Claire Martin and Joe Stilgoe, St James Theatre

CLAIRE MARTIN AND JOE STILGOE, ST JAMES THEATRE Onomatopoeic delights and acerbic wit from top-drawer duo

Onomatopoeic delights and acerbic wit from top-drawer duo

With Peter Andre butchering Frank Sinatra on the one hand ("Reality TV swing", as Ray Gelato aptly put it) and Annie Lennox massacring Billie Holiday on the other, it was heart-warming to hear two artists performing standards and originals with such care, insight and sensitivity.

Wayne Shorter and Wynton Marsalis with the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra, Barbican

WAYNE SHORTER AND WYNTON MARSALIS WITH THE JAZZ AT LINCOLN CENTER ORCHESTRA, BARBICAN A landmark meeting that lives up to the hype

A landmark meeting that lives up to the hype

Wayne Shorter and the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra – that sounds like a dream pairing. Shorter, now 82, is one of the true greats, a saxophonist and composer with an enchanting and unpredictable approach that makes him instantly recognisable. He had a defining influence on Miles Davis’ Second Great Quintet and on Weather Report and, for many, his current quartet represent the pinnacle of modern small group performance.

10 Questions for Jazz Quartet Empirical

10 QUESTIONS FOR JAZZ QUARTET EMPIRICAL Empirical bassist Tom Farmer on musical risk-taking, scientific method and taking jazz to bleary-eyed London commuters

Empirical bassist Tom Farmer on musical risk-taking, scientific method and taking jazz to bleary-eyed London commuters

Described by Courtney Pine as "the most exciting jazz band to come out of the UK" and hailed in the press as the new young lions, Empirical broke cover in 2007, topping album of the year charts with their self-titled debut and picking up wins at the prestigious EBU/European Jazz Competition and the Peter Whittingham Jazz Award all within a few months.

CD: Snarky Puppy - Family Dinner Volume Two

US collective delivers another appetizing smorgasbord of songs

With everything they touch seemingly transforming into artistic gold, shapeshifting US collective Snarky Puppy are currently on a roll. Following their 2014 Grammy win for Family Dinner Volume One, they’ve since chalked up ‘Best Jazz Group’ in the 2015 Downbeat Readers Poll, plus a Grammy nomination in the ‘Best Contemporary Instrumental Album’ category for last year’s Sylva. This purple patch looks set to continue with the arrival of Family Dinner Volume Two.

CD: GoGo Penguin - Man Made Object

CD: GOGO PENGUIN - MAN MADE OBJECT Manchester post-jazz trio's Blue Note debut not quite as innovative as they think

Manchester post-jazz trio's Blue Note debut not quite as innovative as they think

Penguins tend to be associated with slow and ungainly progress, slithering about in the snow. Yet there’s nothing cumbersome or awkward about the progress Manchester trio GoGo Penguin has made since emerging on the local jazz scene based around Matt and Phred’s club and their friend Matt Hallsall’s label Gondwana Records, which released their first two albums. In the past year they have broken through with North American audiences, and this, their third album, is not on Gondwana, but – applause – Blue Note. Much more GoGo than Penguin.

CD: Gerard Presencer & Danish Radio Big Band - Groove Travels

CD: GERARD PRESENCER & DANISH RADIO BIG BAND - GROOVE TRAVELS Brilliant, multifaceted big band album from the British trumpeter and composer

Brilliant, multifaceted big band album from the British trumpeter and composer

There's a moment in album-opener “Another Weirdo”, just after the one-and-a-half-minute mark, that powerfully captures the dramatic heft and textural surprise of this outstanding big band album. A subdued call and response in the brass snakes its way over an unchanging cadential figure in the bass. And then, from nowhere, a sudden shift up a semitone and the full might of the big band comes crashing in, a blaze of colour over which its composer takes flight.

Ian Shaw, Pizza Express Jazz Club

IAN SHAW, PIZZA EXPRESS JAZZ CLUB Fine, eclectic new album launched with sparkling live show

Fine, eclectic new album launched with sparkling live show

Many jazz singers are known for an instantly recognisable tone. Billie Holiday or Louis Armstrong are known the moment they open their mouth, for a particular quality of delivery. Jazz singer and comedian Ian Shaw, who launched his 14th album at Pizza Express Jazz Club last night, works differently. His best performances are about the blend of comedian’s timing and musician’s tone, and once he’d warmed up last night, there were tears and giggles aplenty.

Reissue CDs Weekly: The Wilde Flowers

REISSUE CDS WEEKLY: THE WILDE FLOWERS Modality and punky crudeness from the Canterbury band which birthed Caravan and Soft Machine

Modality and punky crudeness from the Canterbury band which birthed Caravan and Soft Machine

Though Soft Machine were the first band to suggest Canterbury could be musically noteworthy, the appearance of Caravan’s debut album in late 1968, Kevin Ayers' post-Soft Machine solo outing two years later, and the subsequent arrivals of Gong, Matching Mole, Hatfield & the North and the solo Robert Wyatt confirmed the city had a fertile scene. It was a fluid environment where musicians from one band played with others. The mutability was captured in one of the most entangled of Pete Frame’s celebrated Rock Family Trees.

Albums of 2015: The Maria Schneider Orchestra - The Thompson Fields

ALBUMS OF 2015: THE MARIA SCHNEIDER ORCHESTRA - THE THOMPSON FIELDS The Maria Schneider Orchestra serves up an incontestable masterpiece

The Maria Schneider Orchestra serves up an incontestable masterpiece

My Album of the Year is The Thompson Fields, a stunningly beautiful collection of eight new pieces by the acclaimed composer, arranger and bandleader, Maria Schneider. It's one of those incredibly rare albums in which every element – breathtaking textural detail, gorgeous melodies, transfixing solos and the sheer expressivity of the playing – comes together in a kind of magical alignment.

We Made It: The Electric Recording Company

WE MADE IT: THE ELECTRIC RECORDING COMPANY Pete Hutchison's quest for musical perfection on vinyl

Pete Hutchison's quest for musical perfection on vinyl

Always desperately seeking the next profit-boosting lifeline, the record industry is getting all worked up about the "vinyl revival". While sales of CDs and downloads have been falling, those shiny black circles, once believed defunct, have been enjoying an upward surge. Tesco has even taken the bizarre decision to stock a triple LP by Iron Maiden.