Julia Keefe Indigenous Big Band
Friday, March 6, 2026, 8pm
Zellerbach Playhouse
This evening’s performance will be performed without intermission.
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Indigenous jazz musicians, ensembles, and big bands have their place in the contemporary jazz world and jazz history. Following 19th-century federal policies to remove Indian children from their homes and indoctrinate them into European culture (Indian boarding schools), small ensembles and big bands began to flourish on reservations across the US and Canada during the first half of the 20th century. Indigenous musicians including Russell “Big Chief” Moore, Mildred Bailey, Oscar Pettiford, and Jim Pepper began to achieve celebrity with jazz as their medium, but they were never duly credited as Indigenous visionaries in the genre.
From time immemorial, songs have been the vessels of stories and lessons for the Indigenous people of the Americas. The goals of the Julia Keefe Indigenous Big Band (JKIBB) are to celebrate and continue that tradition, to compose and perform new music inspired by traditional backgrounds, and to create a community of like-minded peoples from all backgrounds to uplift the next generation of Indigenous jazz musicians.
Indigenous cultures are not monolithic; many cultures carry traditions and songs as old and sacred as the next. The Julia Keefe Indigenous Big Band reflects a wide range of Indigenous identities, from South America to Canada, the Northeast to the Southwest. Together, the artists represent a long-silenced, long-forgotten chapter of jazz history: the participation, contribution, innovation, and legacy of Indigenous jazz musicians. And it is this legacy that composers and arrangers Julia Keefe and co-founder Delbert Anderson (Diné) carry forward through original works inspired by songs and rhythms of their Native heritage reimagined through the language and stylings of jazz.
It is a rarity to see a single Indigenous jazz musician nowadays—let alone 16 at one time!—on stage. The Julia Keefe Indigenous Big Band celebrates the diversity and vitality of Indigenous peoples in jazz: past, present, and future. It is a bridge for people everywhere to see themselves on the bandstand regardless of race, ethnicity, age, gender, or socioeconomic status.
The JKIBB debuted at the Washington Center for the Performing Arts in May 2022. The first performance was made possible with the support of Jazz Road, a national initiative of South Arts, funded by the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation with additional support from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation.
“Himacus Qeci’Yew’Yew” (“thank you so much”) for your support of Indigenous artists.


