EFG London Jazz Festival announce new artists including Nubya Garcia, Omou Sangaré, Mulatu Astatke, Shabaka Hutchings, Camilla George and many more.
Wednesday, July 09, 2025
EFG London Jazz Festival, has announced the next raft of names for its 33rd edition which takes place from 14-23 November 2025. Press release attached.
We have received the following press release;
SERIOUS
Announce More Artists For
EFG LONDON JAZZ FESTIVAL 2025
New names include Nubya Garcia, Oumou Sangaré, Mulatu Astatke, The Evolution of UK Jazz – 20 Years On ft. Camilla George and Shabaka Hutchings, Hossein Alizadeh, Bill Laurance and more
14-23 November 2025
https://efglondonjazzfestival.org.uk/
The global celebration of music, EFG London Jazz Festival, is sharing the next raft of names for its 33rd edition which takes place from 14-23 November. For 10 days and nights musicians from all over the world will come together in London to perform boundary-pushing music that showcases jazz and its influence across different genres and cultures.
Following his performance at EFG London Jazz Festival in 2023, the ‘Father of Ethio Jazz’, Mulatu Astatke, will bring two shows to the festival this year. The first is at the Southbank Centre’s Royal Festival Hall on Sunday, 16 November and then the following night at HERE at Outernet. He will perform a celebratory career-spanning set that is sure to be a fitting tribute to his incredible musical journey so far. The shows will also be in support of his first major studio album in over 10 years, Mulatu Plays Mulatu, which is being released ahead of his performance.
On Friday, 21 November Aga Khan Master Musicians & Friends: A Night of Musical Alchemy and Wonder take the stage at Queen Elizabeth Hall. The Aga Khan Master Musicians are a unique ensemble of visionary performers and composers, each devoted to reimagining the musical heritage of their culture through bold, contemporary expression. Experience an unforgettable evening of musical innovation as the Aga Khan Master Musicians join forces with French jazz luminary Vincent Peirani (accordion), Aga Khan Music Awards laureates and extraordinary talents from the tapestry of musical cultures. In this one-of-a-kind concert, boundaries dissolve and traditions intertwine, offering a thrilling musical journey where East meets West, the ancient meets the avant-garde, and new creations are born in the moment.
Continuing at the Southbank Centre, the soul of Wassoulou meets the power of orchestral sound as the BBC Symphony Orchestra are performing alongside Malian singer and 2019 Aga Khan Music 2019 winner, Oumou Sangaré. Opening the concert are winners of the prestigious Aga Khan Music Awards which take place as part of EFG London Jazz Festival over the closing weekend. Soon to be announced, the winners are artists whose work preserves and reimagines musical traditions from across the globe.
These concerts are curated by the Aga Khan Music Awards 2025 in collaboration with the EFG London Jazz Festival and celebrate outstanding musical creativity inspired by cultural heritage across the world.
London-born saxophonist, composer, bandleader and Take Five alumnus, Nubya Garcia melds jazz, classical, dub and R&B into sweeping, adventurous music to stir the senses. Her eclectic music style comes from a place of exploration and self-study, of wanting to experiment across all disciplines. One of the most lauded of her generation in UK jazz, Garcia is closing the festival at HERE at Outernet on Sunday, 23 November with a unique show accompanied by specially-commissioned visuals.
Over at Cadogan Hall, the beautiful concert hall just off Sloane Square, the full lineup is almost in place with Iranian player of the Tar and Shurangiz Hossein Alizadeh performing on Friday, 14 November, presented in collaboration with Artstage and Vaak Records. American vocalist and purveyor of the Great American Songbook, Stella Cole performs on Sunday 16, November. Into the midweek, maverick violinist who moves freely between jazz, classical and pop, Nigel Kennedy will perform on Tuesday, 18 November and pianist Taylor Eigsti ft Becca Stevens will bring some New York flair on Wednesday, 19 November. Classically trained composer, sought after collaborator and 5 times Grammy award-winning pianist Bill Laurance will play music from his new album Lumen, released on ACT Records on 26 September in Cadogan Hall on Saturday, 22 November.
