Reviewed: Classic V-Disc Big Band Jazz Sessions | Harold Mabern

Various: Classic V-Disc Big Band Jazz Sessions Following the release of Classic V-Disc Small Group Jazz Sessions, an 11-CD set which I reviewed in December 2024, Mosaic have now issued a companion 10-CD compilation running over four and a half hours. The set features - in (mainly) excellent restored/improved sound - the musical contributions of swing-band leaders to the US World War 2 effort in Europe and Asia.* Those leaders included stars such as Woody Herman, Les Brown, Charlie Barnet,...

Jews And Jazz

The alliteration is obviously pleasing because Amazon offers five books with titles which relate to a connection between Jews and jazz. This one must...

Jacky Terrasson accused of rape

The Franco-American pianist Jacky Terrasson, well known for his work on the Blue Note label, has been accused of raping a six-year-old girl, according...

Reviewed: Ben Rosenblum Nebular Project | Joe Harvey-Whyte, Geir Sundstøl | Jazz Sabbath

Ben Rosenblum Nebular Project: The Longest Way Round Composer, pianist and accordionist Ben Rosenblum has used a quote from James Joyce’s novel Ulysses as the...

New releases February-March 2026, W-Z

Records offered for review to Jazz Journal in January-February 2026, including Mal Waldron, Emmanuel Wilkins, Buster Williams, Steve Wilson and Alex Wintz // Editor's pick: Buster Williams

News in brief...

Attila Kleb of JazzFest Budapest says he’s been fighting for a real jazz festival, undiluted with “performances by pop and rock stars”. This year, 27 June – 2 July, the city invites such as Pat Metheny, Marcus Miller, Charles Lloyd, Mike Stern and Ravi Coltrane.

Among the soul and pop that dominates the 2026 Love Supreme Jazz Festival in Sussex, 3-5 July (e.g., Temptations, Four Tops and Sister Sledge) is some jazz-related music from such as Bill Frisell, Joe Lovano, Joe Webb and Emma Rawicz.

The fourth MoonJune festival, devised by the indefatigable Leonardo Pavkovic and describing itself as a festival of “eclectic music”, takes place in Teramo, Italy, 22-25 July 2026 and includes Soft Machine w. Gary Husband, Gong w. Steve Hillage and Diego Amador’s Flamenco Free Jazz.

Couleurs Jazz, an ad-free radio service based in Paris that in contrast to notable UK providers plays jazz all the time, is asking for donations. It’s an appeal that will likely to resonate with jazz fans who tune in. All contributions are welcome, but 50€ gets your name on the contributors’ wall.

The Swanage Jazz Festival, the oldest (1990) and largest “pure jazz” festival on the south coast of England, has reached its £25k appeal target and thus will go ahead 10-12 July 2026. Director Paul Kelly said “We have been amazed and uplifted by the generosity of our supporters.”

Reviewed: Cal Tjader | Lafayette Harris Jr. | Clark Terry

Cal Tjader: Demasiado Caliente Drummer Cal Tjader along with Paul Desmond and Dick Collins was a founder member of Dave Brubeck’s innovative octet in the...

New releases February-March 2026, T-V

Records offered for review to Jazz Journal in January-February 2026, including Taupe, Henri Texier, Mark Turner, McCoy Tyner and Various: Cuba Cha Cha Chá // Editor's pick: Taupe

Reviewed: Herbie Hancock | Raffaele Fiengo | Waan | John Donegan

Herbie Hancock: Takin’ Off The budget Jazz Masters label may not appeal to audiophiles, but it provides desirable items of classic jazz that boast coloured...

New releases February-March 2026, N-S

Records offered for review to Jazz Journal in January-February 2026, including NYYS Jazz, People In Orbit, Michel Petrucciani, Soft Machine and Louis Stewart // Editor's pick: People In Orbit

Reviewed: Shawn Lovato | Denman Maroney | Olle Lannér Risenfors Quartet

Shawn Lovato: Biotic The chordless tenor trio is one of the most exciting and dangerous formats in jazz. For some it represents the ultimate technical...
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New releases February-March 2026, L-M

Records offered for review to Jazz Journal in January-February 2026, including Noa Levy & Paul Edis, Mark Lockheart, Laura J Marras, Jake Mason and Brian Molley // Editor's pick: Noa Levy & Paul Motis
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JJ 02/96: Esbjorn Svensson Trio – Mr & Mrs Handkerchief

Thirty years ago Derek Ansell welcomed a good straightahead piano trio but wondered why they used an old fag-stained pub joanna to record their new album

JJ 02/66: Bobby Wellins – The New Departures Quartet

Sixty years ago Mark Gardner was pleased to find somebody else - Bobby Wellins of the 'stove-pipe' sound - who sounded like they had been listening to Warne Marsh

