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191 articles

Brian Payne

Brian Payne was born in Manchester and raised in Cheshire. He graduated in English and American Literature at the University of East Anglia and was employed for a while as a technical editor for a publishing company. He then changed direction and after obtaining applied social science qualifications at LSE and Birmingham University he worked in social services and later managed local authority provision in London for 20 years. He was later employed in the Information Commissioner’s Office to investigate and write decisions concerning the withholding of public information. Perhaps the most edifying of these was ordering the release and publication of MPs’ expense claims that had been withheld by the House of Commons. Over the years Brian has written about and photographed live jazz performance in a variety of settings. Some of his work can be seen at brianpaynephotography.com.

Allan Botschinsky Quintet: Live At The Tivoli Gardens 1996

Miles-influenced Danish trumpeter leads a well-paced, virtuosic performance integrating swing, bop and hard bop

Wild Card: Cabin 19 Fever

London-based French guitarist Clément Régert leads his trio and more new guests in a dynamic mix of Afro-Cuban jazz, soul, rock and funk

Antonio Adolfo: Octet And Originals

Venerable Brazilian pianist and composer leads new set based in local music but influenced by soul, bebop and West Coast jazz

Skip & Dan Wilkins Quartet: In The Stars

Pianist Skip Wilkins, resident at the longest-running US jazz club, makes straightahead jazz from lesser known songs by famous composers
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Bill Evans Trio: Portrait In Jazz

The album that announced the pianist's influential democratic trio concept is reissued minus alternate takes and plus most of its sequel

Sonido Solar: Eddie Palmieri Presents

Latin-piano legend Eddie Palmieri guests on a high-voltage Latin jazz set from New Jersey that barely pauses for breath

Cardenas, Allison & Nash: Healing Power – The Music Of Carla Bley

The guitar, reed and bass trio take a look at familiar and lesser-known Bley songs, including Ida Lupino, And Now The Queen and Olhos De Gato

Owen Broder – Hodges: Front And Centre Vol. 1

New York reedman Broder and quintet offer a swinging, lyrical tribute to Rabbit, seasoned with modernist touches
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Ray Charles: The King Of Soul – Classic Hits

Among the classics are What'd I Say and Drown In My Own Tears, with jazz interest from such as Cecil Payne on Hallelujah I Love Her So

The Jazz Professors: Blues And Cubes

Floridian jazz pedagogues tap the parallels between the transformative Picasso and Charlie Parker in set of straightahead and swing

JC Sanford: Imminent Standards Trio, Vol. 2

The trombonist's definition of standard might seem elastic and his chordless trio a little thin, but good musical moments ensue

Eric Ineke: 75 – Swinging, Boppin’ And Burnin’

Tribute to the Netherlands' first-call bop drummer includes Jimmy Raney, Houston Person, Scott Hamilton, Pepper Adams and Maynard Ferguson
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