Les Égarés, London Jazz Festival, Cadogan Hall review - a wondrous musical conversation

★★★★ LES EGARES, LONDON JAZZ FESTIVAL A wondrous musical conversation

Singular talents make collective magic

Combine four super-talents, masters of their instrument, and you might well expect a battle of egos or a clash of modi operandi.  Not least, as in the case of Les Égarés, a quartet made up from two seasoned duos – the virtuoso jazzers Vincent Peirani (accordeon) and  Émile Parisien (soprano sax) on the one hand, and the entrancing creative partnership of Ballaké Sissoko (kora) and Vincent Ségal (cello) on the other.  And yet…

Death Cult, O2 Institute, Birmingham review - The Cult revisit their post-punk roots

A blistering return to the early Eighties by Ian Astbury and Billy Duffy

The Cult may have only really hit paydirt in the late Eighties when they started worshipping at the altar of the Rawk Gods of more than a decade before and welcomed Rick Rubin and Bob Rock to toughen up their sound on albums like Electric and Sonic Temple. However, there are clearly many people who still look back wistfully on their post-punk years – to the Dreamtime album, to Death Cult and even further, to vocalist Ian Astbury’s first band, Southern Death Cult.

Le Guess Who? 2023, Utrecht - deep listening and deft dancing

The music festival celebrates its quarter-century reign over the Dutch city

On a Friday morning under the Dom Tower, the tallest church spire in the Netherlands, our enthusiastic guide explains that we’re standing on 2000 years of history. Formed on the frontier of the Roman Empire, Utrecht originally bordered the river Rhine. But forward-thinking festival Le Guess Who?’s quarter-century rein proves that the city is no longer fenced in. 

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.

DVD/Blu-ray: 23 Seconds to Eternity

Collection capturing the berserk, exhilarating vision of music-art mavericks The KLF

The KLF are endlessly fascinating. There’s never been a “pop group” like them. From the late Eighties into the early Nineties, they treated music, especially electronic dance music, as a laboratory for lunatic experiment. Unlike most avant-garde thinkers in pop, though, they made a glorious and highly unlikely commercial success of it, via a series of globally successful singles (and, to some degree, the album, The White Room).