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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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Yunmi Sang and the BEJE trio South Korea tour

From August 11 to 21 Paolo Adamo and I travelled to South Korea, invited by the Chuncheon Arts Festival and by our friends Yunmi Kang and Sangyeon Park. It was a long-awaited reunion, sparked by Yunmi and Sangyeon coming to the UK a year before. Landing in the hot humid summer, full of the sound of cicadas, a gastronomic road-trip with futuristic tower blocks and towering forested mountains flashing by and bowls of delicious things dripping from chop sticks in every pit stop, we spent a happy 10 days preparing for and performing three gigs.

We were delighted to meet Sungsu the bassist who instantly got to grips with my spidery charts and fitted in so well. The first gig was in Seoul, the Cotton Club, where cool couples sipped cocktails and a giant screen played silent jazz clips in the interval. We were well received, short of table-dancing. The second gig was in Chuncheon in a large church-cum-arts centre where we were treated like royalty and went down very well to a packed house. I’ve never experienced such an in depth interest, from a festival director, local press and national TV in what I’m trying to do in and through music. A day later we were in the city of Kunsan, guests of Songjin, the coolest jazz-loving dude ever, who’d converted a Japanese-era elegant house, once the home of seven shamans (and who’d predicted he’d appear to buy the old place) to the Muddy Jazz Club. That’s where we recorded my new song ‘Soul Set Free’ featured in the video linked here. https://l.facebook.com/l.php?u=https%3A%2F%2Fyoutu.be%2FRHnrVUFPlFE%3Fsi%3DlGoWYWjzeB2dTjs6%26fbclid%3DIwZXh0bgNhZW0CMTAAYnJpZBExTWdFeDhTWElHajNEbmJJcwEehLEeVFtFRBwXANH7ZOnVnNX0pP78V5glMNzdltZMVM1fd7IGQj57ij74DYg_aem_oPCXrIKeRWOdxfFOQQA2mA&h=AT0uEZUAuI4CkMqxy7mEv8i2cBciFijhyrVZbXgxGEQE4AcKMCgpGHuEWWGOjr1QGnRc_SjAXa7TFPeccLKZXEvINNrVtDEsqEwe4E2LcPABeOEXa8k14oEEAFB9_YDB_YgXhVBhEfd9sELM790

We can’t thank enough Yunmi and Sangyeon for their dedicated hospitality in their mountain home, for organising the gigs, and above all for being our soul sister and brother in this amazing collaboration. We have great plans for the future: a UK tour in February 2026, an album and gigs back in South Korea in August and a return in 2027. Below is a transcript of the news article about our Chuncheon Festival appearance.

Yunmi Sang and BEJE trio at Chuncheon Arts Festival 15 8 25 Review and interview by Jin-Hyung Kim https://www.kado.net/news/articleView.html?idxno=1328730

What can music do when society is shrouded in darkness? There are times when music approaches us like a prayer. When the music of artists, created for those weary of life, resonates with the audience, it gives them the strength to carry on.

On Liberation Day, August 15, at Seongam Church in Chuncheon, the Chuncheon Performing Arts Festival presented a performance by “Yunmi Kang & David Mowat BEJE Reunion.” Trumpeter David Mowat, vocalist/pianist Yunmi Kang, guitarist Sangyeon Park, and drummer Paolo Adamo formed the group in 2018.

David Mowat is an artist who has practised social solidarity, refugee support, and anti-war activism through music for more than 30 years. He once made a year-long pilgrimage from Bristol, England to Jerusalem, playing the trumpet along the way to deliver a message of peace. Their performance unfolded as a serious form of jazz that transcended nationality and culture. Though ways of life differ, the philosophy that we are all alike and essentially one was deeply embedded in their music.

In an interview with this paper, David Mowat spoke of Korea’s painful history and the ongoing massacres in Gaza, explaining the value of connection. Jazz vocalist Yunmi Kang, who joined the interview, also said: “I hope our music can move people’s hearts and minds to become a tool for creating a better world.”

Q. “What is this BEJE ‘Reunion’, and how did it feel to perform with Korean artists?

DM “In Europe, musicians often try to assert themselves through their playing. My personality doesn’t fit well with that. Korean musicians are very delicate, calm, and composed. Instead of rushing to convey their stories, I appreciated how they could step back and reflect through the music.”

Q. You have continued to raise your voice for Gaza. What can music do?

DM “Music has the power to move people and awaken humanity. I am not only a performer but also a political activist. Music crosses borders. While I speak out for the oppressed in Gaza, I am also a scholar of Jewish music, which is beautiful in its own right. Music transcends boundaries and plays a role in opening hearts and transforming relationships of division and hostility.”

