere
 Jazz Happening, the festival that earlier this year won the prestigious
 EJN Award for Adventurous Programming, will be organized for the 36th 
time, taking place between 2nd and 5th November, 2017. The festival 
features some of the most innovative musicians in modern jazz, both from
 Finland and from abroad. The festival includes ten concert events that 
bring to the stages of Klubi, Pakkahuone, and Telakka altogether 25 
ensembles and orchestras.
Saxophonist Shabaka Hutchings,
 one of the brightest rising stars of British jazz, will perform in 
Tampere with two ensembles. In Pakkahuone, he plays together with South 
African jazz musicians in the ensemble Shabaka & the Ancestors. On 
Friday, Hutchings will perform at Klubi with his trio The Comet Is 
Coming, whose musical style combines jazz with electronic elements, 
funk, and psychedelic soundscapes.
Swiss trombonist Samuel Blaser arrives to Tampere in conjunction with the release of his latest album, Early in the Morning. Blaser will play together with saxophonist Oliver Lake, who has throughout his career – spanning decades – collaborated with iconic artists, including Lou Reed, Björk, and Vijay Iyer. Equally impressive and lengthy is the career of jazz drummer Tony Allen, who will bring to Tampere Jazz Happening his tribute to the legendary drummer Art Blakey from the Jazz Messengers.
Tunisian oud lute player Dhafer Youssef
 will charm the festival audiences with his musical style that 
incorporates masterfully intricate oud playing, Arabic lyrics, and jazz.
 The festival also features New Zion with Hamid Drake, who take 
inspiration from the spiritual jazz of the 1970s. Furthermore, Nordic 
jazz sounds in this year’s festival will be represented by the Icelandic
 Sunna Gunnlaugs Trio, who play in Tampere together with the legendary 
Finnish trumpeter Verneri Pohjola.
The
 festival programme at Telakka is also filled with some of the most 
interesting jazz ensembles of today. Earlier this year, the rock-jazz 
trio Virta released their critically acclaimed album, Hurmos, 
and went on to enchant audiences at Pori Jazz Festival and Flow 
Festival. In addition, the international nature of the Finnish jazz 
scene is reflected by the ensemble Sid Hille & Foreign Friends, 
whose members hail from all over the world, but have all settled to live
 in Finland.
Tampere 
Jazz Happening also offers two concert events that are free of charge to
 the audiences. The festival’s opening concert is dedicated to Estonia, 
which will celebrate the anniversary of the country’s 100 years of 
independence next year. The evening is titled Spotlight on Estonia and 
showcases Estonian modern jazz through performances by the ensembles 
Kirke Karja Quartet, Kadri Voorand in Duo with Mihkel Mälgand, and Heavy
 Beauty. During Tampere Jazz Happening’s final concert evening, 
listeners will be treated to the ethereal melodies and stunning vocals 
of Swiss Lucia Cadotsch. Modern classics from Strange 
Fruit to Moon River will transcend to the present time through 
Cadotsch’s evocative interpretations.