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The 10 best jazz albums of 2020

The 10 best jazz albums of 2020 John Fordham Pat Metheny – From This Place Being both a bestselling jazz-fusion superstar and an experimental collaborator with John Zorn and Ornette Coleman takes rare agility, but guitarist Pat Metheny has managed both. Metheny’s 2020 album, performed by his current live band (UK pianist Gwilym Simcock, bassist Linda May Han Oh, and drummer Antonio Sánchez) with guest appearances from vocalist Meshell Ndegeocello and harmonica virtuoso Gregoire Maret, showcases his famously cinematic compositional muse, shrewdly balanced with the group’s off-the-leash inventiveness, and for the most part subtly applied synthesised orchestral effects. Read the full review.

Plat-eweg: Zittesje Toren-LP, Romona s, Venlose Kerssterre, Lizette en Frits Pelt

Plat-eweg: Zittesje Toren-LP, Romona s, Venlose Kerssterre, Lizette en Frits Pelt
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Sonny Rollins: Rollins in Holland review – saxophone colossus in gale-force form

Sonny Rollins: Rollins in Holland review – saxophone colossus in gale-force form John Fordham The creative acquisitiveness of improvisation sounds boundless in the work of jazz sax master Sonny Rollins. He turned 90 in September. Every timeless theme and every long-forgotten one, every pop hit or fragment of an aria, every quirky mannerism he has heard in the jostling soundtrack of the world seems to have been filed somewhere in his head. These fragments make warped reappearances live, sometimes in apposite places, sometimes in provocatively oppositional ones. That’s what put the phrase “the greatest living improviser” on the flyers to Rollins’ gigs.

Sonny Rollins: Rollins in Holland review – saxophone colossus in gale-force form | Jazz

Last modified on Wed 16 Dec 2020 09.47 EST The creative acquisitiveness of improvisation sounds boundless in the work of jazz sax master Sonny Rollins. He turned 90 in September. Every timeless theme and every long-forgotten one, every pop hit or fragment of an aria, every quirky mannerism he has heard in the jostling soundtrack of the world seems to have been filed somewhere in his head. These fragments make warped reappearances live, sometimes in apposite places, sometimes in provocatively oppositional ones. That’s what put the phrase “the greatest living improviser” on the flyers to Rollins’ gigs. Sonny Rollins: Rollins in Holland album cover. Photograph: Resonance Records

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