Paul Booth, Forty Four, Ubuntu ****

First time I heard Paul Booth was hearing him with the Steve Winwood band at the Cork jazz festival. He stood out a mile among that stellar band. A few years later in Sligo he was playing in casual circumstances at a jam session and blew everyone …

Published: 16 Apr 2022. Updated: 2 years.

First time I heard Paul Booth was hearing him with the Steve Winwood band at the Cork jazz festival. He stood out a mile among that stellar band. A few years later in Sligo he was playing in casual circumstances at a jam session and blew everyone off the bandstand without even trying! He spends a lot of his time playing with big name rock bands like Winwood and The Eagles no less and doing sessions. But increasingly in recent years his records especially Travel Sketches under his own name have brought him on to more jazz fans' radar a little like the way Michael Brecker emerged from playing sessions to recording his own records. Here the recipe is driving straightahead contemporary sounds that draw on jazz-rock and funk the 44 in the title marking his 44th birthday playing in the company of a double quartet. Trumpeter Alexandra Ridout is superb in the front line with him while the drum team of Shane Forbes and Andrew Bain keep the groove lively. Booth's good at capturing a pastoral sense on a track such as 'Four Candles' and the tunes easily pivot from the balladic to a more driving and always involving improvisational arc. Beautifully recorded, the level of musicianship here is sky high and it's one of the best UK releases I've had the pleasure to listen to this year. If Booth is new to you discover his accessible and likeable approach today. He's in his prime SG

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Fergus McCreadie tops new UK jazz chart

It is highly unusual to see a relatively new UK jazz act riding high on top of the official UK jazz and blues chart especially for a non-crossover record such as Forest Floor from the acoustic piano trio led by Scottish pianist Fergus McCreadie …

Published: 16 Apr 2022. Updated: 2 years.

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It is highly unusual to see a relatively new UK jazz act riding high on top of the official UK jazz and blues chart especially for a non-crossover record such as Forest Floor from the acoustic piano trio led by Scottish pianist Fergus McCreadie which is the current occupant of the chart's top spot. Read the marlbank review of the record here. Also charting among new releases is the latest record from the Tord Gustavsen trio Opening at no. 6 proving once again along with the McCreadie success that the piano trio remains a popular format with record buyers.