On Wednesday, 19 November at the Queen Elizabeth Hall, Adrian Dunbar presents T.S. Eliot’s The Waste Land with music by Nick Roth alongside the Guildhall Session Orchestra. Conceived and directed by Dunbar, the Unreal Cities setting of the poem is composed for four actors, film and jazz quintet and is expanded for this performance with a full orchestral treatment in collaboration with the Guildhall Session Orchestra.
UK drummer, composer and producer Tom Skinner has been a vital and central figure in the burgeoning underground music scene in London throughout the last 20 years, and he brings this experience to a special headline show at the Queen Elizabeth Hall on Friday, 21 November. Tom is known, among others, as an original member of award winning band Sons Of Kemet alongside band-leader and frequent collaborator Shabaka Hutchings. He is also the core drummer of The Smile, with Thom Yorke and Jonny Greenwood.
Headlining KOKO on Friday, 21 November, composer, producer and multi-instrumentalist Adrian Younge is performing with an outstanding 10-piece orchestra to present ‘Something About April III’ - the final chapter of his Brazil inspired psychedelic soul trilogy. As the founder of Linear Labs and co-creator of Jazz Is Dead, his work spans collaborations with artists such as Roy Ayers, Lonnie Liston Smith, and João Donato. Fans can expect a star studded show in keeping with the Jazz is Dead nights, inviting surprise guests for their first ever outing in London.
Following their show at Jazz Cafe earlier this year, the electrifying and genre-crossing Ilhan Ersahin’s Istanbul Sessions return to play the EartH Theatre in Dalston on Sunday, 23 November.
At the Union Chapel, there are two new shows announced. On the opening Saturday, 15 November, childhood friends Sam Amidon and Thomas Bartlett perform in a double bill show for EFG London Jazz Festival. Having grown up together and formed bands as children, they have both gone on to carve out brilliant careers as musicians and collaborators. On the back of his breakthrough album Salt River, Amidon follows his two sold out shows at Stone Nest earlier this year, whilst Bartlett will perform works including his luminous 2020 release Shelter.
Anyone who attended last year’s showstopping Moment’s Notice will be feverishly anticipating the event’s return to Union Chapel. George Nelson’s improv series is one of the hottest tickets on the London jazz scene. Five musicians with little or no history of playing together are invited to spontaneously compose in front of a live audience. Last November, Courtney Pine, Yazz Ahmed, Femi Koleoso, Petter Eldh and Farida Amadou treated a sell-out Union Chapel to three blisteringly brilliant sets, and this year Moment’s Notice returns to the EFG London Jazz Festival for a second time on Tuesday, 18 November with a secret lineup that will be revealed in the coming months.
At Milton Court, Dhamaal and Shri Sriram present a high-energy collaboration of South Asian, jazz and electronic traditions, creating an exhilarating and dynamic celebration of musical diversity on Sunday, 16 November. Created by Indian-born British composer, multi-instrumentalist and producer Shri Sriram and commissioned by Serious Trust for the 2025 New Music Biennial, it draws out the up-tempo sounds from the genres to create a celebratory and joyous performance, helped along by a 28 piece brass band.
The following day, Monday, 17 November at Milton Court poet, novelist, musician and academic Anthony Joseph and legendary UK producer Dave Okumu present a live performance of Rowing up River to Get Our Names Back.
Closely mentored by the legendary trumpet player Hugh Masekela, Somi has carved out her own path as an artist, scholar, and activist. Somi offers an Afropolitan sonic travelogue that weaves deeply personal storytelling with modern jazz and African groove and performs at Jazz Cafe on Saturday, 22 November.
Composer, arranger, producer, conceptualist and actor ESKA’s artistry spans genres, disciplines and institutions, from underground improvisation scenes to fashion houses. She can leap from sweet jazz-folk to radical avant-garde improv at the drop of a hat, and performs at The Lower Third on Tuesday, 18 November, as she moves into a bold new chapter.
