If youâre not a jazzhead, you may have missed last Fridayâs celebration of International Jazz Day. Each year the event takes place in one of the worldâs many jazz hubs. Osaka, Istanbul, and Paris have all played host in the past. This year, though, the celebrationâas President Obama stated when he kicked off the eveningâcame âback home.â
The ceremony was held in the White House. In one part of his opening speech, Obama recounted the story of Dizzy Gillespieâs 1964 presidential run. His first executive order as president, he said, would be to change the name of the White House to the âBlues House.â Obama committed to making that a reality.
Morgan Freeman hosted International Jazz Day, adding an extra layer of vocal velvet to a night that had plenty of it. Other guests included jazz legends like Wayne Shorter, Herbie Hancock, and Chick Corea, as well as revered vocalists like Sting, Esperanza Spalding, andâthe greatest voice of them allâMs. Aretha Franklin.
Franklin opened the night with a soulful rendition of Leon Russell’s âA Song for You.â Later (at the 74-minute mark), she returned to the stage to sing Princeâs âPurple Rain.â It was a brief rendition, only lasting 45 seconds, but its inclusion is telling of Princeâs towering legacyâeven amongst some of the most important American musicians of all-time. Franklin acknowledged as much in an interview with MSNBCâs Brian Williams following the musicianâs deathâas Rolling Stone remembers. “He was definitely an original and a one-of-a-kind. There was truly only one Prince,” she said. “He put his stamp [on his sound]. Prince is gone but his music lives on.”
As Obama said in his elegant commencement, jazz has âhumble origins as the music of the black working classâ and grew to become âAmericaâs most significant artistic contribution to the world.â Prince’s music, too, is rooted in those origins, and it will be forever remembered as integral to the American musical experience.
Image Credit: International Jazz Day