Sebastian Sternal, Thelonia, Traumton ****

Listening to Thelonia I could well imagine that any number of top jazz labels in the very competitive world that is German jazz would be delighted to poach Frankfurt resident Sebastian Sternal (born 1983) to sign the pianist to their label. Home …

Published: 16 May 2022. Updated: 23 months.

Listening to Thelonia I could well imagine that any number of top jazz labels in the very competitive world that is German jazz would be delighted to poach Frankfurt resident Sebastian Sternal (born 1983) to sign the pianist to their label.

Home was a fine release and now this out next month certainly its equal. Traumton is a very advanced label and advanced too is Sternal in the sense that he is an artist who aspires to push himself artistically and technically so it's a meeting of minds.

Solo piano jazz albums are a whole genre on to themselves and have been since The Köln Concert and here highlights include a very well-designed study of the Gershwins' 'Embraceable You' a galaxy away from when the Majestic Dance Orchestra made a first recording of the song in 1930 and a tribute to Sternal's teacher John Taylor on the absorbing 'J.T' which Sternal has recorded before in a different arrangement.

Early tracks seem more classical than later ones when the jazz side nudges through far more. Virtuoso playing throughout with Sternal already showered with awards over the years partly a recognition of this but beyond that factor does the pianist cut through to the emotions? Yes, I think he does without his being at all too intense or remote. Certainly when the tempo goes faster and the jazz influence is plainer to discern buying into that completely is easier.

Sternal doesn't really do clinical. But he does do serious and that is important. Thelonia is not a casual performance: while the title puns on Thelonious (as in Monk) nowhere does Sternal to my ears sound that obviously like Monk. So that is one example of how original a player he is (or distracting the title reference may be, a devil's advocate might suggest) because he has long since found his own voice. Sternal's version of 'The Way You Look Tonight' is fast and furious and it's yet another thrill. SG Out on 3 June

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Christine Tobin's No Strangers Here and Jay Rayner & Phil Robson duos among the jazz line-up at June's Borris House festival

Appearing at the Vivienne Guinness-curated Festival of Writing and Ideas in County Carlow next month in Ireland are singer Christine Tobin's No Strangers Here and peerless restaurant critic pianist Jay Rayner to perform with his wife the singer …

Published: 16 May 2022. Updated: 23 months.

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Appearing at the Vivienne Guinness-curated Festival of Writing and Ideas in County Carlow next month in Ireland are singer Christine Tobin's No Strangers Here and peerless restaurant critic pianist Jay Rayner to perform with his wife the singer Pat Gordon-Smith as a duo.

Also taking to the stand as a duo are guitarist Phil Robson with bassist Dan Bodwell in the festival club marquee hosted by this Borris House gathering located in a country house near the tiny town of Borris.

Robson's recent Portrait in Extreme was a a welcome reminder of this now County Roscommon-based Derby-born player's John Scofield-and-beyond artistry revealed in intimate circumstances.

The festival lists a bountiful array of stellar speakers in its main programme and who include Ireland's most revered political journalist and author Fintan O'Toole who memorably delivered a fine talk on the theme of mortality and death in the work of Samuel Beckett during the 2014 Happy Days festival.

Also to deliver a talk are the extraordinary Booker prize-winning author of The Gathering Anne Enright of misery memoir renown and Enright's fellow novelist the comic writer Roddy Doyle who also won the Booker for Paddy Clarke Ha Ha Ha and yet who is most beloved for The Commitments – favourite character hereabouts the beautiful dreamer, Jimmy Rabbitte.

Christine Tobin, top, is Ireland's greatest jazz singer and an artist who possesses a strong literary sensibility most evident on her fine W. B. Yeats album Sailing To Byzantium and the exuberant Paul Muldoon-themed Pelt. It is a coup and a blessing for any festival to put the singer on. Avant violinist Cora Venus Lunny is in the singer's band and who in 2019 proved impressive playing a duo with Izumi Kimura at the Jazz Connective showcase in Dublin. Rayner is amusing live for his between-song chats and is a talented shall-we-say tinkler to boot. He quipped the time that we saw him at Kings Place some years ago ''If you know nothing about jazz I'm brilliant; if you know something, thanks for coming.'' Borris House runs from 10-12 June