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246 articles

Nigel Jarrett

Nigel Jarrett is a former newspaperman and a double prizewinner: the Rhys Davies Award for short fiction and, in 2016, the inaugural Templar Shorts award. His first story collection, Funderland, published by Parthian, was praised by the Guardian, the Independent, the Times and many others, and was longlisted for the Edge Hill Prize. His debut poetry collection, Miners At The Quarry Pool, also from Parthian, was described by Agenda poetry magazine as "a virtuoso performance". Jarrett's first novel, Slowly Burning (GG Books) was published in 2016, as was his second story collection, Who Killed Emil Kreisler? (Cultured Llama Publishing). Templar published his three-story pamphlet, A Gloucester Trilogy, in September 2019. In 2022, Saron Publishers brought out his latest work of long fiction, Notes From the Superhorse Stable, and his fourth story collection, Five Go To Switzerland, was published by Cockatrice Books. Gwyriad, his second poetry collection, was published by Cockatrice in March 2024. Based in Monmouthshire, Jarrett also writes for the Wales Arts Review, Arts Scene in Wales, Slightly Foxed, Acumen poetry magazine, and several others. His poetry, fiction, and essays appear widely. For many years he was a daily newspaper music critic, and now freelances in that capacity. When he can find time, he swims.

Chris Mondak: Glass Spheres

What came first: the vision or the title? Nashville bassist Chris Mondak saw individuals inside glass bubbles, hence the cover of his album, which...

Joey Alexander: Origin

Musical child prodigies provoke two reactions: one is to stand back in non-critical amazement, the other is to wait until the prodigious becomes mature...

Renee Rosnes: Kinds Of Love

What joy to encounter a jazz album that strikes such a fine balance between solo and ensemble, echoes now and then with another genre...

Dominik Schürmann Trio & Max Ionata: Moons Ago

Miles Kington said he travelled from Wales to London for jazz, only to discover that jazz had decamped to Wales. He was referring to...
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Marsha Bartenetti: Sings McNealy & Kuhns

It's always interesting to listen to singers reportedly with jazz antecedents if only to estimate what they would sound like at full throttle. Marsha...

New Orleans Streets Re-visited: Bass12

Not all nostalgia-driven jazz in Britain rekindles the New Orleans revival in 1940s America and 1950s Europe. Some of it goes back to the...

John Handy: Recorded Live At The Monterey Jazz Festival

Texan altoist John Handy had already appeared at Monterey in 1964 with the Charles Mingus band before returning a year later with his own...

Ugly Beauty: Jazz In The 21st Century

Phil Freeman in his thorough survey of 21st century jazz (so far) is with fellow writer Stanley Crouch in believing that it's no longer...
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Iain Ballamy helps launch new sax concerto into orbit

Iain Ballamy might be the first to admit that you don't have to be a jazz musician to play the solo part in a...

Emler, Tchamitchian, Echampard: The Useful Report

French pianist and composer Andy Emler is a musician whose minimalism emerges through a door that remains part opened on a roomful of pianistic...

Webb City at Black Mountain Jazz, Abergavenny

As an admirer of Django Reinhardt, guitarist Dave Archer will understand his forebear's argument that when soloing in the Quintette du Hot Club de...

Wendy Kirkland Sextet: Latin Lowdown Live

Wendy Kirkland's third album confirms necessity as the proverbial mother of invention and the solitude of lockdown as its chivvying partner. Pianist-singer Kirkland and...
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