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143 articles

Barry Witherden

I first started to enjoy jazz when I was about nine through watching films like The Glenn Miller Story, The Benny Goodman Story and anything with Gene Krupa on drums. In my early teens I began to delve into modern jazz: first Stan Getz, the MJQ and Dave Brubeck, then the likes of Charlie Parker, Miles Davis, John Coltrane, Charles Mingus, Sonny Rollins, Jackie McLean and Ornette Coleman.When I was 15, disgusted by the general drubbing that my hero, Brubeck, got (from the critics, not the public) I submitted an article defending him to Jazz Journal. The legendary Sinclair Traill, founder and then-editor of JJ, disagreed with everything I said but enjoyed the article and published it. Soon after, I had pieces published in Jazz Monthly, International Times, Jazz and Blues and several fanzines. In my late teens I was, for a while, Secretary of the British Institute of Jazz Studies and contributing editor of its magazine. Then I dropped out of the fanzine scene, but at a Christmas party in 1985 I met the late, much-missed Richard Cook. He had just been appointed editor of The Wire and, remembering some of my earlier writings, invited me to contribute to the magazine, which I did for about a quarter of a century. I subsequently contributed to Jazz Review, Jazz on CD, Jazzwise, Gramophone, Music Week, Classic CD, Avant, The Rough Guide to Classical Music and The Guinness Who's Who of Jazz (for which I wrote 45,000 words without the aid of free samples from the sponsor) and currently contribute to BBC Music, allaboutjazz.com and, of course, Jazz Journal. I currently present a jazz show and a “left-field” show (which often features the more outré reaches of jazz and improv) on my local radio station, 10Radio (105.3 FM and www.10radio.org).

Charlie Pyne Quartet: Nature Is A Mother

Guildhall graduate and bassist plays original music ranging from bright and pretty to spiky and disquieting with saxophone, piano and drums

John Coltrane with Eric Dolphy: Evenings At The Village Gate

Recovered from 1961 test recordings, with sometimes unbalanced sound and incomplete songs, this unissued session might be one for completists

Jazz Side Of The Moon: The Music Of Pink Floyd

The 2007 set that laid jazz from Seamus Blake, Sam Yahel, Mike Moreno and Ari Hoenig over classic prog-rock tunes gets a vinyl reissue

Kris Davis’ Diatom Ribbons: Live At The Village Vanguard

Pianist leads somewhat experimental music that can be unfocused and overladen with effects but includes some powerful boppish solos
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Steve Tromans & Mark Sanders: Mountains, Meditations, Murmurations

Drummer Sanders and pianist Troman demonstrate empathy and sensitivity in improvisations that range from the turbulent and reflective

LJF 2023: Ron Carter Foursight Quartet

The 86-year-old most-recorded jazz bassist played his classics with Jimmy Greene on tenor, Renee Rosnes on piano and Payton Crossley on drums

LJF 2023: Charles Lloyd’s Ocean Trio / Mette Henriette Trio

At the age of 85 Lloyd once again lived down charges of going commercial while the young Henriette went straight to chamber jazz

Bill Evans/Shelly Manne with Monty Budwig: Empathy

The pianist isn't at his peak in this music recorded after the demise of the celebrated Motion-LaFaro trio but never fails to hold interest
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Satoko Fujii: Torrent

Despite the title, and some appropriately dense and dynamic pieces, Japanese improvising pianist Fujii is often delicate and meditative

The Anti Rubber Brain Factory: Musiques De Rêves Et De D​é​mences

Paris-based collective combines trancy moods, modal vamps, free improvisation, ethnic percussion and jazz soloing

The Griots Speak: Destiny Calling

Brooklyn collaboration brings together straightahead and free players on Western, African and oriental instruments

Uri Caine: Agent Orange

Expressing himself as much in a classical as jazz vein, Caine draws a parallel between an infamous herbicide and an orange-tinted politician
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