And The City 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 The largest free jazz festival in North America returns to Hart Plaza in downtown Detroit Aug. 31-Sept. 3. BILL CARROLL Special to the Jewish News C elebrated jazz artists, some of metro Detroit's hottest jazz bands and award-win- ning student ensembles will soon converge on the Motor City in a 100-act, four-stage extravaganza heralding the coming of fall. The sights and sounds of jazz will again fill Hart Plaza on Labor Day weekend, as the Ford Detroit International Jazz Festival — formerly known as Montreux — takes place Friday-Monday, Aug. 3I-Sept. 3. The largest free jazz festival in North America, the event, presented by Music Hall for the Performing Arts, last year drew 750,000 people. The 22nd annual festival — the sixth under Ford sponsorship — will feature jazz masters and ris- ing stars and a total of about 750 musicians. It also will be streamlined from previous years and operate under a reduced budget, down to $850,000 from $1.2 million. The number of artist slots is down from 125 to 100; the number of stages reduced from five to four, and the festi- val hours will be trimmed. The event starts 3 p.m. Friday, Aug. 31, rather than noon, and fin- ishes 9:30 p.m. Monday, Sept. 3, rather than 11. "In celebration of Detroit's 300th birthday, 80 percent of the artists in this year's festival have Detroit roots," said Director Frank Malfitano, the festival's third artistic chief in three years and founder of the Syracuse Jazz Festival. Native Detroiters performing include young saxophone star James Carter; veteran bebop pianist Tommy Flanagan; and Marcus Belgrave and the Detroit All-Stars in a tribute to Louis Armstrong. Other headliners include Jewish flutist Herbie Mann, with Dave Valentin; 93- - 14% 8/24 2001 82 year-old Claude "Fiddler" Williams; organ legend Jimmy Smith; pianist/com- poser/big-band leader Toshiko Akiyoshi, with husband Lew Tabackin on tenor sax and flute; the Brubeck Brothers Band; pianist Benny Green; Jane Monheit, the hottest new jazz singer on the circuit; and the Wallace Roney Quintet in a tribute to Miles Davis. There also will be 30 Detroit area school jazz bands and ensembles. Mann has made several recent appearances in the Detroit area, including a performance at the Birmingham Jazz Festival last year. He and his virtu- oso flute legend colleague Dave Valentin — the "Two Amigos"— will play 10:30 p.m. Sunday, Sept. 2. With them will be Mann's son, Geoff, on drums, Jewish bassist Paul Socolow and Bruce Dunlap on accordion. "I'm going to accentuate Eastern European music because that's the music of my roots, and that's what I want to play," Mann said from his home in Santa Fe, N.M., where he moved from New York 12 years ago. "Dave and I also will play our old favorites, but Eastern European music has real flavor and longevity. And remember, Eastern European Jews also know the blues." Mann, 71, born Herbert Jay Solomon, is a native of Brooklyn and the son of immigrant parents. He played the clar- inet and tenor saxo- phone before becom- ing a charismatic flutist and pop jazz icon. "My parents thought musical instruments were for weekend playing ... that I'd never make a living from them," Mann mused. In remission from a bout with prostate cancer almost four years ago, Mann goes from the Detroit festival to Mackinac Island for a gig at the Grand Hotel. ❑ For more information on the festival and a complete schedule, call (313) 963-7622, or visit the Web site at www.detroitjazzfest.com .