Top 5 UK jazz albums so far in 2025

Sultan Stevenson Sultan Stevenson
Sultan Stevenson: playing Kings Place on 31 October

YEAR BEST SO FAR ON THE UK SCENE: 1/El Roi, 2/Rowing Up River To Get Our Names Back, 3/On a Modern Genius Vol 1, 4/Alleviate and 5/A Year in the Life

1 El Roi (Edition)

”This album,” Sultan, a Londoner with Caribbean roots who is still in his early twenties, tells us, ”is my way of expressing thoughts and emotions that I have about two very important concepts: Faith and identity. ‘El Roi’ is one of the many names for God in the bible. It means ‘God of Sight’. The title binds together these two themes well. ‘God’ referring to faith and ‘sight’ referring to how one is seen and how you perceive the world around you.”

Stephenson – who was initially trained by the Julian Joseph Jazz Academy and Tomorrow’s Warriors and taught by Julian Joseph, Simon Purcell and Robert Mitchell and is a graduate of the city of London’s Guildhall School of Music & Drama – adds that ”the idea of ‘faith’ was firstly tackled in my debut album Faithful One and is inspired by faith-based experiences like: prayer and giving thanks.”

His sound is inspired a great deal by the strong influence of the great John Coltrane pianist – the unforgettable ”going fourths” quartal harmony approach contained therein – McCoy Tyner (1938-2020). But crucially the latest is less like Tyner and shows development in the arc of the pianist’s writing direction that shows the essence of this Sultan of deftly sublimated swing far more and that’s why it’s inspiring given the fresh breeze running through the whole album. Plus factor in subtle blending in the horn arrangements, beatific harmonies, and double bassist Jacob Gryn’s brilliant pacing of the beat throughout and some cool touches from trumpeter Josh Short.

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Evident artistic growth

In this video filmed back in November at Milton Court in the City of London there’s a version of ‘He Has Made Me Whole’ which was on Sultan’s first album Faithful One released in 2023.
Solomon Northup played by south London actor Chiwetel Ejiofor – who earlier in his career played the part of bandleader Louis Lester in Stephen Poliakoff’s London set 1930s jazz inspired TV series Dancing on the Edge (2013) – with Northup’s fellow abolitionist Samuel Bass (Brad Pitt) in the best picture Oscar winning 19th century period drama, 12 Years a Slave.

‘Unspeakable Happiness’ is a phrase taken from Steve McQueen’s 2013 film 12 Years a Slave in which the enslaved protagonist describes freedom as unspeakable happiness.

ALSO IN THE TOP 5 MARLBANK CHOICE

2 Anthony Joseph’s Rowing Up River To Get Our Names Back (Heavenly Sweetness)

3 Xhosa Cole’s On A Modern Genius Vol 1 (Stoney Lane)

4 Donovan Haffner’s Alleviate (Own Label)

5 Tom Smith’s A Year in the Life (Own Label)

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