In 1970 the
London Borough of Camden added a Jazz Week to the
Camden Festival. During the next fifteen years, the Camden Jazz Weeks were held at venues around the borough:
Bloomsbury Theatre, Logan Hall,
London Forum,
Roundhouse, and
Shaw Theatre. By the early nineties, the Camden Festival was closed. In 1992 the company Serious, which had produced the Camden festival, started the London Jazz Festival with help from the
London Arts Board. The festival is branded as the EFG London Jazz Festival, reflecting headline sponsorship since 2013 by EFG Private Bank, part of Switzerland's
EFG International. A history of the festival was published in 2017 to commemorate its 25th anniversary. Written by Emma Webster and George McKay, the book arose from collaboration between the festival and the
University of East Anglia and was funded by the
Arts & Humanities Research Council (2015–16). McKay was the inaugural Professor in Residence at the 2014 festival, and Webster the Researcher-in-Residence in 2016. The book covers the history of London as a city of jazz festivals since about 1949 and includes material on festivals at Bracknell, Camden, Crawley, and Richmond/Reading. In 2018, the final of the
BBC Young Jazz Musician competition formed part of the festival, and the performances at the
Queen Elizabeth Hall were broadcast the following day by
BBC Four. ==Previous editions==