13th KK Jazz Festival returns to raise funds for community projects

KOTA KINABALU: One of the longest running jazz festivals in Malaysia, the Kota Kinabalu Jazz Festival (KKJF), returns for the 13th time next week, where part of its proceeds will go to community projects in Sabah. To be held over two days on August 2 (Friday) and August 3 (Saturday) at the Covered Tennis Court of Sutera Harbour Resort, it will feature talented jazz bands from the Sabah music community and Kuala Lumpur's Rainbow Children and Xianghai Divas.
The Sabah Tourism, Culture and Environment Ministry has approved an allocation of RM60,000 in support of the non-profit event, according to Minister Datuk Christina Liew in a statement on Wednesday (July 24). Part of the money raised will fund community projects of Kota Kinabalu Rotary Club, which include medical outreach camps for health screening of rural folks, building toilets for rural communities, water gravity feed projects to provide clean water supply and helping out poor children in remote villages.
"The inclusion of the Festival as a premier event in the Sabah Tourism Board's annual calendar of events reflect the government's support for KKJF," Liew said, following a courtesy call by KKJF 2019organising committee led by organising chairman, Jack Ong. Among Sabah's performing groups will be Jamstation, SWAG (comprising professional musicians from RTM Sabah, lecturers from Universiti Malaysia Sabah Music Faculty, tutors and students of Sabah Institute of Arts as well as musicians from the Royal Malaysian Police Band), Blues Summit and AC Duo. Others are Take 2 (vocalist and guitarist Jonathan Tse with Peter Lau on percussion and handsonic), Rikki and Friends, Sunrise Jazz Ensemble, Project Trio, Lawalah from the Sabah Institute of Arts' Music Department and Calypsoul. Liew, who is also Deputy Chief Minister, rated the KKJF as a tourism event for both domestic and international tourists, as well as local music enthusiasts to enjoy. "Support our Malaysian musicians ... KKJF (founded in 2007) is the only jazz festival in the region that was set up to raise funds for charity and develop the performing arts," she said. Source: The Star Online
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Fun and surf in Kudat

KOTA KINABALU: Sabah’s tip of Borneo in Kudat will be alive with music, fun activities and water sports from Nov 24 to 26 as the Music and Surf Festival takes place during these days. The event, which will be held at Kalampunian Beach, Tanjung Simpang Mengayau, will see an array of activities including a surfing competition and concert by local artistes for the public to enjoy. Sabah Tourism Board (STB) chairman Datuk Joniston Bangkuai said the three-day event was aimed at promoting the beautiful beaches of Kudat as a tourism destination for outdoor activities and surf culture. “We also want to showcase the tradition and customs of the Rungus community there,” he said during a press conference on Thursday. This festival will kickstart with a surfing competition on Nov 24, exclusively for participants while those who wish to try out this new sport in Sabah can do so the next two days. Joniston said Kudat is named one of the best surfing destinations because of its seasonal waves varying from one to six feet, sandy beaches and clear water. He said although surfing is a new adventure sport, especially among locals in Sabah, it is fast gaining popularity. “Those interested in learning how to surf are encouraged to attend scheduled surf clinics on Nov 25 and 26,” he added. The prize presentation for the surfing competition will be held on the last day of the festival. Winners stand to take home cash prizes, trophies and goodie bags worth RM8,000. Young surfers called Groms are also in the running for trophies, goodie bags and surf accessories worth of RM500 each. There will also be a “Best in Borneo Surfer” title in search of the best performing local surfers too. The admission-free concert, which will be held on Nov 25 from 4.30pm onwards, will feature artistes such as Atmosfera, Beverly Matujal, Francis Landong, Jonathan Tse, Ayumi Yusof, Sarma Cherry, Rhythm of Heartbeat Nature, Akar Rimba, and Borneo Cakrawala Band. There will be a special appearance of Aunty Patrin (radio personality and YouTube character) and Rayner Pailus as well as Sabah’s Elvis Presley. Festival-goers will be able to enjoy fire dance performances, and DJ Eflexx and brothers will be spinning music at night. A “Dangers of Rip Current” Awareness Campaign and handicrafts exhibition will also be held during the event while food trucks will be parked throughout the programme to satisfy the taste buds of festival-goers. The Music and Surf Fest @ The Tip Of Borneo, Kudat is an event organised by Sri Pelancongan Sabah with support from Sabah Tourism, Culture and Environment Ministry and Sabah Tourism Board, Sabah Surf Association and Kudat District Office. It is sponsored by Rip Curl, K2 and Tritonic. For details, contact Winceslaus Gerald Autine of Sri Pelancongan Sabah at 088-232 121 or email wences@sabahtourism.com. Contact Fina of the Sabah Surfing Association at 012-306 9977 for competition details.
