Joshua Jaswon octet to debut

Saxophonist Joshua Jaswon's octet is to debut this autumn with Silent Sea, an album shaped around inspirations derived from contemporary British poetry including work by writers Jackie Kay, Maura Dooley and Rachael Boast. Joshua is a graduate of the …

Published: 14 Jul 2020. Updated: 3 years.

Saxophonist Joshua Jaswon's octet is to debut this autumn with Silent Sea, an album shaped around inspirations derived from contemporary British poetry including work by writers Jackie Kay, Maura Dooley and Rachael Boast. Joshua is a graduate of the Guildhall School of Music and Drama and later studied at the Jazz-Institut, Berlin. The multi-national octet personnel are: Anna Serierse NL - Vocals; Joshua Jaswon UK - Alto and Soprano Saxophone; Marc Doffey DE - Tenor and Soprano Saxophone; Miguel Gorodi ES - Trumpet and Flugelhorn; Jan Landowski PL - Trombone; Johannes Mann DE- Guitar; Sidney Werner DE - Double Bass; Aarón Castrillo ES - Drums. Silent Sea will be released by the Ubuntu label at the end of October.

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Nir Felder, II

The blues, crunchy jazz-rock and a John Scofield universe of jazz possibilities, are never far away from this new album from Nir Felder, consistently one of the most inspiring of jazz guitarists over the past decade. Opening with 'The Longest Star' …

Published: 13 Jul 2020. Updated: 3 years.

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The blues, crunchy jazz-rock and a John Scofield universe of jazz possibilities, are never far away from this new album from Nir Felder, consistently one of the most inspiring of jazz guitarists over the past decade. Opening with 'The Longest Star' there is almost a Metheny-like world of possibilities conjured up but Jimmy MacBride's blistering drum solo at the beginning of 'Interrignum' is more like where the album really locates itself, Felder chipping in with earthy riffing and a rumbling acceleration. He is happy to fold in plenty of other instruments beyond guitar in the album's production layers but nonethless II does not feel overcooked. Essentially it is a trio album, with Felder and MacBride bassist Matt Penman completing the trio plus a few guests dotted about. 'Fire in August' has a garage-rock feel to it and the album on one level has a certain straight forward sense of momentum. But other tracks like 'Coronation' take the pot off the stove and add a certain airiness that works well before the blues coated 'Big Heat' soars in and provides one of the album's best tracks. 'Big Swim' with its futuristic synth beginning is a bit of a surprise and the album is good at coming up with new angles of attack before concluding with the anthemic 'War Theory' which again is a big highlight. Worth getting. Once again Felder proves himself a vital presence on the contemporary jazz scene. Out now on Ropeadope.