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Savannah Music Festival positioned at crossroads of global roots music

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Seventeen years ago, when Ryan McMaken traveled to Savannah to interview for the marketing director job with the Savannah Music Festival (SMF), he was surprised to see the diversity of musicians on display on a poster in the Savannah-Hilton Head International Airport — classical and jazz legends and international performers just on the cusp of stardom.

For a small town, “this was pretty major to see this mix of music,” recalled McMaken, who has served the past five years as the music festival’s artistic director, the enthusiastic, curious and thoughtful curator of its wide array of musicians and vocalists. “It’s important to us to be a leading presenter in booking roots music from around the world.”

Now entering its 35th season, SMF’s “World of Music. One City” tagline runs like a continental stitch through the 17-day festival’s sound tapestry, beginning March 28 with Malian superstar Oumou Sangaré and ending April 13 with a Goya-inspired flamenco performance by Soledad Barrio & Noche Flamenca.

In between, the festival celebrates every kind of music from arias to Zydeco, and there will be many firsts, and a few homecomings.

Oumou Sangare_by Holly Whittaker

Savannah Music Festival celebrates music from arias to Zydeco

The official kickoff for the festival is March 23’s Spring Fling Benefit Party and Concert, which raises funds to support SMF’s year-round artistic residencies and educational programs. Following the party, the distinctive jazz vocalist Samara Joy will take the stage at the Lucas Theatre for the Arts as part of the Faircloth Jazz Series, which offers an exhilarating lineup across the festival with Cuban pianist Chucho Valdés, Warren Wolf and Isaiah J. Thompson, French guitarist Stephane Wrembel, Tatiana Eva-Marie and the Avalon Jazz Band, Brandee Younger, and Matthew Whitaker.  



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Written by: Soft FM Radio Staff

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