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Yunmi Sang and the BEJE Trio Feb 2026 UK tour

After 3 months of preparation I’m finally ready to start the marketing for this exciting tour which has been my main focus this autumn. Tour organisers will know the feeling of dozens of emails going out into the void with no return, like satellites leaving the solar system. And there were several near misses of the ‘it doesn’t quite fit’ genre, or offers of nights where we’re already booked, or double-booked venues who changed their minds, and venues just too pricey to afford. Still I persisted and we have five smashing gigs lined up.

CARDIFF The Flute and Tankard Feb 18

LONDON St Cyprian’s Church Feb 20

BRISTOL St Paul’s Church Clifton Feb 21

LYME REGIS Marine Theatre Feb 22

BATH The Bell Inn Feb 23

In the interval since our three city tour of South Korea August 2025 Yunmi has published and received reviews for her wonderful sensitive duo album with acclaimed American guitarist John Stowell. Yunmi Kang × John Stowell Duo Album — A Timeless Place
“A living dialogue between voice and guitar—music where spontaneity and depth coexist.
Even in moments of instant reaction, the two musicians shape a larger structure together, creating a true conversation in sound.” Shin Saem-i, @lovecoexist Jazz People @jazzpeople_magazine

I’m composing new tunes too. And both of us are thinking about the join between our humanitarian concerns and our art. It feels so hard to stay being an artist focussed on creativity whilst my heart and finance and time are taken by responding to the genocide in practical ways, and in dialogue with victims in Gaza. I want to express these growing relationships in my music and find a common humanity to overcome the divide between us. I know Yunmi is thinking and feeling the same with social fault lines in her own country. She applied for a culture grant from her government and wasn’t successful this time, but it sharpened our thinking meanwhile. We’ve been starting discussions with a visual artist too, but probably won’t involve her yet, before the summer when we’ll retirn to Korea all being well, to make our 2nd album, the expression of this search for common humanity across dehumanizing divides.

I hope BEJE fans, and bigbromo promo fans and friends will catch us at one of our gigs. There’ll be an update in January I expect. Meanwhile to Korea tour -featuring the tune I wrote this year to honour my mother’s passing- is on the website front page. (If the gremlin angels keep it there).

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BEJE Birth Of A Cool Band

As I, trumpeter, growled and prowled my beloved Bristol jam sessions twelve years back my ears noticed the boys from Europe, my semi-Swiss roots attuned to foreign twangs: the off-beat swing of double bassist Pasquale Votino, Paolo Adamo’s restless drumming, and the smoothly does it alto-ease of Julien Alenda; BEJE was born in my head, a Bristol European Jazz Ensemble. A niche concept on a jostling stage. ‘Collective’ whispered Pasquale in my ear at a pizzeria gig. It was years later that it became thus.

Now BEJE brims with international collaborations. Faris Ishaq the ney wunderkind from Palestine, Enrico Merlin wizard guitarist of Trento, Yunmi Kang Seoul soul singer and many more. It’s been an edgy progression from being the Bristol EJE to the British EJE. How did it start?

Jon Taylor at the Bristol Fringe booked us first in 2013 and marvelled at the jazz-rock chops of drummer Marco Anderson. Suave Swede Anders Olinder held it together for a while as the rhythm section fit wasn’t quite right, and Marco left to be replaced by Paolo. That was the European BEJE line-up for quite a while, ironically playing ‘all-American jazz, all of the way’ as Bath jazz voice Charley Dunlap once put it. Italian bassist Pasquale was often replaced by Italian bassist Federico Leonori, such is the draw of the city’s benevolent musical mafiosi. In those days BEJE played my compositions, influenced by my travels in the Balkans and the Middle East, but also by Keith Tippett who’s ‘Seedbed Jazz Workshop Orchestra’ I’d played in alongside Kevin Figes, Pete Judge and many others, and inevitable hero Miles Davis. Monk was a formative voice too, via a chain-smoking Chemistry teacher jazz enthusiast at school.

At the time of BEJE’s formation Bristol was bidding to be Europe’s Capital Of Culture and I fondly imagined we’d be its icon-actually it was the firebrand James Morton who’d wowed us all as an 18 year old at the East Bristol Jazz Club (I’d started in 1999 and still front). Another attempt at a marketing hit was presenting an anti-Brexit spoken word suite at one of Bristol’s Jazz and Blues Festivals at the time of the vote. Good gig but media flop, and astonishingly it failed to sway the result. Still, our marketing failures didn’t stop us getting great gigs over several years in the region. Jazz Lines Birmingham, Cardiff, Taunton CIC, Bocabar Glastonbury, Prema Arts Centre, Black Mountain Jazz Club and many others.

In this period there were two albums, ‘Live At The Fringe’ and ‘BEJE bites’. I’ve sold multiple dozens of cds at gigs but have felt very 20th century in my ambivalence to the fast changing world of technology. So these albums are not yet on bandcamp. I did sign up to a dubious crypto currency- earning website where allegedly I have 15,000 listeners who all seem to be pretty American teenagers. Being on there is more like being parked in a dodgy Musk space station than the wild reaches of the blue ether.