Source: Star Online
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Local Talent in Limelight at KK Jazz Festival

KOTA KINABALU: Having experienced his first KK Jazz Festival from the sidelines, Sabahan musician Gordon Chin is excited to be given the chance to share the limelight at the 11th instalment of the highly anticipated annual music extravaganza. Strumming the guitar since he was only six years old, Gordon has never looked back. He recalled admiring the festival from afar until he managed to work his way slowly towards it, first as a reporter providing media coverage and then as an artist liaison for the festival in recent years, before landing himself a spot on the coveted stage. “I’d been keeping myself updated with all the happenings in KK. When the first jazz festival happened 11 years ago, I was a senior in high school and I managed to convince my parents to drive me to the festival, where I watched from the sidelines because I couldn’t afford a ticket. “Being a musician, I told myself I wanted to be on that stage one day. After high school, I went to college and then became a reporter with a local daily, which was when I covered a good three or four jazz festivals. “I still held on to that musical dream while doing music on the side, and one day, I decided to pursue music full time. “That was when I started participating more actively in the festival, by becoming an artist liaison,” he said. Gordon told The Borneo Post that he had taken care of American-born fingerstyle guitarist, singer and songwriter Shun Ng, as well as Motown legend Bobby Taylor, most noted for discovering and mentoring The Jackson 5. “I took care of Shun Ng and Bobby Taylor during the ninth KK Jazz Festival in 2015. Then, in 2016, Bobby took me on as his guitarist. And this year, I get to perform as a solo act.” Gordon said his experience with the jazz festival has been nothing short of surreal. “This experience, starting from the beginning and looking at the festival from the outside before finally being on the big stage, is surreal. “It has reminded me that the festival has come this far and musicians here have also progressed so much. “I really hope the festival will continue to grow stronger every year so that more musicians can get this type of experience and exposure.” Gordon is currently working on producing his first solo album, which he hopes to release by Christmas this year. Along with other performers who will be gracing the jazz festival stage this weekend, namely Shun Ng and The Shunettes, Sada Borneo, Dasha Logan and Borneo Big Band, Gordon attended a press conference at the Sutera Harbour Marina and Country Club, prior to the first night of the festival. Organising chairperson Jack Ong noted that the festival had evolved and developed greatly through the years, and Sabahan musicians with it. “Through interactions with the immensely diverse musicians we bring in, budding musicians who first joined us in their early 20s would have grown up with the festival and are now seasoned musicians in their own right,” he said. In realising its purpose to nurture fresh local talent, Jack added that the KK Jazz Festival also took the initiative to send promising acts to other jazz festivals, to expose young artists to a wider audience and environment. He said that the committee also organised jazz fringe events at entertainment outlets throughout KK, where Sabahan jazz bands get to perform. Jack also told the press that students from Sabah Skills Training College, Universiti Malaysia Sabah (UMS) and Universiti Malaysia Sarawak (Unimas) would be volunteering at the festival, to learn how it is run. With regard to the jazz festival’s accomplishments after a decade of making its mark within the community, co-organising chairperson Roger Wang said, “I believe the festival’s greatest achievement is how it helped transform the music scene in KK. “I have learned that the true measure of a music festival is not about the number of stars it has featured, nor about the big names it has brought in. “A music festival is really about the number of stars it has helped create within the community.” A non-profit event, the KK Jazz Festival also supports community projects by the Rotary Club of Kota Kinabalu (RCKK) through proceeds from ticket sales. In the last 10 years, the festival has supported provision of clean water projects, literacy programmes and avoidable blindness campaigns. RCKK president Dr Ravi Mandalam said that last year, the jazz festival managed to raise between RM60,000 and RM70,000, after expenses were deducted. This year, he expressed hope