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.
Dave O’Higgins & Rob Luft: Pluto / Dave & Judith O’Higgins: Omicron
Saxophonist Dave O'Higgins pairs with guitarist Rob Luff and wife Judith in sets contrasting semi-abstraction with 1960s tough-tenor duos
Jonathan Gee: The Lions Revisited
Versatile British pianist, lately enamoured of Monk, focuses on singing, his fine voice thriving at one point over just a bass line
Emmet Cohen: Uptown In Orbit
Young New York pianist essays a wide range of style with trio and horn guests, imbuing the traditional with a modernist flavour
Ahmad Jamal: The Complete 1962 At The Blackhawk / At The Blackhawk
Jamal's 1962 SF date is presented from possibly every angle in reissues of the complete gig on CD and the original LP on 180g orange vinyl
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Qasim Naqvi, Leo Wadada Smith, Andrew Cyrille: Two Centuries
Synthesist leads trumpet and drums in a largely meditative sonic exploration leavened with moments of gnarly, electronic funk
Kansas Smitty’s: We’re Not In Kansas Anymore
While retaining their signature blues feeling, the London combo add the inspirations of modern jazz, hi-life and classic cinema music
Keith Jarrett: Bordeaux Concert
The pianist showed on this 2016 set from what turned out to be his final solo tour that he could still produce new and surprising music
Shorter, Carrington, Genovese, Spalding: Live At The Detroit Jazz Festival
Set from Detroit in 2017 has saxophone, keyboard, bass, drums and voice interacting in the moment on complex and abstract material
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Julia Hülsmann Quartet: The Next Door
German pianist leads a pensive and thoughtful set of originals including a Chopin contrafact plus Prince’s Sometimes It Snows In April
Trevor Watts & Liam Genockey: The Art Is In The Rhythm
Drummer Genockey hadn't improvised before joining saxophonist Watts but he turned out to be a natural as this unreleased 1989 duet shows
Linus Eppinger: Leaning In
Amsterdam-based guitarist is a picture of seemingly effortless pertinence in a set with Jorge Rossy that combines originals and standards
Enrico Rava & Fred Hersch: The Song Is You
In Hersch's ECM debut, the pianist and flugelhorn player explore the standards and two originals as well as making a joint improvisation
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