Top Ten albums 2024.
Ten to Six:
10: Zara McFarlane: Sweet Whispers.
It's a brave performer who takes on the Sarah Vaughan Songbook.It's even braver when you add a non Sarah Vaughan track - in this case Marvin Gaye's 'Inner City Blues' and it's a seamless fit. The album shows off McFarlane's voice to its true extent, but she's never overwhelmed by a quartet of empathetic players, with added inputs on selected tracks from Giacomo Smith on reeds, a stell pan player and a cellist on two tracks. It's such a refreshing change to have vocals mixed well forward on such an uncluttered sounding album.
9: Nigel Price & Aban Claret: Entente Cordiale.
In terms of album production Nigel Price has certainly been prolific over the last few years. Mainly it's been organ and sax led ensembles, but this features two 'lead' guiar players, both at the top of thier game set in a quartet format. The programming is eclectic, from Horace Silver to Bill Evans and Ira Gershwin to Woody Shaw. The playing throughout is ..er..joyous, and it sounds as though the group had a great time recording it . Highly recommended.
8. Thokozile Collective: Thokozile Collective.
This floated in, in the middle of the year. I played a track and thought 'That's quite interesting', a sextet that seem to embrace the joy of playing together and introducing a definite township jazz feel to what they did. Over the next few weeks I played different tracks and realised just how satisfying this is. All I have to go on are the sleeve notes, which give individual details about each track, it's origins and the suggestions that they might have been playing together in some form, for a number of years. I wish I'd kept the accompanying press release!
7. Emmet Cohen: Vibe Provider.
He regularly crops up on social media sitting in with various jazz luminaries, and obviosly having a blast playing the piano with them. The styles are eclectic, but then so is this album. The trio are augmented on various tracks by sax, trumpet and trombone, but it's definitely Cohen's piano playing that is center stage. He turns 'Surrey with the fringe on top' into something that Rogers and Hammerstein might not recognise, but all the tracks are a imbued with his own trademark.
6. The Jazz Defenders: Memory in motion.
One of the best gigs I went to this year was the Jazz Defenders at our home base in The Phoenix in Exeter. The bands sound has benefitted from a change in personnel which had brought in Ian Mattews (sometime Kasabian drummer) and Jake McMurchie on Sax. Collectively they beefed up the sound of the band, with the album displaying an improved intensity on both the previous ones. A lot of the credit must go to keyboard player George Cooper - nominally frontman - whose writing has improved over the space of three albums, and has become better at banter between songs. A good record, and it'll be interesting to see what they record in 2025.
Next week: Five to one, the best label award and a couple that didn't make the list, but deserved to!
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