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Christian McBride, Benny Green & Gregory Hutchinson at Ronnie Scott’s

If you are looking for musicians to celebrate a bassist as unmistakable and influential as Ray Brown this trio surely sits near the very top of the list. And here they were, presenting a show titled "Remembering Ray Brown". Benny Green and Gregory Hutchinson both played in Ray's 90s trio and as Green recalled, Ray Brown once said “If had a son who played bass I’d want him to play like Christian McBride.” Fittingly, the show started with the bass-led...

Reviewed: Pharoah Sanders | Natsuki Tamura & Satoko Fujii | Kaze & Kochi Makigami

Pharoah Sanders: Love Is Here Two years after his last Impulse! recording, and without a major label behind him, or indeed much new material, saxophonist...

New releases October-November 2025, A-B

Records offered for review to Jazz Journal in September-October 2025, including Pete Allen, Baby Vortex, Usein Bekirov, Billy Hart and Greg Burrows // Editor's pick: Baby Vortex

Electric Blues! T-Bone Walker & The Guitar That Started It All

What’s not to like about T-Bone Walker? His suave lines act as balm for the soul, his roasted-chestnut voice makes your heart melt. He...

Melbourne International Jazz Festival 2025

The Melbourne International Jazz Festival (MIJF), now in its 28th year, continues to stake its claim as the première jazz festival in Australia and...

Unapologetic Expression: The Inside Story Of The UK Jazz Explosion

For a geezer of my vintage the great and most fruitful UK jazz explosion occurred in the late 60s-early 70s, fuelled by South African...

Gwilym Simcock & Tommy Smith at Watermill Jazz Club, Dorking

For their Watermill gig, Tommy Smith and Gwilym Simcock mainly featured their own compositions. Tommy played with expressive power, occasionally using high-register harmonics and...

News in brief...

Nigel Price is holding a raffle of some high-quality guitar amps, including a DV Little Jazz, to help fund his mammoth tour. Tickets are just £10 and include a free digital copy of Chops, Live!, his recent album covering Joe Pass and Niels-Henning Ørsted Pedersen.

Drummer Jack DeJohnette died in New York from congestive heart failure, 26 October 2025, aged 83. The Independent reports he posted a photo of himself, apparently in good form, just two days before. A 2006 interview is republished here.

Scott LaFaro‘s early 1800s Prescott bass, used on early 1960s Bill Evans sessions, will be played at New Jersey Performing Arts Center in November by Ben Williams (9), Max Gerl (13), Christian McBride (22) and Gregory Jones (23). See its story here.

The ingenious and creative bassist Anthony Jackson, a pioneer of the six-string instrument – died 19 October, aged 73, reports Music Radar. Among his major associations were Steve Khan, Steely Dan and Michel Camilo.

Köln 75 is a new film dramatising the creation of Keith Jarrett’s famed Köln Concert (ECM). A YouTube trailer gives some insight into its style and content.

Reviewed: Wadada Leo Smith & Sylvie Courvoisier | Brigitte Beraha | Ruby Rushton

Wadada Leo Smith & Sylvie Courvoisier: Angel Falls (Intakt CD 444)  Trumpeter Wadada Leo Smith and pianist Sylvie Courvoisier first played together at a concert...

Reviewed: John Taylor | Blink | Nikola Bankov

John Taylor: Tramonto (ECM 2544) Rosslyn (ECM, 2003), the precursor to this album by virtuoso pianist John Taylor, featured the same line up with bassist...

Reviewed: Saihs | Steve Rosenbloom Big Band | Emilia Vancini/Guillermo Martin-Viana

Saihs: Distopia (GleAM Records AM7039) Saihs is a sextet formed in Florence two years ago who, in 2025, won the Conad Jazz Contest, where they...

Reviewed: Rick Keller | Anna Einarsson | Charlie Hunter & Ella Feingold

Rick Keller: Heroes (Vegas Records VR 1032) Whether or not inspiration and influence are one and the same, American saxophonist and composer Rick Keller doesn't...

Reviewed: David Bailis | Patricia Brennan | Steve Tintweiss & The Purple Why

David Bailis: Running Through My Mind (Triple 1 Music) Bailis is one of those guitarists who at one and the same time display a relatively...

Reviewed: Johnathan Blake | Trio of Bloom | Bruce Gertz Quintet

Johnathan Blake: My Life Matters (Blue Note Records 7585478) In 2022 there was a Drum Candy podcast interview in which Philadelphia-born drummer Johnathan Blake was...

Jack DeJohnette and drumming: ‘That’s what I came here to do’

Jack DeJohnette was born in Chicago in 1942 and studied classical piano from the age of four. He took up drums in high school...

Reviewed: The Hot Club of Jupiter | Jon Batiste | Ivo Perelman & Matthew Shipp String Trio

The Hot Club of Jupiter: Copacallisto An accomplished and popular band on the swing/dance circuit, violinist Kit Massey’s Hot Club of Jupiter launched this new...

Reviewed: Shri | Wolfgang Muthspiel, Scott Colley, Brian Blade

Shri: Singing Bass (DTBASS008) Released on all digital platforms via Drum The Bass, Singing Bass is a patient yet probing, naked yet multi-dimensional solo recording...

Pete Allen launches his new album at Pizza Express

The Pete Allen Jazz Band launch their new album with two gigs in November: the first is on Sunday 2nd November at The Bowlers Arms,...

