Pearl Django’s featured track would feel at home in a 1930s Parisian nightclub. The audience is then introduced to a trio of musicians dedicated to finding the musical synchronicities between European Gypsy jazz and American swing. Singer, guitarist and bassist Alune Wade, from Senegal, and Harold López-Nussa, a pianist from Cuba, perform a jazzy, Cuban-flavored cover of a famous Algerian song written by Dahmane el Harrachi, “Yarahya.” Next, with her silky voice, Niuver sings a bittersweet bolero. The melody is reminiscent of "If I Were a Bell," a song from the Broadway musical, Guys & Dolls, that was famously turned into a jazz standard by Miles Davis. It is followed by a rendition of a classic song performed by Lisa Bassenge. Jazz Café opens with is a self-titled track by Delicatessen, a Brazilian group devoted to performing jazz standards with a bossa nova flavor. Today, you can find jazz in every corner of the world. Jazz has come a long way since its birth in New Orleans at the end of the 19th century. Jazz Café is a collection of extraordinary musicians from the U.S., Cuba, Brazil, Finland, Senegal and beyond that will transport people to jazz cafés and clubs around the world. Extraordinary musicians from the U.S., Cuba, Brazil, Finland, Senegal and beyond will transport you to jazz cafés around the world.