As was announced last week, Serious’ talent development programme Take Five celebrates its 20th anniversary in 2025, and as part of the celebrations they are presenting a show with specially composed music by celebrated alumni Shabaka Hutchings, Camilla George and Jason Yarde at the Barbican on Wednesday, 19 November.
There are also two Take Five performances on the opening weekend from the 2025 cohort with Polish-born London based harpist Marysia Osu and Ghana-born Manchester raised guitarist Rory A. Green performing a matinee show at Purcell Rooms on Saturday, 15 November. Scottish saxophonist Matt Carmichael and percussionist Gloria Yehilevsky do the Take Five matinee showcase on Sunday, 16 November, with pianist Marco Mezquida performing his new project ‘Tornado’ in the evening.
After the flurry of Take Five shows on the opening weekend, there is another taste of the future of UK jazz on Monday at the Elgar Room in the Royal Albert Hall with Take Five Presents: Olivia Murphy’s Moonrise Ensemble, Andrew Woodhead’s Swing you Sinners & Lewis Daniel. Take Five alumni Bryony Jarman-Pinto performs at Toulouse Lautrec on Thursday, 20 November.
EFG London Jazz Festival have a plethora of other fantastic shows being announced today, including Sarathy Korwar Drum Ensemble at the ICA on Saturday, 15 November, Dark Days: Neil Charles, Mark Sanders and Cleveland Watkiss at Camden Arts Centre on Thursday, 20 November and Rosie Frater-Taylor at The Courtyard on Saturday, 22 November.
EFG London Jazz Festival is a place to explore music and to celebrate the legacy and the future of an inspiring musical universe.
Serious would like to extend their heartfelt thanks to all of their partners, particularly the continued support of title sponsor EFG, which helps to support the breadth and diversity of the festival. The EFG London Jazz Festival is made possible thanks to the support of many key sponsors and funders, including Arts Council England, Serious Trust, BBC Radio 3, Champagne Thienot, Jazzwise Magazine and Jazz FM UK.
Dee Dee Bridgewater’s show at the Barbican is presented in collaboration with Eurostar, celebrating the London to Paris connection for over 30 years.
EFG London Jazz Festival Shows (to date)
12 - 14 Nov - aja monet (Artist in Residence) - Barbican
14 Nov - Hossein Alizadeh - Cadogan Hall
14 Nov - Jazz Voice - Royal Festival Hall
15 Nov - Sam Amidon ‘Salt River’ & Thomas Bartlett - Union Chapel
15 Nov - Marysia Osu + Rory Green (Take Five matinee showcases) - Purcell Room
15 Nov - Sarathy Korwar Drum Ensemble - ICA
15 Nov - Joan As Police Woman - EartH Theatre
15 Nov - We Exist! The Dee Dee Bridgewater Quartet - Barbican
15 Nov - Tanita Tikaram - Royal Festival Hall
15 Nov - Chris Thile - Queen Elizabeth Hall
15 Nov - Kurt Elling and The Yellowjackets Celebrate Weather Report - Cadogan Hall
16 Nov - Mulatu Astatke - Royal Festival Hall
16 Nov - Stella Cole - Cadogan Hall
16 Nov - Matt Carmichael + Gloria Yehilevsky (Take Five matinee showcases) - Purcell Room
16 Nov - Marco Mezquida: Tornado - Purcell Room
16 Nov - Dhamaal + Shri Sriram - Milton Court
16 Nov - Hermeto Pascoal & Grupo - Barbican
16 Nov - Michael Wollny Trio + Emma Rawicz INKYRA - Queen Elizabeth Hall
16 Nov - Bilal - Village Underground
17 Nov - Mulatu Astatke - HERE at Outernet
