226 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.
Noah Haidu: Standards
Paying undemonstrative but solid tribute to Keith Jarrett's standards trio, pianist Haidu shows the songbook repertoire is in safe hands
Mark Lewandowski: A Bouquet (For Lady Day)
Bassist Lewandowski leads a trio with Liam Noble and Heidi Vogel that honours Billie Holiday but with few vocals and no direct imitation
A Strange Celestial Road: My Time In The Sun Ra Arkestra
Trumpeter Ahmed Abdullah was devoted to Sun Ra's visionary band but found it financially precarious, erratically led and inequitable
Pharoah Sanders Quartet: Live At Fabrik
1980 set from Germany has the saxophonist in his post-radical stage, playing crowd-pleasing modal grooves, still with plenty of jazz soloing
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Brandee Younger: Brand New Life
Harpist inspired by hip-hop sampling of Dorothy Ashby plays solo, in small groups, over hip-hop and on sometimes syrupy soft-soul backgrounds
David Haney: European Trio/Solo/Live At Schlot
Three contrasting sets from classical composer turned improvising pianist underline the hazard inherent in non-referential playing
Ahmad Jamal: Four Classic Albums
Double-CD set collects four Jamal LPs including At The Pershing, which sold 47,000 at a time when 15,000 was big news for a jazz album
Bill Evans, Scott LaFaro, Paul Motian: Complete Trio Recordings
In contrast to the express radicalism of Ornette Coleman et alia, the quiet, in some ways traditional Evans trio created its own revolution
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Neil Ardley: Kaleidoscopes And Rainbows
Biography of the British composer traces his contribution to the 1960s-70s fusion of jazz, rock and classical music
London Brew: London Brew
Inspired by Miles Davis's Bitches Brew, London group play appropriately menacing music but with such as tuba and saxophone in place of trumpet
Tristan Banks: View From Above
The drummer boss of the Verdict jazz club in Brighton debuts his Brazil-inclined writing in a set featuring woodwind man Paul Booth
Wadada Leo Smith & Orange Wave Electric: Fire Illuminations
The octogenarian trumpeter echoes Miles Davis, with references to Davis's electric period and to drummer Tony Williams
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