that the festival would continue to generate more funds in order for the community programmes to be a success. To avoid the hassle of parking, the festival partnered with Uber Malaysia through promo code “11KKJAZZF”, which will award ticketholders with two free rides worth RM5 each, to and from the festival yesterday and today. Festival doors open at 6pm till 11pm on both nights. Tables and chairs are provided at the venue, with availability on a first-come-first-served basis. Food and beverage operators will also be present during the two-day event, namely Carlsberg, Coffee Bean and Tea Leaf, Party Play, Borenos Fried Chicken, Fruto, Adelphi and Co, Alexys, Wineshop and Purple Cane. F&B coupons of RM20 and RM50 will be sold at the venue. Tickets to the festival are sold at various outlets around town such as Coffee Bean and Tea Leaf in Damai and Wisma Merdeka, Party Play, Adelphi and Co, Alexys Cafe and Borenos Fried Chicken, at RM100 per person per night and RM150 per person for two nights. Yayasan Sime Darby returns as the main sponsor of the event, with other sponsors including the Ministry of Tourism, Culture and Environment, Sabah, PACIFICITY and Uber Malaysia, supported by Kota Kinabalu City Hall and Carlsberg. The Kota Kinabalu Jazz Festival is a premier event included in the Sabah Tourism annual calendar of events, and is also a key component of the Kota Kinabalu Arts Festival. More information on the festival can be obtained through its website, kkjazzfest.com, as well as on other social media platforms under the same handle.   Source: TheBorneoPost
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KK Jazz Festival Committee Meets Mayor

KOTA KINABALU: The Kota Kinabalu Jazz Festival (KKJF) 2017 organising committee led by its organising chairman Rotarian Jack Ong, paid a courtesy call on Mayor Datuk Yeo Boon Hai, recently . Jack briefed Yeo on the programme for the upcoming 11th KK Jazz Festival at the  Sutera Harbour Marina & Country Club Covered Tennis Courts on July 21-22 The two-night concert will feature international and local talents and bands to perform on either the centre or main stage. Malaysian celebrity, personality and TV anchor, Sabahan Daphne Iking, is back by popular demand to emcee again this year. Performers on the first night includes 2017 Bakat Interact winner from SM St Francis Convent; Butod Project (KKJF Talent Search winners);  Gordon Chin with his complex fingerstyle technique; the energetic pop fusion band – Dominant 5th of Borneo (D50B);  Sabahan Jazz piano Alton Wong and jazz ensemble Kangkung Belacan; the infectious rhythm driven sound of Nafas; Sada Borneo’s musical fusion of traditional, modern, ethnic and nature elements; and ending the night with the winner of Tiger Jams 2016 – Rozella. The line-up for the second night begins with sophisticated jazz, dance and Latin music by Borneo Big Band led by Joan Jim; Talent Search finalists – Zuhaili and Culumus; Good Messenger – professional musicians from Taiwan with their mix of jazz, blues, gospel and classical music; the first authentic Spanish Flamenco ensemble to perform in Sabah – Origen; the unique and virtuosic style of Shun Ng & The Shunettes, comprising of Stellar Award nominee Deon Mose, with their special guest – China’s The Voice finalist Melody Tan; a UK chart topper and daughter of the legendary Loganathan of the Alleycats – Dasha Logan; and Asia’s first and only Prince-inspired tribute band – Rainbow Children, to bring the festival into a spectacular ending. The festival opens at 6pm on both nights and ends at about 11 pm each night. There are tables and chairs provided at the venue but availability is on a first come first serve basis. This year  KKJF will have some of the best restaurants in Kota Kinabalu serving their best food and beverages such as The Coffee Bean and Tea Leaf Outlet, Party Play, Adelphi & Co, Alexys, Borenos, Fruto, Wine Shop, Carlsberg, and many more. F&B coupons of RM20 and RM50 per book are sold at the festival. Tickets will be available at the door on both days but purchase them now via website and at selected outlets in KK at the Coffee Bean & Tea Leaf, Party Play, Adelphi & Co, Alexys Cafe and Borenos Fried Chicken. Prices for the tickets are RM100 for a one-day pass (per pax per night) and RM150 for a two-day pass (per pax for two nights). Both tickets are for regular seating on a first come first serve basis. The price for one Premier table is RM1,000 per table per night (maximum of six pax) or RM200 per pax per night (maximum of four pax) for a premier seating on sharing basis where table and seats are