Another attempt in that phase of the band’s life to ‘break through’ with a would be ‘hit single’ – another naive strategy that floppped-was an investment in a video recording of my tune ‘Redfield Carnival’, deliberately more popular in style than other compositions of mine. I was pleased with the results. https://youtu.be/bIDmuRfYL1w

In my next blog I’ll tell the story of how BEJE started collaborating with international artists outside of the Bristol vortex, and what the 60 shades of ‘collaboration’ look like…

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2020 plans and HEAR MUSIC from forthcoming album Modernised Sacrifice

Our plans are:

1. Regular UK gigs starting with The Canteen Stokes Croft Bristol Jan 15th. Next up currently is April 2nd at St George’s Bristol. This is the BEJE line up with Anders Olinder or Anna Gomez on keys and Len Aruliah alto.
2. A long awaited album launch; Modernised Sacrifice is the album made last year by Yunmi Sang and the BEJE trio. July 9th is the key date, at St George’s Bristol. If you’re a PR pro make a pitch to help us gain max exposure for our lovely album!
3. A Yunmi Sang and BEJE trio July tour in UK and Europe July 9 to 18th. If you’re a promoter or a venue, offer us a date in this window!

4. Gigs and festivals world-wide in late 2020 and 2021!

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Promoters and Venues: Book EuRIP project for 2018 to 2019

Venues and promoters looking for new acts for the autumn of 2018 and beyond, note that BEJE is preparing a performance project called EuRIP. To be premiered at The Bristol  International  Jazz and Blues Festival on March 15th this is a spoken word and jazz story based on band-members’ formative memories, in Switzerland Italy Sri Lanka and The Netherlands. It’ll be a unique look at the interwoven fabric that is today’s Europe, as the fabric is torn by Brexit. More details in the months ahead. See http://www.facebook.com/Bristol.European.Jazz.Ensemble1

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Review of 2017

 

“The BEJE (Bristol European Jazz Ensemble) is the brainchild of Bristol jazz trumpeter David Mowat. Their distinctive sound is a combination of David’s lyrical trumpet,
Knud Stuwe’s masterful guitar and oud fused with the sympathetic rhythmic section of bassist, Federico Leonori and drummer, Jon Clark.

Their culturally diverse repertoire comprises elements of American jazz, contemporary folk and beautifully re-harmonised classical music; an uplifting journey across musical boundaries”

Andy Christie composer on hearing BEJE at Bristol Music Club Nov 28th 2017

BEJE has had a less busy year in 2017 than in the preceding three on account of David Mowat’s focus on his Arts Council England-funded project ‘Longing Belonging and Balfour’, a music with spoken word take on The Balfour Declaration of 1917 which has traveled around the UK. There’s some crossover with BEJE as Knud Stuwe is involved as arranger composer and oud player and the jazz has seeped into the Yiddish song and Arabic maqaams.

After The Bristol Music Club gig in January came a gig at a hot pub party with Senegalese kora Master Moussa Kouyate, then a Bristol Fringe gig at the same time as the Bristol Jazz and Blues Festival in March and a Colston Hall gig in May (where the video and recording were done). These last two were in stark contrast of personnel, with Julien  on tenor, Paolo drums Daan keyboards and Federico bass, whilst the May gig Jon Clark was on drums, Al Swainger on bass and Len was on alto and soprano.  There were more recent originals played in Colston Hall than the grooves we layed out with Moussa.

Jazz Stroud May 28 2017

In May at The Stroud Jazz Festival BEJE went down very well and in June a large audience at The Portishead Speakeasy loved us. Hostess-singer Kate O’Loughlin wrote after “What a joyous night last night.David Mowat and BEJE played extraordinary takes on regular Jazz standards along with some very moving, contemporary own compositions, beautifully executed”

Despite a long summer gap and one one on one rehearsal with bass dep Guilaume our gig at The Bocabar in Glastonbury in September was as free-flowing as ever with bassist-promoter Adrian Smith writing “It was a great gig on Friday 8th at the Bocabar with BEJE  – Beautiful compositions and some really top notch playing. The audience loved every minute of it. If you get a chance you should definitely go see the Bristol European Jazz Ensemble”

By request we were invited back to the slightly less pristine (having had us jazzers once already) classical Bristol Music Club, developing a taste for reflective jazz and story telling in

Portishead Speakeasy June 16 2017

November, which takes us to 2018.

 

Bocabar Glastonbury Sept 8 2017

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BEJE at TAUNTON CICCIC

KnudI’ve been preparing this morning for the TAUNTON CICCIC gig this Friday Jan 20th 7.30pm doors open £10 on door. £9 conc. http://www.creativeinnovationcentre.co.uk for address. Back by popular request as they say. Len Aruliah on sax, Knud Stuwe guitar and oud, Paolo Adamo drums, Federico Leonori bass. This’ll have a different feel to the gig with Anders on kb of last year as Knud is a very different player. His oud playing will bring real authenticity to the Syrian groove tune ‘Justin’ and the Somali desert blues ‘Mustapha’s Song’ and I always dig his guitar voicings.201602192206-_R2E1366-7

Federico Leonori at CICIC taunton 19 2 16. Pic: Rob Elford

201602192306-_R2E1446-17201602192308-_R2E1450-18The ‘Italian boys’ on bass and drums are in fantastic form with sparky duets expected, and Len on sax is always on fire and ever sinuous. I’ll have my warm steady cooler sounds in the mix (David Mowat on trumpet/flugel), and am looking forward to this gig! All pics from our fab gig at the same venue a year ago bar Knud’s.