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113 articles

John Adcock

I've been lucky enough to write reviews for Jazz Journal since 2009. My main interests lie at the more popular end of the jazz spectrum - pop, soul, blues and funk. European jazz has, to me, never sounded more vibrant and alive than it does at the moment, which is why I enjoy listening to and reviewing it so much. That said, my biggest musical regret is never having seen Art Pepper in concert - he simply was the greatest.

Nils Kugelmann: Stormy Beauty

Without using any words, young German bassist leads piano and drums in explorations of unexpected love, the power of nature and the like

Marius Neset & Norwegian Radio Orchestra: Summer Dance

Norwegian saxman plays quartet jazz, classical and folk music with Ivo Neame, Peter Eldh, Anton Eger and the national radio orchestra

Brötzmann – Bekkas – Drake: Catching Ghosts

The trio improvises at Jazzfest Berlin on incantations from Gnaoua liturgy, using reeds, guembri (a three-string African bass) and percussion

Iiro Rantala: Veneziana

Orchestral music from the Finnish pianist, tangentially related to jazz, depicts imaginary scenarios featuring famous composers in Venice
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Emile Parisien, Roberto Negro: Les Métanuits

The jazzing of Ligeti by soprano and piano, while momentarily peaceful, is largely abrasive and at times stubbornly inaccessible

Laila Biali: Your Requests

Canadian singer and guests produce bristling modern interpretations of old standards, reframing mood, form, harmony and rhythm

Matthieu Saglio: Voices

Cello-led band with Nils Landgren and others captures in one voice-focused album the range of music typical of the ACT label

Peter Somuah: Letter To The Universe

Ghanaian trumpeter moves the Miles Davis legacy along, mixing Miles' styles with Ashanti 6/8 rhythm patterns, slam poetry and Fra Fra music
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Lars Danielsson: Symphonized

Swedish bassist adds another chapter to the jazz meets classical story by blending his quartet with the Gothenburg Symphony Orchestra

Sissoko, Segal, Parisien, Peirani: Les Égarés

Kora, cello, soprano saxophone and accordion play jazz-tinged world music, creating a cinematic atmosphere

Nguyên Lê Trio: Silk And Sand

French guitarist who found his own, orientalised, voice in jazz fusion offers another rich mix of jazz, world music and hip solo lines

Gilles Peterson, Lionel Loueke: HH Reimagined

DJ Peterson and guitarist Loueke reframe Herbie Hancock tunes, adding club rhythms, loops, crashes, yells, guitars and hypnotic drumming
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