You’re never too old to funk. This much is true. On Live at Joe’s Pub, trumpeter Shunzo Ohno doesn’t just reaffirm it – he ...
Few musicians carry the kind of quiet authority that Airto Moreira does. From the electric shifts of Miles Davis’ early-70s ...
Ghent saxophonist Mattias De Craene’s latest album emerged from a period of profound reorientation. Living with lingering ...
For her latest release, “Thee They Thy”, pianist, vocalist and composer Judith Berkson returns to ECM with a record that ...
Drummer and composer Olivier Le Goas has long been a quietly inventive presence on the European jazz scene, and with The ...
On The Sweet Sweden Suite, Danish saxophonist Johannes Gammelgaard offers an ambitious, deeply personal portrait of his ...
German-born, London-based pianist Bruno Heinen has long occupied a distinctive space between contemporary classical music and ...
Trumpeter David Smith returns with Redstone, his fourth outing on Brooklyn Jazz Underground Records, and a continuation of ...
One Album That Changed My Life: Thelonious Monk ‘Thelonious Alone In San Francisco’ (Riverside 1959)
James Read Thelonious Monk’s 1959 album Thelonious Alone In San Francisco changes my life every time I listen to it; the ...
Jason Byrne It was 1983 or ’84. I was 16 or 17 years old and studying drums with a somewhat famous teacher/guru in NYC by the ...
Antonio Martino Music has been the only constant in my life. All the rest has changed, cities, works, friends, lovers, but my ...
Andy Hazell I started buying music in the mid-to-late 80s, a period when music buying habits were shifting, enabled by emerging technology. Vinyl had given ground to cassette with the digital alchemy ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results