JJ 02/86: Terje Rypdal – Chaser

Forty years ago Mark Gilbert observed that while the Norwegian guitarist's enjoyable rock-outs were novel for ECM, they were commonplace in a broader context

JJ 02/86: Warne Marsh – Jazz From The East Village

Forty years ago, Victor Schonfield found here nothing to equal Marsh's I Remember You - 'one of the great jazz solos' - but still plenty of feeling, invention and rhythmic life

Reviewed: Classic V-Disc Big Band Jazz Sessions | Harold Mabern

Various: Classic V-Disc Big Band Jazz Sessions Following the release of Classic V-Disc Small Group Jazz Sessions, an 11-CD set which I reviewed in December 2024, Mosaic have now issued a companion 10-CD compilation running over four and a half hours. The set features - in (mainly) excellent restored/improved sound - the musical contributions of swing-band leaders to the US World War 2 effort in...

Jews And Jazz

The alliteration is obviously pleasing because Amazon offers five books with titles which relate to a connection between Jews and jazz. This one must be simpler than any of them because it mainly consists of brief details and photographs of 142 individuals (on 142 glossy pages which are eight inches wide and five inches high). All but four are Jewish and the four who...
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New releases February-March 2026, W-Z

Records offered for review to Jazz Journal in January-February 2026, including Mal Waldron, Emmanuel Wilkins, Buster Williams, Steve Wilson and Alex Wintz // Editor's pick: Buster Williams

New releases February-March 2026, T-V

Records offered for review to Jazz Journal in January-February 2026, including Taupe, Henri Texier, Mark Turner, McCoy Tyner and Various: Cuba Cha Cha Chá // Editor's pick: Taupe

New releases February-March 2026, N-S

Records offered for review to Jazz Journal in January-February 2026, including NYYS Jazz, People In Orbit, Michel Petrucciani, Soft Machine and Louis Stewart // Editor's pick: People In Orbit

Jacky Terrasson accused of rape

The Franco-American pianist Jacky Terrasson, well known for his work on the Blue Note label, has been accused of raping a six-year-old girl, according to a report published 18 March by France Culture. The alleged offence is said to...

Laura Macdonald appointed head of jazz at Scottish conservatoire

The saxophonist Laura Macdonald, the former wife of saxophonist Tommy Smith, has been appointed Head of Jazz at the Royal Conservatoire of Scotland. Smith, who established the Glasgow college's jazz course in 2009, had held the post until June...
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Trinity Laban settles with Martin Speake over his remarks on jazz and skin colour

Following a two-year dispute the Trinity Laban conservatoire in South London has reached a private settlement with Martin Speake, a former teacher of saxophone at the college who attacked critical race theory and the proposition that the UK jazz...

Unapologetic Expression: The Inside Story Of The UK Jazz Explosion

For a geezer of my vintage the great and most fruitful UK jazz explosion occurred in the late 60s-early 70s, fuelled by South African expats and musicians from the West Country and then, somewhat in contrast, there was the...

Satoko Fujii and Natsuki Tamura: making music never heard before

Stan Getz, Miles Davis, Red Rodney, Corky Corcoran, to pick a few names at random, all began playing professionally in their teens. I remember seeing Betty Carter live back...

Gianluca Pellerito, drum wunderkind

I first encountered drummer Gianluca Pellerito through social media and quickly became one of his 330k followers on Instagram, but it was seeing this...

The dance is ended (but the memory lingers on)

Seeing the Count Basie Orchestra live was one of the great thrills early in my lifelong obsession with jazz. I did not realise it...

Count Me In… 02/26

Oh for a schism, an entertaining rupture in the ranks so that one can watch militants spit venom across a void. Jazz had a famous one at the turn of the 1950s – "la mère de tous les schismes",...

Obituary: Ralph Towner

With the death of Ralph Towner (1940 - 2026) contemporary jazz lost one of its most prolific and distinctive voices. How many musicians can you think of whose work covers the range that Towner explored in the now rippling,...
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JJ 02/96: Tribal Tech – Reality Check

Thirty years ago Mark Gilbert welcomed TT's latest, not least for its reminders of the melodic clarity of the mid-80s Spears and for the incendiary roadhouse R&B of Nite Club

JJ 02/96: Jaco – The Extraordinary And Tragic Life Of Jaco Pastorius

Thirty years ago Mark Gilbert read a book that was a corrective to the sage view of the 80s and 90s that jazz had lost its characters long ago

JJ 02/96: Charlie Hunter Trio – Bing, Bing, Bing!

Thirty years ago Mark Gilbert heard John Scofield in Hunter's Blue Note debut but also individuality in his orchestral eight-string technique and his jazzing of Nirvana