The time is right for rescheduled event, Sunday July 25
There are still a few places at the table for this Sunday’s Jazz in the Chef’s Kitchen, the long-delayed annual Jazz Festival Benefit Concert & Dinner. Originally scheduled for May 22, the unseasonable spring weather caused the rescheduling of the event, and it’s a good thing they pulled the plug when they did.
“It actually hailed here on that day,” said Bruce Aidells, co-host of this year’s benefit for the Healdsburg Jazz Festival. “Then the wind picked up – we would have had to serve dinner in the garage. It would have been an absolute disaster.”
Well, maybe. Considering that the garage, like the rest of the custom-built home on Sweetwater Springs Road, is an aesthetic and practical showcase, an Arts and Crafts celebration in the style of Greene & Greene. The brother architects of the early 20th century created many memorable homes in Pasadena, Carmel, Berkeley and other California neighborhoods, and the couple count architecture and jazz among their top three loves. “Food is actually our first love,” Aidells clarifies, “’way more than the others!”
Aidells (yes, the sausage guy) and his wife, chef Nancy Oakes of Boulevard and L’Avenue, will make good on their commitment to the Healdsburg Jazz Festival this Sunday, July 25, with a multi-faceted celebration of the arts. The event, held at the Aidells-Oakes custom built home on Sweetwater Springs Road, starts at 4:30 with a reception and music from a top-flight jazz quartet, the David Udolf Trio. The pianist is joined by drummer Lorca Hart and bassist Jeff Chambers, and they’ll treat the 50-plus attendees to jazz in the garden while appetizers — oysters, pizza, caviar and truffles — are served.
After the hour-long reception vocalist Kenny Washington joins the trio, and his set of jazz, blues and classics from the Great American Songbook as well as other surprises promises to delight the guests. “He’s great, you’ll love him,” promises Jessica Felix, and we believe her. You can visit this page to hear some clips of Kenny’s music.
Nancy’s the head chef for the dinner, prepared with the assistance of Franco Dunn, and the carte looks appetizing indeed: Beef Steak Florentine, Wood Oven Roasted Lobster Tails, and Grilled Quail with Balsamic Cherries, are the entrées, and sides include Roasted Asparagus, Wild Mushrooms, Toasted Ancient Grains and Eva’s Tomatoes & Mozzarella among many other choices. (To see the complete menu, visit this page.)
Yes, there’s a dessert table too, but the wine list alone makes the expected donation a sound investment: there’s the Roederer Estate Brut from Anderson Valley, the ’07 Alysian Chardonnay, the Miner Family ’06 Oracle – half bottles run $50 of this Napa Valley Burgundy blend – the 92-point Helena Montana cabernet from Anakota, and many other wines well worth the price of admission.
It may sound like an extravagance for the well-to-do. But consider all you get – a Michelin-worthy dinner from one of Northern California’s most decorated chefs, live jazz music from the Top of the Mark, a living museum of architectural innovation, and your choice from a custom wine list that no connoisseur could resist. Indulgence or bargain? It’s all in how you look at it. If you look at it as worth every cent, click this link to purchase your admission to the benefit event of the summer.
Over the past 12 years the Healdsburg Jazz Festival has become one of the largest cultural events in Sonoma County. Supporting our mission of “preserving the indigenous art form of music known as jazz,” the Festival is now heralded as being one of the best boutique jazz festivals in the world. Help support the Festival, and enjoy an unforgettable evening in the bargain, by joining us at the Benefit Dinner and Concert this Sunday.






The
Sunday, June 13




Opening the concert is local guitarist
Haden’s own roots reach back over 50 years, when he was a founding member of Ornette Coleman’s radical quartet. Later, he anchored Keith Jarrett’s sound, created moody film music and radical “liberation” music, his explorations never ceasing to this day. He last appeared at HJF two years ago, playing the Raven with Kenny Barron and Joshua Redmond. This time his guests are no less remarkable.
Haden’s trio is rounded out by a relative newcomer to master status, but one whose lineage is true jazz royalty: Ravi Coltrane. Often sons of artists the significance of John Coltrane won’t even try to follow in their father’s footsteps, and even less frequently do they succeed. But Ravi’s own star has been steadily rising in the 2000s, and his CDs “In Flux” and “Blending Times” earned raves from the jazz illuminati. His recording of “For Turiya”—written for his mother Alice Coltrane by none other than Charlie Haden – is already a classic, and its inevitable performance at the Raven on Saturday night is sure to be one of the highlights of this year’s remarkable – and masterful –
But behind most of these reasons the core element of our Mission Statement, found in the right column of every page on our website.

One of the core tenets of the Healdsburg Jazz Festival is personal contact – that jazz artists and their audience need to meet each other, to know each other, in order to understand one another – and the music that results. Sure, we have concerts in the 500-seat Raven Theater, and “on the green” at Rec Park and Rodney Strong, but it’s in the small restaurants, hotel lobbies and tasting rooms that the spirit of jazz really comes into its own.
Saturday afternoon, 3 – 5 pm
Monday, June 7:
At almost the same time, from 4 to 6 pm, check out Seasons of the Vineyard (113 Plaza St.) — it’s that red awning on the north side of the square. They promise delectable bites to go with their Ferarri-Carano wines, and home décor gifts to browse while the music plays. But do listen to the music: it’s
Reason No. 6: Historic Venues
Since 2001, it’s been known as the
Saturday, June 12
Auction Ends Tomorrow!
Reason No. 7: Learn Music
Reason No. 8: Local Talent
Saturday June 5:
Monday June 7:
Wendesday June 9:
The Healdsburg Jazz Festival is fast approaching — it all kicks off officially on Friday June 4 with 

That’s not all, not by a long shot. You remember piano virtuoso Geri Allen from 2004, and she’s back again this year on 