Q. How do you see the current situation in Palestine?

“First, I must speak about the role of journalism in telling the truth. Those in power do not want the truth revealed. If journalists disappear, they can do as they wish. Today’s media and social media create distortion, undermining the value of journalism. The Israeli government is targeting Palestinian journalists for elimination. A journalist friend of mine was recently murdered in what was clearly an assassination. The role of reporting what is really happening is vital. If journalists vanish, the powerful will dictate the narrative, and most people will believe and follow it. Journalists who tell the truth of what happens in a single day hold an invaluable and dangerous role.”

Q. Today is Korea’s Liberation Day. Are you aware of Korea’s history?

DM “It is inspiring. The Korean people are well organized, modern, and proud. Commemorating independence and freedom is not only about the past but also meaningful for the present and future. I’ve studied Korea’s political situation: the people have repeatedly fought corruption and power, raising their voices in the streets. Koreans cherish freedom and know how easily it can be lost—that it is never simply given. I didn’t fully grasp this in Europe, but being in Korea I felt the nation’s independent identity. This is an important message to send to the world. For the oppressed people of Palestine, Korea’s example can deliver the message that ‘if we unite, we can win freedom.’”

Q. The concert’s theme was loss and recovery, coexistence and solidarity. You performed ‘With No Petals’, dedicated to Comfort Women. [Tell us about it]

DM “That piece was composed by our guitarist, Sangyeon Park. It was meaningful to perform it on such an important day. The very process of performing it together strengthens the connection within our project. We wanted to express the hidden pain and dignity beyond it in a solemn yet restrained tone. I believe music is not a tool for self-display but a way to address the realities and social issues we live with.”

Q. The final piece, Gig for Gil, seemed to encapsulate the group’s message….

DM “Yes. We are not so different, but if we don’t yield and only collide, coexistence is impossible. The piece starts with simple motifs, but each voice enters differently, clashing in dissonance until the drum solo leads into harmony. Building a team is about faith and conviction beyond music.”

Q. What is in your mind when you play the trumpet?

DM “On stage, sincerity is everything. The instrument is the amplifier of my soul. I must express the reality I see and feel through music.”

Q. What gives you the strength to continue such passionate work?

DM “Music itself. What drives us is the hunger to express truth and the desire to comfort others. And the fact that we can share those stories together, that alone is reason enough for music.” —Reporter Jin-Hyung Kim

For excerpt from our first album ‘Modernised Sacrifice’ see below

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REVIEW OF BEJE GIG at Black Mountain Jazz, Abergavenny, 30 April, 2016.

https://www.facebook.com/groups/blackmountainjazz/This was another great evening of jazz put on by Black Mountain Jazz at Abergavenny, this time on a Saturday to coincide with International Jazz Day. Today’s ensemble was very appropriate, given its international roots and the vast range of cultural and geographical sources for the compositions of its leader, the Swiss/English trumpeter/flugelist, David Mowat. The ensemble consisted today of Mowat, the superb Len Aruliah (UK/Canada) on alto and soprano saxes, the excellent guitarist and oud player, Knud Stüwe (Germany), on Strat and effects, an unusual and welcome setup in jazz clubs, and the fantastic duo of Paolo Adamo on percussion and Pasquale Votino (both Italian) on double bass. I had had the pleasure of hearing Adamo and Votino twice already this month – with the Davide Logiri/Ben Thomas UK tour – so I knew that I was in for a treat this evening.
The Bristol based ensemble did not disappoint, providing an exhilarating mix of compositions, including ones based on ragas, oud tunes collected in Somalia, and themes collected on Mowat’s wandering in various countries, including Syria. One composition provided a musical backdrop to Mowat’s recounting of the hospitality and friendship he had been shown on a journey across various countries, including Syria, such warmth having been shown by those of Muslim, Christian and other religions – particularly apt on International Jazz Day, which, as Mowat reminded the audience, was not just about music, but about bridging cultural gaps.
Most striking about the performance was the successful mix of clearly stated, internationally flavoured, themes with quite free form improvisation, conjuring up tastes of the creativity of such predecessors as the Chicago Art Ensemble, Mingus’s ‘Tijuana Moods’, and many others, while retaining its own unique identity.

Unfortunately, I had to leave before the end of the performance, but I left very satisfied and clutching both CDs that were available. If you get the chance to catch this band of fine, musically gifted, creative and technically excellent musicians, grab the chance with both hands! One of the most creative musical evenings that I have experienced recently in a jazz club.

Those attending were also lucky to be entertained by the local singer/songwriter/guitarist Mansel Davies. Davies provided a great contrast to the main act, and produced a very polished performance of his own compositions to a very attentive and appreciative audience. He has a solid guitar style, with a very full sound, and a great voice for his genre.
All in all, a very enjoyable night! David Hobbs, club posted on Black Mountain Jazz FB