17 Nov - Anthony Joseph + Dave Okumu - Milton Court
17 Nov - Take Five Presents: Olivia Murphy’s Moonrise Ensemble, Andrew Woodhead’s Swing You Sinners & Lewis Daniel - Elgar Room
17 Nov - Levitation Orchestra - Islington Assembly Hall
18 Nov - Moments Notice - Union Chapel
18 Nov - Eska - The Lower Third
18 Nov - Nigel Kennedy “Spiritual Connection” - Cadogan Hall
18 Nov - Jasmine Myra with Strings - Hackney Church
19 Nov - The Evolution of UK Jazz – 20 Years On ft. Camilla George and Shabaka - Barbican
19 Nov - Taylor Eigsti Group ft Becca Stevens - Cadogan Hall
19 Nov - Adrian Dunbar presents T.S.Eliot’s The Waste Land Music by Nick Roth with Guildhall Session Orchestra - Queen Elizabeth Hall (6 & 8pm)
19 Nov - Queer Jazz: B.H.A.M w/ Abi Asisa - Vortex
19 Nov - Makaya McCraven - KOKO
19 Nov - Rita Payés - Union Chapel
20 Nov - Bryony Jarman-Pinto - Toulouse Lautrec
20 Nov - Dark Days Neil Charles, Mark Sanders and Cleveland Watkiss - Camden Arts Centre
20 Nov - Ana Carla Maza - Cadogan Hall
20 Nov - Emma-Jean Thackray - KOKO
20 Nov - London Sinfonietta with Marius Neset - Queen Elizabeth Hall
20 Nov - Fergus McCreadie + Laura Jurd - Union Chapel
20 Nov - GeeJay - Islington Assembly Hall
21 Nov - Aga Khan Master Musicians & Friends: A Night of Musical Alchemy and Wonder
21 Nov - Adrian Younge / Jazz is Dead - KOKO
21 Nov - Tom Skinner - Queen Elizabeth Hall
21 Nov - Gary Crosby’s Africa Space Programme featuring Denys Baptiste, Winston Clifford + Guest - Vortex
21 Nov - The Weather Station with Strings - EartH Theatre
21 Nov - Bill Frisell Trio - Cadogan Hall
21 Nov - Hiromi’s Sonicwonder - Barbican
22 Nov - Somi - Jazz Cafe
22 Nov - Bill Laurance - Cadogan Hall
22 Nov - SpiceJazz presents Rosie Frater-Taylor - The Courtyard
22 Nov - Tortoise + Jeremiah Chiu and Marta Sofia Honer - Barbican
22 Nov - Tune-Yards - Royal Festival Hall
23 Nov - Nubya Garcia - HERE at Outernet
23 Nov - Oumou Sangaré with BBC Concert Orchestra - Queen Elizabeth Hall
23 Nov - Ilhan Ersahin Istanbul Sessions - EartH Theatre
23 Nov - Adekunle Gold with Guildhall Session Orchestra - Royal Festival Hall
23 Nov - Japanese Jazz - Barbican
23 Nov - Swingin’ With Strings - Cadogan Hall
23 Nov - Herbert & Momoko - Village Underground
Praise for 2024 edition
“beautifully curated” - The Guardian, ★★★★★
“The incredible musical jamboree of the EFG London Jazz Festival is our yearly reminder that the jazz scene has never been more various” - The Telegraph, ★★★★★
“exceptional” - The Times, ★★★★
“November can be a month to hunker down for the onset of winter and its weather, and where better to do that than in one of the myriad venues across the capital” - The Arts Desk, ★★★★
“there’s a noticeable buzz amongst the crowd amassing” - Clash
Serious is one of the UK’s leading producers of live jazz, international and new music through concerts, festivals, tours, digital shows, talent development schemes, learning and participation programmes, and bespoke events for all.
EFG International is a global private banking group offering private banking and asset management services and is headquartered in Zurich. EFG International’s group of private banking businesses operates in around 40 locations worldwide. Its registered shares (EFGN) are listed on the SIX Swiss Exchange.