EFG London Jazz Festival 2023 round-up review - vital sparks crossing and uniting generations

EFG LONDON JAZZ FESTIVAL 2023 Vital sparks crossing and uniting generations

From Sultan Stevenson, 22, to Elaine Delmar, 84, great small-venue shows around the festival

Start with the biggest gig of this year’s EFG London Jazz Festival: Angélique Kidjo’s Royal Albert Hall show definitely stays in the mind. Part of the story is the earth-shaking power and resonance of the voice of the "Queen of African music" which transforms the Royal Albert Hall magically into an intimate space.

Christine Tobin, EFG London Jazz Festival, World Heart Beat review - an enchanting ode to home

★★★★ CHRISTINE TOBIN, WORLD HEART BEAT An enchanting ode to home

A new song cycle from one of contemporary music’s unique compositional voices

This UK premiere of the award-winning, Dublin-born vocalist and composer Christine Tobin’s latest project, Returning Weather, presented an otherworldly ode to finding home – casting multiple perspectives on our yearning for connection and human warmth.

Selaocoe, Schimpelsberger, LSO, Ward, Barbican review - force of nature crowns dance jamboree

★★★★★ SELAOCOE, SCHIMPELSBERGER, LSO, WARD, BARBICAN One in a million

Cellist, composer and singer is one in a million – and the whole programme zings

It was good of the EFG London Jazz Festival to support this concert and bring in a different audience from the one the LSO is used to. But how to define it? Jazz only briefly figured in works by Gary Carpenter, Bartók, Barber and Abel Selaocoe. The only category would seem to be All Things Vital and Dancing. Anyone who’d come just for the phenomenal South Africa-born cellist, singer and composer must have been riveted by the rest, too.

Hiromi's Sonicwonder, EFG London Jazz Festival, Barbican review - keyboard fireworks from a brilliantly versatile jazz pianist

★★★★ HIROMI'S SONICWONDER, EFG LONDON JAZZ FESTIVAL, BARBICAN Keyboard fireworks from a brilliantly versatile jazz pianist

Two very different sides of this extraordinary musician's creativity

To watch virtuoso jazz pianist Hiromi perform is to experience a vast weather system of sound; at some moments exuberant hailstorms of notes alternate with thunderous chords, at others, sombre atonal passages resolve into a burst of sunshine.

10 Questions for the avant-pop icons Stereolab

10 QUESTIONS For Laetitia and Tim of the avant-pop icons Stereolab

Laetitia and Tim on Nineties tribes, new-age technology and their lifelong affinity with music

Just over 30 years ago, avant-pop icons Stereolab released their debut album Peng! establishing the early hallmarks of the English-French band’s sound; 1960s pop harmonies, chorus-laden guitar riffs and a borderless world of analog electrics.

theartsdesk at Salzburg Jazz & the City Festival - perfection in free venues

The ideal setting for cleverly programmed European jazz

As a cultural destination, Salzburg really is hard to beat. Each year, a million and a half tourists descend on this compact city with its baroque architectural delights, and a population of just 150,000. The city of Mozart and of the Salzburger Festspiele was also once home to Paracelsus, Heinrich Biber, Stefan Zweig, Georg Trakl, and more recently – of course – The Sound of Music and Red Bull.

Album: Melanie De Biasio - Il Viaggio

Jazz-rooted Belgian individualist's oblique exploration of her Italian roots

Il Viaggio is a form of soundtrack. Its lyrics, music and soundscapes are created in response to the journey referenced in the title. Though born and raised in Belgium, Melanie De Biasio’s paternal grandfather was Italian. After the Europalia arts festival contacted her to see if she would create a work on its chosen theme of “Trains & Tracks” she chose to explore her roots. This took her to Abruzzo, in central eastern Italy – where Il Viaggio was born.

Album: Nils Petter Molvær - Certainty of Tides

An arresting symphonic journey through the heart of Molvær's musical world

With beautiful playing from the Norwegian Radio Orchestra conducted by Ingar Berby, sumptuous arrangements which hint at everything from the great jazz orchestrator Gil Evans to the haunting "night music" of Béla Bartók, and – at its heart – the wonderfully singing quality of Nils Petter Molvær’s trumpet playing, these symphonic reimaginings present a remarkable conspectus of the Norwegian musician’s work.