specially reserved. F&B is not included but waiters are on standby to assist on getting your food and beverages. To avoid the hassle of parking, the festival will partner with Uber Malaysia this year. Ticket holders can ride with Uber to/from the festival by entering the promo code 11KKJAZZF in the Uber app and enjoy two  free rides worth RM5 each to/from the festival on July 21-22 only. The main sponsor of KKJF is Yayasan Sime Darby. Other sponsors are the Ministry of Tourism, Culture and Environment Sabah, Pacificity and  supported by Kota Kinabalu City Hall (DBKK) and Carlsberg. KKJF is jointly organised by RCKK and SPArKS, and the festival is an annual fund-raising festival, where money raised from ticket sales is used to fund deserving community projects of RCKK. For more information on KKJF, please log onto www.kkjazzfest.com or check out FB page @KK Jazz Festival. Source: The Borneo Post Online
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Sabah band emerges third in Japan

Kota Kinabalu: All the hard work and sacrifices have finally paid off for Poseidon, a Sabahan band, when they emerged one of the top three bands at the Asian Beat 2016 band competition, in Tokyo, Japan, recently. The Kota Kinabalu-based band won third place through 'Ontoros Antanom', a song composed by its vocalist Kaynizam Maskor, against seven other bands from Asia, Europe and North America. "Poseidon was formed this year and comprises six music enthusiasts from Kota Kinabalu, Tuaran and Papar. "Apart from me, the other band members are Hasdee Nurikhwan Jalil who plays the guitar, Ramzul Ihsan Ab Rahman (drum), Mohd Alhafiz Basri (keyboard), Isam Dion Ismail (bass) and Abdul Muis Mushadi (flute). "We started off by joining the Yamaha Band Mentor 2016 organised by Yamaha Malaysia by sending a video clip and luck was on our side as 'Ontoros Antanom' was selected to go to the next phases and eventually we won the competition," he said when contacted on Tuesday. By winning the Yamaha Band Mentor Malaysia 2016, Poseidon received a ticket to represent the country to the Asian Beat 2016 which was held in Tokyo, Japan on Nov 5. "We decided to perform 'Ontoros Antanom' once again for the grand finals as the song is unique where it tells a story of the legendary Murut warrior apart from the traditional music elements which we infused into the song through the sounds of 'Bungkau' and flute. "The idea for the song came from our own awareness on the uniqueness of Sabah and its culture. "We are also excited to make the State and the country proud by grabbing the third place after competing with seven other acts from various countries in the competition." The competition was won by Gift from South Korea while in second place was leMeow from Canada. The other competitors were Sabi Band from Indonesia, Bad Ditch (Singapore), Li Ji (China), Koralli (Ukraine) and Sugar Bro (Hong Kong). Poseidon brought home a voucher for US$1,000 worth of Yamaha musical instruments while the winner and the first runner-up received a US$3,000 voucher and a US$1,500 voucher, respectively. "Money was the greatest challenge for us as we have invested a lot throughout the competition, especially for the preparations as we had to go through full scale practise sessions… we had to rent a studio every day, plus we had to upgrade our instruments as well. "All these are not cheap and we would like to thank (Youth and Sports Minister) Datuk Tawfiq Abu Bakar Titingan and (Tourism, Culture and Environment Minister) Datuk Seri Masidi Manjun for their support," said Kaynizam. He disclosed that the band is in the midst of completing their debut album and that they will tour with Yamaha Music Malaysia in East Malaysia, starting with Kuching before proceeding to Kota Kinabalu and Sandakan. "We hope to penetrate the Asian as well as the international market in future and bring the Sabah elements in our music to another level," he said. Asian Beat is one of the biggest amateur band contests held throughout many regions in Asia. It started out from local competitions in participating countries and regions where each winner at these competitions proceeds to the grand finals to perform together on the same stage and compete to be the top of amateur bands in Asia. Yamaha Corporation started the event as Band Alert in 1998, prior to renaming it as Asian Beat in 2001. In the past years, international famous musicians were the judges such as Nathan East, Wes Borland, Tommy Aldridge, Sonny Emory, Billy Sheehan, James LoMenzo and Akira Jimbo. Source: Daily Express
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