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What's Inside

Issue #111 Gwilym Simcock

Sample Features In This Month's Issue
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Gwilym SimcockGwilym Simcock - Keys To The City - The pianist emerged fully formed after a dazzling spell at music college with a firm classical and jazz grounding and then quickly found his feet winning prizes, playing with Kenny Wheeler and Dave Holland and quickly making a reputation for himself as an extraordinary new talent, making him the most talked about pianist in the UK since the early days of Django Bates. Stuart Nicholson meets him in the recording studio as he prepares to move his career one step further on with the making of his first album.

John EtheridgeJohn Etheridge - Changing Man - One of the most respected musicians of his generation John Etheridge has never been one to restrict himself to one musical context. His career has seen him in a multitude of musical situations from playing with Soft Machine to French violin legend Stéphane Grappelli to his Zappa project the Zappatistas and with classical guitarist John Williams. As the latest release by the Soft Machine Legacy band is released, Duncan Heining looks back with John on some career highs and one or two lows.

Bobby HurtchersonBobby Hutcherson - The Right Vibe - Bobby Hutcherson stands tall in the pantheon of the vibraphone in jazz, his name is up there will all the greats stretching back to Lionel Hampton and Milt Jackson and inspiring later generations of players such as Orphy Robinson and Stefon Harris. In a rare interview, Hutcherson talks to Keith Shadwick about his heyday with the Blue Note label, the great friendships he built up with Andrew Hill and Eric Dolphy and the way his music has developed over a long career in jazz

Reviews - Jazz and Beyond
From the UK's biggest review section
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June CD Sample Reviews

Bobby Hutcherson - For Sentimental Reasons  ****
Julien Lourau - Vs Rumbabierta ****
Bobby Hutcherson - For Sentimental Reasons   ****

Barnaby DickersonThe Player
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Versatile and in-demand trombonist Barnaby Dickerson to David Gallant about how he got started and his instruments of choice.


Jazz Instrument Update
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David Gallant reports on the latest instrument developments and launches

Jazz On Film
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BorderlineBorderline - Silent taboos:  Courtney Pine provides the score for a newly revived version of the silent movie Borderline starring Paul Robeson and directed by Kenneth MacPherson. Selwyn Harris is impressed...read more

Charts

Charting the Jazz message
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Jazzwise July 2007 Chart

Bitches Brew

"The column they're queuing to be in..."
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Latest Brew

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Issue #111 Gwilym Simcock
 Back Issues
Back Issues

Issue #119 Jack DeJohnette

Issue #119 Jack DeJohnetteSample Features From This Month's Issue
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Jack DeJohnette Jack DeJohnette - Rhythm Symbol Master drummer Jack DeJohnette is part of a continuum in jazz that stretches back to the 1960s when the Chicagoan was a member of Charles Lloyd’s seminal quartet and when he made his debut as a leader. The line continued the next decade via Miles Davis and the groundbreaking album Bitches Brew, and then into the 80s and on with his own influential group Special Edition. With the foundation of the Keith Jarrett Standards Trio, which recently celebrated its 25th anniversary, a new chapter in both DeJohnette and Jarrett’s career began, the birth of a group that would revitalise the trio format and then influence a myriad of jazz trios keen to break the mould just as DeJohnette and Jarrett had done themselves.  Read more...

Tobin and Robson Christine Tobin and Phil Robson - Coming of Age Daring to be different, singer Christine Tobin is set to delve still deeper into the consciousness of her fans and newcomers alike if the arrival of her brand new album Secret Life of a Girl is anything to go by. An emotional and personal stirring, one step beyond her previous album, the dark Romance and Revolution, Tobin on Secret Life inhabits the world of the young characters in the songs. The album is released at a time when her partner and regular musical colleague, guitarist Phil Robson, releases Six Strings and The Beat, a Bartók-infused strings album flavoured by post-modern jazz and African music alike. Stuart Nicholson talks to the pair about the story behind their albums.  Read more...

Issue #118 Lizz Wright

Issue #118 Lizz WrightSample Features From This Month's Issue
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Lizz Wright Lizz Wright - Garden Of Earthly Delights - When Lizz Wright debuted with Salt five years ago it was clear even then that the jazz world had found a new unique talent even if the album was ostensibly a strongly gospel-rooted affair. By the time of her second album Dreaming Wide Awake, when she was on the cover of Jazzwise for the first time, Nearly three years on, her third album The Orchard finds Wright working again with the celebrated producer Craig Street, Andy Robson speaks to Wright about the album in a revealing and frank interview. Read more...

Bourne, Davis, Kane Matthew Bourne - Fun Boy Free - Pianist Matthew Bourne last year released a remarkable live album recorded in the Norwegian city of Molde. It provided a fascinating glimpse into the world view of the Leeds improv and jazz scene kingpin. The Molde album was the latest milestone in a career trajectory that saw an early peak five years ago with the prodigious flow of his debut record The Electric Dr M for the Sound label. It’s year zero, however, for Bourne as he now unveils the debut of his trio Bourne/Davis/Kane. Daniel Spicer talks to the band on the eve of the release of its debut album Read more...

Issue #117 The Neil Cowley Trio

Issue #117 The Neil Cowley TrioSample Features From This Month's Issue
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The Neil Cowley Trio - Loud And Proud - The Neil Cowley Trio shook up jazz fans two years ago with debut album Displaced, which was a bolt from the blue at the time. Neil Cowley, Richard Sadler and Evan Jenkins grabbed the jazz trio format by the scruff of its neck while not forgetting the elements that made it great in the first place. Cowley, best known for his work with key jazz funk and chill out bands, had come up with a post-EST concept that was distinctly fresh and rooted in his jazz influences, including the music of Keith Jarrett.  Read more...

Chick Corea and Gary Burton - The Sound of Silence - More than 35 years have passed since Chick Corea and Gary Burton came together to record the classic album Crystal Silence. The two have now recorded once again, this time for Concord to produce a two-CD set with a big difference as the first disc of The New Crystal Silence finds Corea and Burton performing with a symphony orchestra using new arrangements by saxophonist Tim Garland. Read more...
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