Daily jazz blog, Marlbank

Manchester band GoGo Penguin to play Seattle jazz club Dimitriou's Alley for 4 nights this week beginning on Thursday

Manchester piano trio GoGo Penguin have gone through significant personnel changes down the years - only founder pianist Chris Illingworth remaining. We first heard them at the Vortex in 2012 when original double bassist Grant Russell was in the …

Published: 17 Jun 2024. Updated: 8 days.

Manchester piano trio GoGo Penguin have gone through significant personnel changes down the years - only founder pianist Chris Illingworth remaining. We first heard them at the Vortex in 2012 when original double bassist Grant Russell was in the band, his replacement Nick Blacka remains and at their Royal Albert Hall in London show in 2018 - one of their biggest shows to date - a strobey full-on affair in the massive hall - proved a matador presence of serious clout. Since drummer Jon Scott - known for his work with the MOBO-winning Adam Waldmann led Kairos 4tet - took over the reins from Rob Turner, the band continues to be as potent a force but powered differently given that Scott isn't as much a drum'n'bass workhorse as Turner proved so reliably.

The stunning Scott era has already delivered a moving album in Everything Is Going To Be OK and on April's mini-album From the North which is a live representation of it if you think in terms of e.s.t. (an early influence on Illingworth) their Live in Hamburg.

Translated that means this 7 tracker full of trio co-writes is shit hot. It's up there with their best work which we think is v2.0. With 'Everything Is Going To Be OK' from the earlier album as a Miroslav Vitouš calibre Blacka-led centrepiece beautifully picked up by the sound engineers this is a goosebumps inducing affair pretty much all over. Illingworth, also heavily influenced by Aphex Twin, has never sounded more at ease, more himself. l-r: Jon Scott, Chris Illingworth, Nick Blacka

Dimitriou's Alley, Seattle dates this week are Thursday, Friday, Saturday and Sunday nights

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Top 10 Eurojazz labels so far in 24

It's interesting where the powerhouses in terms of countries in this state-of-the-art 10 locate themselves - Germany and the Netherlands scoring best of all. Worthy of note also but outside the list going Dutch is the Timeless Imprint Daybreak whose …

Published: 16 Jun 2024. Updated: 8 days.

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It's interesting where the powerhouses in terms of countries in this state-of-the-art 10 locate themselves - Germany and the Netherlands scoring best of all. Worthy of note also but outside the list going Dutch is the Timeless Imprint Daybreak whose Steve Nelson trio album A Common Language we loved back in May. But Denmark mentioned here and way beyond this list has also been particularly strong across the board - major distributor Universal Music's Denmark label operation also scored with Idyl by the guitarist Casper Hejlesen and indie Blikflak impressed us a good deal by putting out the latest dreamjazz from the very exciting less-is-moreness of Udsyn who one would hope will explode some day beyond their home scene so they get better known about.

Click on the record titles for examples of some of these recent top jazz labels' choicest releases to delve into more:

10 Storyville (Denmark)

Usually a bit too ''trad'' for us, these incredibly jazz versed and erudite Danes at the label nevertheless. But we have warmed to Storyville a lot particularly since 2022's stunning Michel Petrucciani Solo in Denmark archival release. But formidably in 2024 GINMAN, BLACHMAN, DAHL'S WHAT'S TO COME took our admiration a step further. A record we played almost to death earlier in the year. And it proves right up our street again revisiting the sheer flow found therein months on.

9 Ozella (Germany)

Blew us away with the latest ODDGEIR BERG TRIO, A PLACE CALLED HOME release as discussed the other day.

8 Challenge (Netherlands)

A very professional outfit - this year they have scored big with the LYNNE ARRIALE TRIO's wondrous BEING HUMAN.

7 Intakt (Switzerland)

Scored mightily with the new David Murray quartet instant classic that is FRANCESCA.

6 Traumton (Germany)

Imaginative A&R and quirky left field wisdom appeals - and THE OLGA REZNICHENKO TRIO'S RHYTHM DISSECTION we appreciated most.

5 Jazz & People (France)

Big band choice from all of these labels this year is this French outfit's DAL SASSO BIG BAND release CHICK COREA'S THREE QUARTETS REVISITED epic reviewed last month.

4 ACT (Germany)

So many releases - it's like The Generation Game conveyor belt. And the strike rate ratio of good 'un to complete turkey in the former's favour is happily pretty high. This year so far we have adored most GRÉGOIRE MARET AND ROMAIN COLLIN'S ENNIO and IIRO RANTALA's TOUGH STUFF.

3 Fresh Sound New Talent (Spain)

So many great new names and a willingness to take a chance on artists just starting out or not that known by anyone other than by their mums and that bearded type with all the tats behind the counter in every vape shop yep it's our homage to Catalonia & RICARDO PINHEIRO'S FINE TONE STORIES as a top choice.

2 Criss Cross Jazz (The Netherlands)

Why? GREGORY GROOVER JR's 5-star LOVABYE that's why. And, just in, fabulous Italian master Antonio Faraò's trio record with Wayne Shorter Quartet bass great John Patitucci and Brad Mehldau paradiddle wrangler Jeff Ballard's TRIBUTES.

Do check out their stunning cover of Chick Now He Sings, Now He Sobs classic 'Matrix' drawn from it for fire starters. Such a storming conflagration of full-on maximalist jazzing all the way through sweeps through.

1 ECM (Germany)

John Surman's WORDS UNSPOKEN is the easy good vibes ECM Olympics year winner. And judging by what we have heard all through now more treasure is in store from the tender live recorded hitherto unreleased new 2004-recorded Stańko Quartet epic September Night and the poetic collaboration between the great English jazz singer Norma Winstone and compatriate pianist Kit Downes who also is famously on the bubbling-under Belgian choice up top where we began.