Reviewed: Neil Cowley Trio | Adam Rose + Mountain Jazz Quartet

Neil Cowley Trio: Built On Bach It is a truth universally acknowledged (well, quite widely recognised anyway) that there are connections (well, similarities anyway) between jazz and the music of Johann Sebastian Bach. JSB was famed as a formidable improviser and was no stranger to cutting contests. Famously, when he travelled to Dresden to take part in a musical duel with the celebrated harpsichordist Louis Marchand, he arrived to find that Marchand had chickened out and fled by the first stagecoach out of town. The French...

Remembering Red Kelly

After playing with such as Woody Herman, Chubby Jackson, Charlie Barnet, Red Norvo, Stan Kenton and Harry James in the jazz heyday, bassist Red Kelly left the road to open clubs in Washington state, where it became apparent that his wit was as sharp as his jazz prowess

Reviewed: Jean-Baptiste Rousseaux | Eivind Aarset 4tet | Judith Berkson

Jean-Baptiste Rousseaux: Kaveriot Korridor Thanks to the kindness of JJ colleague John White, I was recently made aware of a new development in the affairs...

Reviewed: Hytta Trio | Myra Melford and Satoko Fujii | Tomasz Stańko

Hytta Trio: Vindespel Vindespel – Twining Tunes – is the debut of The Hytta Trio. The trio were formed in 2018, and explore Norwegian traditional...

Judith Owen & The Callers at Bush Hall, London

This is the second Judith Owen live performance I’ve covered for Jazz Journal in slightly less than four months and I was, not unnaturally,...

News in brief...

Saxophonist Sonny Rollins, noted for his robust hard-bop style, died 25 May at his Woodstock, NY home, aged 95. His website noted his 2009 comment that “I think when the creative person ends, he continues in the next existence. I’m a person who believes this life isn’t the be-all and end-all of everything. A spiritual person doesn’t feel like that.”

Among the big names coming up at Ronnie Scott’s, London, May-July are Dave Weckl/Tom Kennedy Project (27), Chris Potter Trio (28), Billy Cobham with the Guy Barker Big Band (8-11 June), Monty Alexander (22-24), Steve Smith & Vital Information (26-27), Gonzalo Rubalcaba, Chris Potter, Larry Grenadier and Eric Harland (8 July), Eliane Elias (15-16), Kenny Garrett (17-19) and Carmen Lundy (24-25).

Attila Kleb of JazzFest Budapest says he’s been fighting for a real jazz festival, undiluted with “performances by pop and rock stars”. This year, 27 June – 2 July, the city invites such as Pat Metheny, Marcus Miller, Charles Lloyd, Mike Stern and Ravi Coltrane.

Among the soul and pop that dominates the 2026 Love Supreme Jazz Festival in Sussex, 3-5 July (e.g., Temptations, Four Tops and Sister Sledge) is some jazz-related music from such as Bill Frisell, Joe Lovano, Joe Webb and Emma Rawicz.

The fourth MoonJune festival, devised by the indefatigable Leonardo Pavkovic and describing itself as a festival of “eclectic music”, takes place in Teramo, Italy, 22-25 July 2026 and includes Soft Machine w. Gary Husband, Gong w. Steve Hillage and Diego Amador’s Flamenco Free Jazz.

Reviewed: Louis Stewart | Jon Irabagon | Olivier Le Goas & Ensemble Pulse

Louis Stewart: Joyce Notes It's been said a few times now – Ireland's greatest writer meets her greatest jazz musician. Guitarist Louis Stewart's suite, based...

Reviewed: Five-Way Split | Grammofon

Five-Way Split: Modus Operandi According to trumpeter & flugelhornist Quentin Collins, this contemporary/hard bop quintet has no leader - hence the sharing of responsibilty reflected...

Reviewed: Gordon Grdina & Russ Lossing | Dave Harrington, Max Jaffe & Patrick Shiroishi | Christoph Irniger & Marc Perrenoud

Gordon Grdina & Russ Lossing: Turnpike There are many strands to the music of Vancouver-based guitarist and oud player Gordon Grdina, and while some of...

Reviewed: Roy Hargrove | Web Web | Chet Baker | In memoriam: Maja Lemmen

Roy Hargrove: Bern Any posthumous release of the exquisite Roy Hargrove (1969-2018) meets high expectations. Certainly, Bern leaves one readily fulfilled. In 2000, the figurehead...

