Botti Kicks Off 2026 SFJAZZ Residency with West Coast Warmth
Joined by jazz heavyweights Chris Potter and Mark Whitfield, the trumpeter’s annual residency bridges the gap between atmospheric pop and hard-bop virtuosity, solidifying Miner Auditorium as his West Coast home.
Dirty Dozen Brass Band Ushers In 2026
The Dirty Dozen Brass Band turned the pristine Miner Auditorium into a New Orleans Second Line, proving that their 50-year-old "codified revolution" still has the power to move bodies and minds as they rang in the New Year.
The Architect of Swinging Joy: Benny Green’s Living History at Miner Auditorium
In the steep, intimate amphitheater of the Robert N. Miner Auditorium, pianist Benny Green operated as a "Curator-Virtuoso." His Sunday evening solo recital was a pedagogical and emotional exhibition, synthesizing the distinct dialects of mentors Art Blakey, Ray Brown, and Oscar Peterson into a singular, exuberant voice.
The Ghost in the Machine: Mayo and Berliner Re-Embody Jazz at Miner
At SFJAZZ, Michael Mayo and Sasha Berliner didn’t just play the standards—they refracted them through a new, post-digital architecture. Read our review of the UpSwing series finale, where vocal loops and percussive vibes reshaped the jazz tradition.
Marcus Shelby’s Orchestral Memory: Blues, Structure, and Community at SFJAZZ
On December 21, 2025, the Marcus Shelby New Orchestra brought Duke Ellington’s The Nutcracker Suite to Miner Auditorium, blending big band rigor with a deep meditation on Bay Area history and global resilience.
Arturo Sandoval at SFJAZZ: Bebop Lessons, Cuban Fire, and the Joy of Staying Alive
At 76, Arturo Sandoval transformed SFJAZZ’s Miner Auditorium into a masterclass of Afro-Cuban rhythm and bebop history. Far from a standard holiday recital, his "Swinging Holiday" show blended virtuosity with intimate storytelling—from his black sequined sneakers to a moving tribute to Charlie Chaplin. Read the full review of a night defined by "Cuban fire" and the joy of staying alive.
The Klezmatics at SFJAZZ: Improvisation, Memory, and the Politics of Joy
Approaching their 40th anniversary, Grammy-winning sextet The Klezmatics delivered a powerful sonic argument at SFJAZZ that joy, in the face of modern darkness, is a radical act of resistance. Read the full review of their "Happier Joyous Hanukkah" show.
Anat Cohen Builds a Living Jazz Ensemble for Her 50th Birthday at SFJAZZ
Anat Cohen celebrated her 50th birthday at SFJAZZ not with nostalgia, but with a masterclass in ensemble architecture, moving from intimate duos to the roar of her full Tentet.
Ben Folds Brings Holiday Mirth and Melancholy to SFJAZZ
Ben Folds brought his 'Sleigher' tour to San Francisco's Miner Auditorium, mixing holiday originals like "Me and Maurice" with pop hits and a choir-ready crowd.
Lisa Fischer and Orrin Evans Trio: Reimagining Soul at SFJAZZ
In her 2025 residency at SFJAZZ, vocalist Lisa Fischer and the Orrin Evans Trio deconstructed soul classics to build a sanctuary of sound. Read the full concert review.
The Alchemist of Sound: Lisa Fischer on Healing, The Stones, and Discovering Her "Barefoot" Voice
In a candid conversation ahead of her SFJAZZ residency, vocalist Lisa Fischer reflects on her decades with The Rolling Stones, the liberation of her solo voice, and her new focus on the medicinal properties of sound.
Legacy Meets the Mothership: Harris and Croker Ignite the UpSwing Series
A review of the SFJAZZ UpSwing double bill featuring Stefon Harris & Blackout and Theo Croker. An electrifying night of jazz tradition and genre-bending innovation.
John Santos Celebrates 70 Years of Groove and Community at SFJAZZ
Bay Area percussionist John Santos celebrated his 70th birthday at SFJAZZ with a 'Roots and Branches' spectacular, featuring Orestes Vilató, Skylar Tang, and a setlist bridging the Fort Apache Band with local folklore.
Three Visitors Craft Sanctuary At SFJAZZ
Three Visitors turned SFJAZZ’s Joe Henderson Lab into a sanctuary of deep listening, blending Steel House favorites and Three Visitors material in a telepathic acoustic set.
Kamasi Washington Delivers Personal Homily of Cosmic Jazz at Golden Gate Theatre
It was part big-band spiritual jazz and part family affair. Visionary saxophonist Kamasi Washington’s sold-out two-hour concert at the Golden Gate Theatre offered an evening of transcendent fusion, mixing funk, hip-hop, and masterful improvisation with surprise guest appearances.
Juan de Marcos’ Afro-Cuban Continuum at Miner
For de Marcos, Cuban dance music functions as a form of endurance, both personal and collective. He reminded the crowd that he had “given them the possibility to get back to the stage,” referring to the elders he had championed during the Buena Vista years, and he clearly felt a similar responsibility to the current ensemble. Thursday night’s performance, part of a four-night run at SFJAZZ, presented the music as a continuum that adapts to new hands and new circumstances while retaining its rhythmic backbone.
Sco's Combo 73 Serves Swagger At SFJAZZ
GRAMMY-winning guitarist John Scofield returned to Miner Auditorium for a three-night residency (November 6–8) alongside Combo 73, a lively quartet featuring pianist Gerald Clayton, bassist Vicente Archer, and drummer Bill Stewart. Their performance on Friday night (November 7), crackled with grit, fire, and instinctive rapport, thrilling the audience with their undeniable chemistry.
Skonberg’s Debut Delivers Stellar SFJAZZ Show
Bria Skonberg took the stage at SFJAZZ’s Miner Auditorium with the confidence of an artist who knows that joy is compelling. The 90-minute set was a lively, good-humored, rhythm-driven performance that blended New Orleans roots, swing, blues, and pop as parts of a shared, generous language. The audience responded right away.
SFJAZZ Collective’s Live Tribute To Wayne Shorter
San Francisco experienced a heartfelt, generous homage to Wayne Shorter on Sunday afternoon when the SFJAZZ Collective presented its second of three shows, the Native Dancer project, at Miner Auditorium.
Las Cafeteras Offer Evening Of Spiritual Storytelling
Miner Auditorium resembled a communal altar on Halloween, with flickering candles, portraits of ancestors glowing, and a towering Día de los Muertos figure watching over. The stage was set as an ofrenda—the Día de los Muertos altar, filled with portraits and marigolds—while Hasta La Muerte unfolded as a ceremony of sound, dance, and testimony. The staging encouraged families to share their memories with the public, and the music provided a structure for those memories. From the first image to the last chorus, the night celebrated remembrance in life and involved the audience as participants and relatives.