Marius Neset’s defiant maximalism meets the London Sinfonietta

Saxophonist Marius Neset, known for bucking the minimalist Scandinavian stereotype by playing high-octane heads and lines more reminiscent of Michael Brecker than Jan Garbarek,...
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Jack DeJohnette and drumming: ‘That’s what I came here to do’

Jack DeJohnette was born in Chicago in 1942 and studied classical piano from the age...
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JJ 10/75: Bill Connors – Theme To The Gaurdian

Fifty years ago Steve Voce declared himself an ECM fan, an allegiance reinforced by his encounter with Bill Connors, 'a beautiful guitarist and composer of themes of great melody and grace'

JJ 10/95: Jason Rebello/Joy Rose – Last Dance

Thirty years ago Simon Adams reviewed Rebello's last session before the pianist went into a Buddhist retreat and looked forward to his return

JJ 10/75: The Roscoe Mitchell Solo Saxophone Concerts

Fifty years ago Chris Sheridan found the Chicago saxophonist's explorations of free improvisation, pitch, timbre and silence to be partially successful

JJ 10/85: Jazz Styles: History And Analysis – Second Edition

Forty years ago Mark Gilbert welcomed Gridley's encyclopedic codification of jazz history - a task that in the fragmented and retrospective post-90 scene might be impossible

Christian McBride, Benny Green & Gregory Hutchinson at Ronnie Scott’s

If you are looking for musicians to celebrate a bassist as unmistakable and influential as Ray Brown this trio surely sits near the very top of the list. And here they were, presenting a show titled "Remembering Ray Brown". Benny Green and Gregory Hutchinson both played in Ray's 90s trio and as Green recalled, Ray Brown once said “If had a son who played...

Reviewed: Pharoah Sanders | Natsuki Tamura & Satoko Fujii | Kaze & Kochi Makigami

Pharoah Sanders: Love Is Here Two years after his last Impulse! recording, and without a major label behind him, or indeed much new material, saxophonist Pharoah Sanders played a live set at the Maison de la Radio’s Studio 104 in Paris on 17 November 1975. His bassist was Calvin Hill, who alone of the backing trio had, after a stint with McCoy Tyner, once previously...
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New releases October-November 2025, A-B

Records offered for review to Jazz Journal in September-October 2025, including Pete Allen, Baby Vortex, Usein Bekirov, Billy Hart and Greg Burrows // Editor's pick: Baby Vortex

New releases August-September 2025, S-Z

Records offered for review to Jazz Journal in July-August 2025, including Pharoah Sanders, Horace Silver, John Taylor, Mark Turner and McCoy Tyner // Editor's pick: Horace Silver

New releases August-September 2025, N-R

Records offered for review to Jazz Journal in July-August 2025, including Oscar Peterson, Pat Petrillo, John Pizzarelli, Max Roach and Ruby Rushton // Editor's pick: Pat Petrillo

Pete Allen launches his new album at Pizza Express

The Pete Allen Jazz Band launch their new album with two gigs in November: the first is on Sunday 2nd November at The Bowlers Arms, (Presidents Suite), Falkland Cricket Club, Wash Common, Newbury, RG14 6TW, 2:30 to 5pm. Admission £20...

Marius Neset’s defiant maximalism meets the London Sinfonietta

Saxophonist Marius Neset, known for bucking the minimalist Scandinavian stereotype by playing high-octane heads and lines more reminiscent of Michael Brecker than Jan Garbarek, is to play a concert with the London Sinfonietta at Queen Elizabeth Hall on 20...
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Unapologetic Expression: The Inside Story Of The UK Jazz Explosion

For a geezer of my vintage the great and most fruitful UK jazz explosion occurred in the late 60s-early 70s, fuelled by South African expats and musicians from the West Country and then, somewhat in contrast, there was the...

German Jazz Prize performances reflect the fraught political scene

Musicians from across Germany and around the globe flocked to Cologne for the German Jazz Prize on 13 June - and that’s no surprise. All 76 nominees got €4,000, while winners in 22 categories departed E-Werk’s brick-and-steel interior with...

The dance is ended (but the memory lingers on)

Seeing the Count Basie Orchestra live was one of the great thrills early in my lifelong obsession with jazz. I did not realise it at the time, but the...

Tracking the mystery woman of jazz: Mama X Plus / 2

Above all else, music and musicians remained constant anchors throughout Gale Madden's life. She had no end to the stories of musicians with whom...

Tracking the mystery woman of jazz: Mama X Plus / 1

I first met Gale Madden at a record shop in Bellingham, Washington in the late 80s. As we stood digging a CD of vintage...

Jack DeJohnette and drumming: ‘That’s what I came here to do’

Jack DeJohnette was born in Chicago in 1942 and studied classical piano from the age of four. He took up drums in high school and thanks his uncle, the DJ Roy I. Wood Snr, for keeping him abreast of...

Count Me In… 10/25

Unlike rock and pop music - I think those two labels cover the gamut - jazz is not everywhere. It is so not-everywhere that you often have to seek it out or hope that, in a sense, it will...
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JJ 10/95: Keith Jarrett Trio – Standards In Norway

Thirty years ago, faced with a particularly constrained repertoire session, Michael Tucker asked 'Just how many Keith Jarrett Standards releases does your collection need?'

JJ 10/95: Jason Rebello/Joy Rose – Last Dance

Thirty years ago Simon Adams reviewed Rebello's last session before the pianist went into a Buddhist retreat and looked forward to his return

JJ 10/85: National Youth Jazz Orchestra – Full Score

Forty years ago Stan Woolley said that NYJO, against opposition, didn't need to play standards, so strong was its original writing and its improvisation