Reviewed: Leïla Olivesi | Chet Baker | Airelle Besson & Lionel Suarez

Leïla Olivesi: African Rhapsody Paris-based Leila Olivesi is an award-winning composer and pianist. She has won Best Musician of the Year awards and a Django...
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JJ 05/96: Shooting From The Hip

Thirty years ago, while not always agreeing with John Fordham's taste, Richard Palmer recommended a collection of what he wrote about jazz for the Guardian and others between 1970 and 1996
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JJ 05/76: Ralph Towner – Solstice

Fifty years ago, Burnett James found that the sitar gimmickry of the 60s had matured into a proper Indian - or at least Eastern - influence in jazz

JJ 05/66: Woody Guthrie – Bed On The Floor

David Illingworth’s 1966 review of Woody Guthrie serves as reminder of how far back the conflation of jazz with pop, protest and folk music goes, even in JJ. The same issue contained reviews of Ewan MacColl and Pete Seeger

JJ 05/96: Shooting From The Hip

Thirty years ago, while not always agreeing with John Fordham's taste, Richard Palmer recommended a collection of what he wrote about jazz for the Guardian and others between 1970 and 1996

JJ 05/86: The Guest Stars – Out At Night

Forty years ago, Simon Adams welcomed the jazz, funk, Latin and African mix of British all-female group The Guest Stars' second album while looking forward to more risk-taking on their next

Reviewed: Neil Cowley Trio | Adam Rose + Mountain Jazz Quartet

Neil Cowley Trio: Built On Bach It is a truth universally acknowledged (well, quite widely recognised anyway) that there are connections (well, similarities anyway) between jazz and the music of Johann Sebastian Bach. JSB was famed as a formidable improviser and was no stranger to cutting contests. Famously, when he travelled to Dresden to take part in a musical duel with the celebrated harpsichordist Louis Marchand, he arrived to find...

Reviewed: Jean-Baptiste Rousseaux | Eivind Aarset 4tet | Judith Berkson

Jean-Baptiste Rousseaux: Kaveriot Korridor Thanks to the kindness of JJ colleague John White, I was recently made aware of a new development in the affairs of Angelo Mastronardi's excellent GleAM label from Italy. The 2025 double-CD release More Than You Know, an extensive 1981 concert session in Genoa by tenor master Dexter Gordon, in the company of Kirk Lightsey (p), David Eubanks (b) and Eddie...
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New releases April-May 2026, S-Y

Sánchez, Christopher: Latin Jazz Meets Opera They say : Latin Jazz Meets Opera is a deeply personal album. It tells the story of Christopher Sánchez’s life through...

New releases April-May 2026, P-R

Records offered for review to Jazz Journal in March-April 2026, including John Pachnos, Peter Furlan, Phoenix Trio, Raimonds Pauls and Ron Reider // Editor's pick: Peter Furlan

New releases April-May 2026, M-O

Records offered for review to Jazz Journal in March-April 2026, including Doug MacDonald, Albert Marquès & Rachel Therrien, Wes Montgomery, Novos Londrinos and Audrey Ochoa // Editor's pick: Audrey Ochoa

Jazz, blues and spiritual Ealing

Ealing's Walpole Park is the scene for a number of summer festivals, including those dedicated to jazz, blues and comedy. In fact, Ealing claims to be the birthplace of British blues, its connections with the British blues boom including...

Swanage Jazz Festival presents ‘pure jazz’ in over 30 concerts

Visitors to this year's Swanage jazz festival, 10-12 July, can expect to see what the festival calls (and what appears from the names clearly to be) the "purest" jazz festival lineup on the south coast (or, one might add,...
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Trinity Laban settles with Martin Speake over his remarks on jazz and skin colour

Following a two-year dispute the Trinity Laban conservatoire in South London has reached a private settlement with Martin Speake, a former teacher of saxophone at the college who attacked critical race theory and the proposition that the UK jazz...

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...

Remembering Red Kelly

After playing with such as Woody Herman, Chubby Jackson, Charlie Barnet, Red Norvo, Stan Kenton and Harry James in the jazz heyday, bassist Red Kelly left the road to open clubs in Washington state, where it became apparent that his wit was as sharp as his jazz prowess

Judith Owen: ‘I dream of being unladylike’

We might assume from past photoshoots that Judith Owen, Wales-rooted and now resident in - where else? - New Orleans, is a raunchy bar-room blues belter but her new album, Suit Yourself, shows her aptitude for more subtle shades

Satoko Fujii and Natsuki Tamura: making music never heard before

Stan Getz, Miles Davis, Red Rodney, Corky Corcoran, to pick a few names at random, all began playing professionally in their teens. I remember...

Count Me In… 02/26

Oh for a schism, an entertaining rupture in the ranks so that one can watch militants spit venom across a void. Jazz had a famous one at the turn of the 1950s – "la mère de tous les schismes",...

Obituary: Ralph Towner

With the death of Ralph Towner (1940 - 2026) contemporary jazz lost one of its most prolific and distinctive voices. How many musicians can you think of whose work covers the range that Towner explored in the now rippling,...
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JJ 05/96: Shooting From The Hip

Thirty years ago, while not always agreeing with John Fordham's taste, Richard Palmer recommended a collection of what he wrote about jazz for the Guardian and others between 1970 and 1996

JJ 05/96: British Saxophone Quartet – Early October

American role models notwithstanding, 30 years ago Barry McRae heard the BSQ of Elton Dean, Paul Dunmall, Simon Picard and George Haslam go their own way

JJ 05/86: Allan Holdsworth – Metal Fatigue

Forty years ago, Mark Gilbert relished the landmark solo on Devil Take The Hindmost and the cut-glass heavy metal riffs but hoped too that Holdsworth might one day play with Corea, DeJohnette and Holland