CD: Xylouris White - Mother

The simple magic of two maestros interlocking their styles continues to intensify

If you see any list of greatest living drummers and the Australian Jim White isn't on it, you should look at it askance. Since he started Dirty Three in the early '90s, White has played with the cream of global alt-rock musicians: the Nick Caves, PJ Harveys, Cat Powers and Will Oldhams. But he's way, way more than a sideman, and the closer he is to the front of the stage, the more interesting the music will be.

theartsdesk Q&A: Vocalist Cécile McLorin Salvant

Q&A: VOCALIST CECILE MCLORIN SALVANT The US jazz singer talks Bessie Smith, visual art, obsessive listening habits and more

The US jazz singer talks Bessie Smith, visual art, obsessive listening habits and more

The vocalist Cécile McLorin Salvant first came to the attention of the jazz scene when she won the prestigious Thelonious Monk International Jazz competition in 2010. In 2013, her Mack Avenue Records debut WomanChild garnered a Grammy nomination. Two years later, she picked up her first Grammy Award when her follow-up release For One To Love won Best Jazz Vocal Album.

CD: Cécile McLorin Salvant - Dreams and Daggers

The vocalist and songwriter delivers one of the great live jazz albums

With her third recording for Mack Avenue, Grammy Award-winning vocalist and songwriter Cécile McLorin Salvant has delivered a vocal jazz album for the ages. A 2CD set recorded live at NYC’s renowned Village Vanguard, the fascinating track list juxtaposes jazz standards, vaudeville songs, blues and more. A number of studio recorded originals sprinkled throughout, featuring the exquisite playing of the Catalyst Quartet, offer an intriguing commentary on the live material.

CD: Alan Broadbent - Developing Story

The pianist's orchestral magnum opus is packed with extraordinary things

Hearing the London Metropolitan Orchestra ripping a hole in the silence with the impassioned opening theme of the three-movement "Developing Story", I’m not entirely convinced that the New Zealand-born, US-based pianist, composer and arranger Alan Broadbent doesn’t have any Russian blood flowing through his veins, despite the two-time Grammy winner's assurances to the contrary when I interviewed him last year.

CD: Binker and Moses - Journey to the Mountain of Forever

Prodigious concept album from the brilliant sax-drums duo

Two of the most impressive young musicians on London’s jazz scene, tenor saxist Binker Golding and drummer Moses Boyd hoovered up every award in sight following the release of their debut album Dem Ones, including a brace of gongs at the Jazz FM Awards 2016 (for UK Jazz Act of the Year and Breakthrough Act of the Year) plus Jazz Newcomer of the Year at the 2016 Parliamentary Jazz Awards.

theartsdesk in Bergen: Questions upon questions at Borealis Festival

THE ARTS DSK IN BERGEN: QUESTIONS UPON QUESTIONS AT BOREALIS FESTIVAL The sublime, the ridiculous and the brain-cleansing in the bracing North Sea air

The sublime, the ridiculous and the brain-cleansing in the bracing North Sea air

There comes a point in any experimental music festival when you have to accept the silliness and go with it. And at Borealis, that point comes very early.

CD: Xam Duo - Xam Duo

CD: XAM DUO - XAM DUO A wonderful, improvisational debut from the Hookworms and Deadwall alumni

A wonderful, improvisational debut from the Hookworms and Deadwall alumni

Everything about Xam Duo’s debut album, out earlier this month on Sonic Cathedral, has a wonderful sense of self-indulgence: from the freeform, experimental feel, the stretched-out tones and resulting melodies that exist almost by implication, to the mournful squall of the saxophone, buoyed by a stubborn sea of sound.

Rava / Herbert / Guidi + Murgia, Kings Place

RAVA / HERBERT / GUIDI + MURGIA, KINGS PLACE Starry Italian improv gig fascinatingly inconsistent

Starry Italian improv gig fascinatingly inconsistent

There was an Italian flavour to the EFG London Jazz Festival programme at Kings Place on Thursday night. Enrico Rava is an eminent statesman of European jazz, who emerged in the 1960s as a disciple of Miles Davis. He was collaborating with young pianist Giovanni Guidi, also recorded on ECM, though best known for diaphanous soundscapes rather than free jazz at its most raw and bloody. They were joined by electronic music pioneer Matthew Herbert, who now has a distinguished presence across opera, theatre, film and books, as well as improvised electronica.