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220 articles

Simon Adams

Simon Adams was born in Bristol and brought up in the home counties. He studied history and politics at London and Bristol universities before starting work in publishing, first as an advertising copywriter and designer and then as an editor. After some years hating middle management, he went freelance, writing more than 80 non-fiction books for children on subjects as varied as the Titanic, World War I, and Afghanistan. His first jazz review was published in Jazz Journal in November 1982 and he continued to contribute to the magazine regularly, as well as writing for Richard’s Cook’s Jazz Review. A consultant and contributor to both editions of The New Grove Dictionary of Jazz, he also wrote a best-selling guide to jazz.

Wadada Leo Smith & Amina Claudine Myers: Central Park’s Mosaics Of Reservoir, Lake, Paths And Gardens

Two veteran members of the AACM record together for the first time, inspired by Manhattan's famous green space

In With The In Crowd: Popular Jazz In 1960s Black America

Mike Smith says soul-jazz - popular, enjoyable and typified by such as Ramsey Lewis and Eddie Harris - is as valid as the serious variety

Art Pepper: Art Pepper + Eleven

Reissue, with bonus tracks, of the 1959 little big-band album where Pepper profits from well-judged, light-touch arrangements by Marty Paich

Sean Khan: Presents The Modern Jazz And Folk Ensemble

Lightly funky modal-jazz readings of folk tunes by John Martyn, Nick Drake, Pentangle and others sometimes lose sight of their inspirations
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Nat King Cole: To Whom It May Concern + Every Time I Feel The Spirit

Cole is in his element on the love collection To Whom It May Concern but not in the bonus gospel set where he seems not to feel the spirit

Horace Parlan: Four Classic Albums

Double CD collection shows that although classified as a hard-bop pianist, Parlan had a subtler, more economic dimension

Nils Økland: Gjenskinn

Norwegian fiddler Økland's folk-inspired music might not be jazz, but it seems to have the same appeal as rural blues

Ian Shaw & Toni Kofi: An Adventurous Dream

The singer and saxophonist and joined by Barry Green and Dave Green at the Pizza Express to play music by Strayhorn and Ellington
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Fred Hersch: Silent, Listening

Inspired by a duo session with Enrico Rava in Lugano the pianist wanted to make his ECM solo debut in the same hall, on the same piano

Fred Hersch: ETC & ETC Plus One

The pianist plays standards and originals on sets from 1998 and 1991 with Steve LaSpina, Jeff Hirshfield and Jerry Bergonzi

Dorian Dumont: To The APhEX: Ode Sessions #2

French classical pianist with a jazz sensibility transforms the electronic dance tunes of Aphex Twin into convincing piano music

Tom Ollendorff: Solo Volume I

Young guitarist plays mostly standards, mixing amplified and unamplified sound and exploiting the reverberant acoustic of a London church
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