Jazz @ Villebaudon
J@V is a must-see event for music lovers and those who enjoy a friendly atmosphere. Organised by the Tingalis association, this event aims to promote jazz culture in a welcoming setting that is accessible to all.
Petite Fleur Trio - Catchy swing tunes, playfully witty French songs... A sparkling, intimate, and delightfully quirky atmosphere.
Thomas Mayeras presents his album "Tenderly at home"
Program
The festival offers an immersion into the world of jazz and traditional music, alternating between conferences, workshops and concerts to provide the public with a rich and varied experience. Throughout the day, participants will be able to discover styles ranging from classic jazz to swing, blues and traditional music, in a friendly and festive atmosphere.
- 12:00 pm - 12:10 pm : Official opening
- 12:15 pm - 1:30 pm : Friendly lunch with music
- 1:45 pm - 3:15 pm : Lecture on the history of jazz - Bertrand Richard - "1920 - 1930 Jazz period"
- 3:30 pm - 4:00 pm : Jazz workshop at the Bougival Conservatory
- 4:15 pm - 4:45pm : Jazz workshops - ‘La Cle de Sol’ music school
- 5:00 pm - 5:45 pm : Musical exchange between the 2 ensembles
- 6:00 pm - 7:15 pm : Petite Fleur Trio
- 7:15 pm - 8:15 pm : Friendly Diner with music
- 8:00 pm - 9:15 pm : Thomas Mayeras Trio
- 9:30 pm – 10:30 pm : Between jazz, nature and poetry - Lorenzo Naccarato
- 10:30pm – 11:45 pm : Open mic
Lorenzo Naccarato, godfather of J@V – when nature inspires jazz, and science illuminates listening
Franco-Italian pianist and composer Lorenzo Naccarato explores a “cinematic” music that transposes natural phenomena into musical language: animal movements, the breath of the wind, tides, tectonics… A universe where nature, jazz and science meet to make life heard.
With a classical background and a research background in musicology (he played silence with Thelonious Monk), Lorenzo has released two albums on the Laborie Jazz label: Lorenzo Naccarato Trio (2016) and Nova Rupta (2018). This work engages with movement and telluric forces, as if the pianist were becoming a seismograph of the vibrations of the times and the environment. In 2024–2025, he initiated Murmurations, a migratory tour following the route of common cranes—from Germany to Senegal—to celebrate the collective intelligence of birds and share a poetics of the soundscape with audiences, schools, and partners, notably the LPO (French League for the Protection of Birds). For us at J@V, his patronage opens a space for sensitive listening and interdisciplinary dialogue: understanding how the science of life nourishes jazz creation, and how music helps us inhabit our environments.