Dipping into Jazz London Radio

review by Stephen Graham. Do you wonder how relevant radio shows are any more when podcasts are flavour of the day and there is still power in the written word, probably more so given that online articles are also accompanied by relevant tracks …

Published: 2 Jul 2023. Updated: 10 months.

Filomena-Campus

  • review by Stephen Graham.

Do you wonder how relevant radio shows are any more when podcasts are flavour of the day and there is still power in the written word, probably more so given that online articles are also accompanied by relevant tracks and videos?

If so do UK radio shows keep up or are they too behind the beat in terms of new releases? OK there isn't always a mad need for bang up to the minute reaction. And maybe it's only by a few weeks the releases played date to. But you never get the feeling that they are ahead of the listening cycle and therefore why bother tuning in at all when you can go DIY and be completely up to date.

A less critical view flags up the plus points - the interviews, often excellent production values and so on. In the digital age sound quality even the sound of a show made on an iPhone can sound quite good. But the fact remains most of the radio shows however worthy we are covering in this series have little profile and even for specialists radio isn't as vital a medium as it was before the Internet.

Jazz London Radio is an internet station. Like a lot of stations today for convenience we accessed it via a smart speaker. We got ads at the beginning, a sports ad I guess promoted by Tune In who host the station on the smart speaker, and the very first thing we heard tuning in earlier today. Then we landed straight into the show on at the particular time we tuned in, just before 4pm hosted by singer Filomena Campus - the show is called Filomena Campus' Theatralia Jazz.

A radio show that has the minimum of chat and not too many ads is a very different kind of show to a magazine format where tracks are interspersed by a presenter with a lot to say and perhaps interviews. Most of what's on jazz radio in the UK is one or other of this divide. Is there another way? There probably is. Certainly what is lacking is critical discussion of albums. You almost never get this and it's worse when musicians, often presenters front shows as they do not want to make meaningful comments about their peers for fear of being biased or displaying overt professional competitiveness. They also aren't critics.

I don't bother with much jazz radio because of the lack of viewpoint - there is so little personality and no real drive, more a celebratory function which can be smug or complacent. Filomena's choices however seemed very well chosen for the quiet reflective time of a late Sunday afternoon. The show seems to go into autopilot as one track segues into another. A livelier latin mix followed immediately afterwards and for passive listening to do the hoovering to and shampoo the cockatoo to it was great! But surely we are looking for more out of a media format than that?

Verdict? Perfectly pleasant what I heard that matched the time of day. As a programme it's pretty basic but that's the point. More broadly what do we want out of jazz radio? Here's what we are looking for: pace, information, curated choices explained and contextualised, a personality to what we are hearing - maybe a word of two about who the players are and where the album is from - are they playing soon, that sort of thing. Jazz London Radio also runs occasional interviews and recent interviewees have included Polly Gibbons, Zoe Rahman and Jalen Baker. Filomena Campus, photo: press

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The Teskey Brothers, The Winding Way, Ivy League ****

You want to start a fire singalong 'London Bridge' asks and blues brothers Josh and Sam know exactly how to ignite the already smouldering kindling by injecting 'Remember The Time’ in particular with a punch the air in delight riot of …

Published: 2 Jul 2023. Updated: 10 months.

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You want to start a fire singalong 'London Bridge' asks and blues brothers Josh and Sam know exactly how to ignite the already smouldering kindling by injecting 'Remember The Time’ in particular with a punch the air in delight riot of possibilities in their own sense of ignition.

Around for a while with Half Mile Harvest and Run Home Slow making a splash down under Sam's guitar playing is as natural as sweet, earthy, rain falling on dry ground after a long, desperate drought. Zombies fans prick up your ears to a stirring cover of Chris White's 'This Will Be Our Year' here from Oz act The Teskey Brothers an outlier moulded by the considerable deep soul touch of the Teskeys. And the glorious songs pretty much all work on a variety of levels - that ring in the air you hear on 'Rich Man' is something to cling on to.

Recorded in Sydney, Otis Redding - hear that seam especially in the spinetingling 'I'm Leaving' and the deliciously slow O. V. like balm found in the feel of 'Take My Heart' before the strings lay it on with a trowel - the blues and Van Morrison are all in the hinterland of what these remarkable brothers have emerged from and take their tuning fork to meet that halo of sound. What a killer line in ''the only thing missing from me was you''. The Teskey songwriting touch is pitch perfect and feeling is all ('Oceans of Emotions' a tearjerker) as the ache and righteous thrum of these homespun songs thunder in on a mighty tide and stone you to your soul.

Hear The Teskey Brothers play Cardiff Castle on Thursday