jazz
Albums of the Year 2018: William Parker - Voices Fall From The SkyWednesday, 26 December 2018![]() A 3CD set featuring 17 singers, 34 tracks and over three hours of uniquely rewarding music, my Album of the Year, Voices Fall From The Sky by the NYC-based musician, improviser, composer, educator and author William Parker, represented an... Read more... |
Merry Christmas Baby - Gregory Porter & Friends, BBC Two review - mellow becomes slo-moTuesday, 25 December 2018![]() In 2017, the BBC Wales team with director Rhodri Huw filmed a Christmas show in the old 1888 Coal Exchange in Cardiff, now a hotel. Tom Jones and Beverley Knight’s Gospel Christmas was an exciting and upbeat show, which ended in an electrifying “... Read more... |
Albums of the Year 2018: Fiona Monbet - ContrebandeThursday, 20 December 2018![]() 2018. Another year when strong presences who have shaped and defined the music for decades, and whom one had fondly imagined might be around for ever, are gone from our midst. Unique vocalists Aretha Franklin and Nancy Wilson have passed... Read more... |
Albums of the Year 2018: Nightports w/Matthew BourneMonday, 17 December 2018![]() Matthew Bourne has been a significant experimental and collaborative presence on the scene since 2001, when he won the Perrier Jazz Award. This project with musician-producing duo Nightports (Adam Martin and Mark Slater) is the first of a series... Read more... |
CD: Kim Myhr - Pressing Clouds Passing CrowdsMonday, 26 November 2018![]() If a new soundtrack for L'Année dernière à Marienbad was needed, Pressing Clouds Passing Crowds is it. Thematically, the collaboration between Norwegian guitarist Kim Myhr, French-Norwegian poet Caroline Bergvall, the Québécois string quartet... Read more... |
EFG London Jazz Festival 2018, round-up review - winners young and oldMonday, 26 November 2018Jazz musicians of just about all ages and persuasions have been on show in this year’s 10-day EFG London Jazz Festival. Some were making their first mark, some taking stock of who and where they are, some trying new things or changing where they’re... Read more... |
Māris Briežkalns Quintet, EFG London Jazz Festival 2018 review - a Rothko symphonyMonday, 26 November 2018![]() One part of the brain, they tell us, responds to visual art and another, quite different, to music; we can't cope adequately with both at once. Which is why I'm often wary of those musical organisations which think that what we hear needs to be... Read more... |
Jazzmeia Horn, EFG London Jazz Festival 2018 review - searching for the unexpectedFriday, 23 November 2018![]() Aside from her incredible time feel, exceptional range and consistently beautiful timbre, what was most impressive about Jazzmeia Horn’s bravura performance at a sold-out Ronnie Scott’s was the sense of joyousness and vitality that coursed through... Read more... |
Orphy Robinson’s Astral Weeks, London Jazz Festival 2018 review - reimagining a masterpieceWednesday, 21 November 2018![]() After failing to make the charts on its release 50 years ago this month, Astral Weeks has long since passed into pop mythology, its unique amalgam of jazz, folk and soul influences inspiring musicians, writers and filmmakers alike.Martin Scorsese... Read more... |
EFG London Jazz Festival, first weekend review - Jeff Goldblum a jazz musician?Monday, 19 November 2018![]() The choice of what to go and hear in the London Jazz Festival can be bewildering: this first weekend of its 10-day run presented over 120 events. I managed to attend eight, of them at least in part, including some of the show that has predictably... Read more... |
Hadestown, National Theatre review - new folk musical is hotter than hellWednesday, 14 November 2018![]() The road to full musical theatre production has been a long one for Hadestown. It began back in 2006, with Anaïs Mitchell’s song cycle – a folk/jazz take on the Orpheus and Eurydice myth – toured around Vermont in a school bus, then grew into an... Read more... |
Reissue CDs Weekly: Jazz on a Summer's DaySunday, 11 November 2018![]() When Jazz on a Summer's Day was first seen in American cinemas in March 1960, it showed that seeing popular music live could be a leisure activity akin to watching high-end sports. Indeed, director Bert Stern intercut the musical performances he... Read more... |
