Farewell Kenny Ball, 1930-2013

FAREWELL KENNY BALL, 1930-2013 A giant of Britain's trad jazz boom passes away

A giant of Britain's trad jazz boom passes away

The death today at age 82 of trumpeter Kenny Ball makes him the first of the big three chart regulars of Britain’s trad jazz boom to pass away. Both Acker Bilk and Chris Barber are still with us. It’s easily forgotten, but trad actually was bigger than The Beatles. In January 1963, just as the Liverpool quartet were issuing their second single, “Please Please Me”, Ball was on a sell-out bill at north London’s massive Alexandra Palace. Ball beat them to the US charts, hitting number two there in early 1962 with “Midnight in Moscow”.

Dancing on the Edge, Series Finale, BBC Two

Poliakoff's slow-burner about jazz and high society goes out with a bang

Stephen Poliakoff's slow-burning drama had turned into a propulsive whodunnit by this final episode, hurtling towards a resolution with panache and surprise. The five-part mini-series about a black jazz band in early 1930s high society has had the feel of an exploratory score at times. With syncopated beats and riffs decorating its unfolding narrative, the occasional scene and detail has seemed superfluous. But Poliakoff has had his reasons. By episode five, almost every character had a motive for murdering Jessie (Angel Coulby), the lead singer, or at least assisting in a cover-up.

10 Questions for Musician Soweto Kinch

The alto saxist and rapper on melding forms, scoring films and social ire

Born in London in 1978 to a Barbadian father and British-Jamaican mother, Soweto Kinch is one of the most exciting and versatile young musicians to hit the British jazz and hip hop scenes in recent years. Following a degree in modern history at Hertford College, Oxford, Kinch has carved out a music career that has so far led to two Mobo wins for best jazz act (2003 and 2007) and a Mercury Prize nomination for album of the year in 2003.

Dancing on the Edge, BBC Two

EDITOR'S PICK: DANCING ON THE EDGE, BBC TWO It's the final part of Stephen Poliakoff's epic drama tonight. Are you still watching?

Stephen Poliakoff's bloated epic ain't got that swing

There is a sequence – quite a long sequence – in the first episode of Dancing on the Edge in which the main characters are all guests on a train. The passengers are curious to know their destination, only it turns out there isn’t one. This is a pleasure trip with no particular place to go. An hour and a half into Stephen Poliakoff’s latest portrait of English manners and mores, boy do you know how they feel.

Jane Birkin, Cadogan Hall

JANE BIRKIN, CADOGAN HALL Emotion-filled tribute to the songs of Serge Gainsbourg from his muse

Emotion-filled tribute to the songs of Serge Gainsbourg from his muse

The notice saying “table reserved for Lord Chelsea” in Cadogan Hall’s foyer bar instantly signalled this show was likely to be more rarefied than your normal pop concert. It was in keeping with the grandeur of this early 20th century, Byzantine-style former church a minute from Sloane Square. The tone was further elevated by this being a rare, small-venue British outing for Jane Birkin, an actual, proper star.

CD: Wayne Shorter Quartet - Without A Net

A magisterial return to Blue Note for the iconic saxophonist and composer

Truly an ensemble cast, the Wayne Shorter Quartet's playing on Without A Net - marking Shorter's return to Blue Note Records after 43 years - fuses disparate elements into something transcendent and utterly original. From the slow burn of “Myrrh” to the searching, high-velocity romanticism of “Starry Night”, two of six new Shorter compositions featured, the album takes small group music-making to another dimension.

Matthew Halsall/Zara McFarlane, Ronnie Scott's

MATTHEW HALSALL/ZARA McFARLANE, RONNIE SCOTT'S Young Mancunian trumpeter holds the audience rapt, while accomplished vocalist offers spirit and charm

Young Mancunian trumpeter holds the audience rapt, while accomplished vocalist offers spirit and charm

Fronting her four piece band - pianist Peter Edwards and saxophonist Binker Golding among them - the young jazz/soul singer Zara McFarlane performs a mix of new songs and tunes from her album, Until Tomorrow. Among the former, “Woman in the Olive Groves” is inspired by a midnight taxi ride through southern Italy, passing an African woman by the highway, among the olive groves, trading her sex.