theartsdesk Q&A: soul singer Joss Stone

THE ARTS DESK Q&A: SOUL SINGER JOSS STONE Soul star discusses international collaboration, freedom from big labels, and how Freddie the horse started it all

Soul star discusses international collaboration, freedom from big labels, and how Freddie the horse started it all

Joss Stone is one of our most popular and successful soul singers, with a rich bronze voice and supple delivery that’s already earned her two Brit Awards and a Grammy, and made her Britain’s richest woman under 30. She burst onto the scene at the age of 16 with Soul Sessions, an acclaimed album of soul classics from artists including Arethra Franklin and Carla Thomas.

CD: Jill Scott - Woman

CD: JILL SCOTT - WOMAN The neo-soul queen on charming form on her fifth studio album

The neo-soul queen on charming form on her fifth studio album

Jill Scott albums should, in theory, be a bit of a chore. Everything about them, this one included, is like listening to a life coach: positive affirmations, exhortations to self-care, expressions of gratitude to the universe, homely snippets of advice... It's all so wholesome you almost feel as if it should be printed in a curly script over tranquil beach scenes and shared on your more uncomplicated school friends' Facebook feeds. Almost.

Flamencura, Paco Peña Company, Sadler's Wells

FLAMENCURA, PACO PENA COMPANY, SADLER'S WELLS Top-quality showcase from some of the best in the business

Top-quality showcase from some of the best in the business

No, don't check your calendar – it's definitely not March. I associate flamenco at Sadler's Wells so strongly with their annual two-week festival in early spring that watching Paco Peña Company at the Wells last night felt a bit like a cheeky out-of-season treat, akin to buying foreign strawberries before the native ones have come in. Fortunately, this was no watery, bland, forced berry, though: Peña and friends are some of the best in the business, purveying reliably high-quality goods in smart, well-produced packaging.

Jazz FM Awards 2015

The legendary Hugh Masekela and the electrifying Loose Tubes are among the winners

Hosted by self-confessed jazz nut John Thomson, a.k.a. The Fast Show's “Jazz Club” presenter Louis Balfour, the winners of this year's Jazz FM Awards were announced on Wednesday evening in the atmospheric setting of the Great Halls at Vinopolis.

Reissue CDs Weekly: Marvin Gaye

REISSUE CDS WEEKLY: MARVIN GAYE Lack of finesse with repackaging the soul great’s compelling early albums

Lack of finesse with repackaging the soul great’s compelling early albums

 

Marvin Gaye 1961–1965Marvin Gaye: Marvin Gaye 1961–1965

Reissue CDs Weekly: Bobby Womack

REISSUE CDS WEEKLY: BOBBY WOMACK A musical identity crisis on the first five solo albums from the late soul-blues perennial

A musical identity crisis on the first five solo albums from the late soul-blues perennial


Bobby Womack: The PreacherBobby Womack: The Preacher

Percy Sledge: 'When a man loves a woman he can't even think right'

PERCY SLEDGE 1940-2015 The great soulman on the creation of his classic ballad

The great soulman, who has died, on the creation of his classic ballad

No soul singer has been associated with one hit in quite the same way. Percy Sledge, who died last week at the age of 74, recorded “When a Man Loves a Woman” in 1966 and launched himself as a tearful balladeer. Its simple chord structure, featuring a descending bassline familiar from Pachelbel and Bach, was the bedrock over which Sledge howled plaintively of a lost love. There were other hits, until his producers retired in 1974 just as soul music was going priapic, but the first cut was always the deepest.

Alice Russell, Jazz Café

The soul sensation strikes a critical nerve

You know what really grinds my gears? Bands that only have one. One gear, one level of intensity. For a good hour of last night’s set, diminutive diva Alice Russell, the voice behind countless Quantic hits and that cover of “Seven Nation Army” that no one would shut up about back in 2005, was guilty of just that. She was flatlining at mid-intensity, lost in the no man’s land between tension and release and it was a shame, because everything else about her set, the first of two sold out shows at Camden’s Jazz Café, was hard to fault.