John Sharpe
@jazzsnipe.bsky.social
160 followers 70 following 41 posts
Free jazz, free improv, creative music, wherever. I write for The New York City Jazz Record, Point Of Departure, All About Jazz, Jazz Podium. Love live music!
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jazzsnipe.bsky.social
Kit Downes and Tom Challenger forged a fluid amalgam of jazz, improv, folk and chamber at St. Margaret's church as part of the Lowestoft Jazz Weekend on Saturday night, and created a wonderfully transcendent racket when Downes moved to organ and literally pulled all the stops out.
jazzsnipe.bsky.social
I really enjoyed Unseparate, the second album by the Webber Morris Big Band on Out Of Your Head Records. The outfit brims with ideas that challenge orthodoxy while remaining deeply rooted in jazz’s improvisatory spirit. You can find my review in PoD here: www.pointofdeparture.org/PoD92/PoD92M...
jazzsnipe.bsky.social
The Louis Moholo Moholo memorial concert at the 100 Club was a suitably celebratory event. Highlights included Sarost (Larry Stabbins, Mark Sanders, Paul Rogers) and Five Blokes (Alexander Hawkins, John Edwards, Jason Yarde, Shabaka Hutchings) with various guests joining as the night went on.
jazzsnipe.bsky.social
I was very sad to hear of the passing of the great tubaist Joe Daley recently. Among many others he played with Gil Evans, Muhal Richard Abrams and Carla Bley. But he can be heard at his best in Sam Rivers' '70s tuba trio. Photo from Edgefest in 2016 with Jason Kao Hwang's Burning Bridge.
jazzsnipe.bsky.social
Also @cafeotodalston.bsky.social earlier in the week, an utterly ferocious set from Weird Of Mouth - Craig Taborn, Mette Rasmussen and Ches Smith - which became a swirl of snarling interlocking motifs. Much more intense than I expected but all the better for it.
jazzsnipe.bsky.social
A belated offering from @cafeotodalston.bsky.social earlier in the week, where the final night of John Edwards' residency went out with a bang courtesy of Camila Nebbia on tenor and Sun Mi Hong behind the traps, following on from an explosive solo bass set to start the evening.
jazzsnipe.bsky.social
Hugely enjoyable set from Kahil El'Zabar's Ethnic Heritage Ensemble just up the road at Norwich Arts Centre last night, made all the better by having the great Alex Harding on baritone saxophone, alongside Ishmael Ali on cello.
jazzsnipe.bsky.social
A fantastic launch for a very good new album All It Was at the Vortex last night from the @oliebrice.bsky.social quartet. Having a band with the pedigree of Alexander Hawkins, Rachel Musson and Will Glaser meant that some wonderfully propulsive tunes became vehicles for blistering improvisations.
jazzsnipe.bsky.social
Smoke pouring from the adjacent building truncated a thrilling set from the incendiary quartet of saxophonists Camila Nebbia and Colin Webster, bassist Caius Williams and drummer Andrew Lisle downstairs at the Vortex last night. Fire music indeed!
jazzsnipe.bsky.social
Great concert from John Butcher, Chris Corsano and Florian Stoffner @cafeotodalston.bsky.social last night. Butcher operates at a staggeringly consistent high level, but this must be one of the most potent settings for his timbral ingenuity and mastery of sound placement.
Reposted by John Sharpe
sunrauniverse.bsky.social
Today is the 101st arrival date of Sun Ra Arkestra Director Maestro Legend Marshall Belford Allen - 25th may 1924 Happy Birthday with space age celebrations
jazzsnipe.bsky.social
Anna Webber's Simple Trio with Matt Mitchell and John Hollenbeck really brought her intricate charts to bristling, pulsating life on her UK debut @cafeotodalston.bsky.social last night, with much of the repertoire deriving from her excellent simpletrio2000 album on Intakt.
jazzsnipe.bsky.social
Magnificent show from the James Brandon Lewis Trio at the Vortex last night, with that sublime tenor sound riding in incantatory waves over bustling grooves crafted and polished by Josh Warner on electric bass and the great Gerald Cleaver on drums.
jazzsnipe.bsky.social
A splendid noise from Paul Dunmall's Double Quartet @cafeotodalston.bsky.social last night. As someone said, more Ascension than Free Jazz, but actually less ordered than either, with roles merging into a single, impassioned, responsive organism rather than a cycle of solos.
jazzsnipe.bsky.social
Yes indeed! That set was a real ear-opener for me.
jazzsnipe.bsky.social
Saxophonist Camila Nebbia was very impressive @cafeotodalston.bsky.social on Sunday with her energy, timbral range and ability to forge a narrative, in a highly combustible trio completed by drummer Andrew Lisle and bassist Caius Williams, who was a worthy substitute for the missing Kit Downes.
jazzsnipe.bsky.social
I've seen her at the Vision Festival a few times, but I think this was her first time in London for many years.
jazzsnipe.bsky.social
Lovely show from the wonderful Amina Claudine Myers @cafeotodalston.bsky.social last night where for over 90 minutes she played her own inimitable mix of gospel, jazz, blues and episodes more tricky to label.
jazzsnipe.bsky.social
The last Soundhunt (for a while at least) went out with a bang in Cambridge on Sunday afternoon, with three short duos, from hosts Dominic Lash and N.O.Moore, a first time meeting between Tansy Spinks and Ben Jones, and an established duo from David Birchall and Alistair Zaldua, before all together.
jazzsnipe.bsky.social
I really enjoyed Alex Bonney's trio with Paul Dunmall and Mark Sanders at the Vortex last night, especially his first set piece dedicated to late trumpeters Ron Miles and Herb Robertson, and then the improv set when both he and Dunmall were blowing freely and Sanders was brewing up a storm.
jazzsnipe.bsky.social
I got to review two excellent records for the March edition of Point Of Departure: Bone Bells by Mary Halvorson and Sylvie Courvoisier; and Rare by John Butcher and Sophie Agnel. Read about them, and lots of other great things here: www.pointofdeparture.org/PoD90/PoD90M...
jazzsnipe.bsky.social
Two superb sets from Craig Taborn and Peter Evans at the Vortex last night. I had a silly grin on my face from the first notes, marvelling at the dazzling interplay and constant weave in and out of their original charts, as well as one from Paul Motian.
Reposted by John Sharpe
obsofdeviance.bsky.social
Cecil Taylor Unit

Live at Antioch College, April 3, 1971

Cecil Taylor (age 42), piano
Jimmy Lyons (39), alto saxophone
Sam Rivers (47), tenor and soprano saxophones, and flute
Andrew Cyrille (31), drums

youtu.be/wDB3_2QguNg?...
Cecil Taylor Unit Live at Antioch College, April 3, 1971
YouTube video by Don Giller
youtu.be