Bebop Spoken There

Ludovic Beier (Django Festival Allstars): ''Manouche means 'free man,' and gypsies have been travelers since they migrated west from India to Europe.'' (DownBeat March, 2026)

The Things They Say!

This is a good opportunity to say thanks to BSH for their support of the jazz scene in the North East (and beyond) - it's no exaggeration to say that if it wasn't for them many, many fine musicians, bands and projects across a huge cross section of jazz wouldn't be getting reviewed at all, because we're in the "desolate"(!) North. (M & SSBB on F/book 23/12/24)

Postage

18383 (and counting) posts since we started blogging 18 years ago. 247 of them this year alone and, so far this month (Mar. 17 ), 57

Reviewers wanted

Whilst BSH attempts to cover as many gigs, festivals and albums as possible, to make the site even more comprehensive we need more 'boots on the ground' to cover the albums seeking review - a large percentage of which never get heard - report on gigs or just to air your views on anything jazz related. Interested? then please get in touch. Contact details are on the blog. Look forward to hearing from you. Lance

From This Moment On

March

Mon 30: Gerry Richardson Quartet @ Yamaha Music School, Blyth. 1:00pm.
Mon 30: Friends of Jazz @ Cullercoats Crescent Club. 1:00pm. Free.

Tue 31: Bede Trio @ The Black Swan, Newcastle. 7:30pm. Free. Albert Hills Wright (alto sax); Finn Carter (piano); Michael Dunlop (double bass).

April

Wed 01: Vieux Carré Jazzmen @ Cullercoats Crescent Club. 1:00pm. Free.
Wed 01: Darlington Big Band @ Darlington & Simpson Rolling Mills Social Club, Darlington. 7:00pm. Free. Rehearsal session (open to the public).
Wed 01: Take it to the Bridge @ The Globe, Newcastle. 7:30pm. Free.

Thu 02: Jazz Appreciation North East @ Brunswick Methodist Church, Newcastle NE1 7BJ. 2:00pm. £5.00. Subject: Musicians playing classical & orchestral music.
Thu 02: The Noel Dennis Band @ Prohibition Bar, Albert Road, Middlesbrough TS1 2RU. 7:00pm (doors). £10.84. Quartet plus special guest Zoë Gilby. Over 21s only.
Thu 02: Renegade Brass Band @ The Cluny, Newcastle. 7:30pm (doors).
Thu 02: Shalala @ The Globe, Newcastle. 8:00pm. £7.00. adv..
Thu 02: Tees Hot Club @ Dorman’s Club, Middlesbrough. 8:30pm.

Tuesday, March 04, 2025

Album review: Thomas Backman – Nothing (Modern Musik)

Thomas Backman (alto & baritone saxophones, clarinet, bass clarinet, flute, synthesiser); Josefine Lindstrand (lead vocals, backing vocals, grand piano); Cecilia Linné (cello); David Lindvall (electric bass, synthesisers, guitar); Martin Ohman (drums, drum machines, electronics) Eze Jackson (rap); Tomas Ebrelius (violins, viola); Magnus Wikland (trombone); Lena Swanberg, Anton Forsberg, Jokob Sollevi, Josefine Lindstrand (choir)

If you’ve been searching for the missing link between rap, sprechsang, muscular European free jazz and Nancy Sinatra singing You Only Live Twice congratulations, you’ve found it in Thomas Backman’s new album. To say that it demands attention is the understatement of 2025; there’s a lot packed into a short space of time. An internet search reveals terms such as ”crime jazz” and ”slow burn yearning widescreen chamber pop”, artpop and hip-hop, shoegaze and free jazz all applied to Thomas Backman’s work. With a menu like that, the question has to be whether it is possible to present beauty, elegance and brutality within a single coherent album?  

A sawing cello, scratching drums and occasional dropping bombs open I Shall But Drink the More, a reading of Emily Dickinson’s I Taste a Liquor Never Brewed, the first 3 verses of which are delivered as a rap by Eze Jackson over a late period Tom Waits junkyard deconstruction backing. We suddenly move to something more angelic for the third verse sung by Lindstrand and friends before we switch back to a scene of drunken revelry with Jackson in staggering pomp as the master of the revels. Succinctly, the Bandcamp page for the piece describes it as “rap/spoken word/orchestral/jazz/whatever.” I wonder if Backman debated whether he should swing between the two extremes in one song or if the idea of the song structure arrived fully formed in one thought. Second track, Scherzo Demoniac, is as you would expect, Devo producing the soundtrack to a seventies Eastern European horror film. Cellos provide the context for Backman’s flying sax with the momentum forced and maintained by pummelling drums and discordant cymbal cracks and crashes.

Har vi Lämnat is contrast again as Lindstrom’s vocals float over increasingly discordant strings and those pummelling drums again. What starts as an ethereal ECM type piece, all bleak winter landscapes veers into rage and then ebbs again to its becalmed opening mood. For Nothing Backman stitches together threads of voice strings and reeds and a bubbling bass to hold it all together. A clarinet solo is comforting in its relative mainstream familiarity compared with what has gone before. 

State of Day sees us still becalmed; a clarinet and strings float over a simple chordal piano motif. It’s a stately, balletic moment for low light and a single dancer. After Threads floats out of the darkness and away, closer, These Cowards, is a more solid construction. Harking back to the heft of the opening tracks, it opens with a scene setting bass line, sparse rattling drums and those floating voices but about two and a half minutes in Backman puts boots on the ground with a bold, robust baritone solo that changes the complexion of the tune completely. The volume of the rest of the musicians rises up to challenge. It’s not as discomforting as the opening tracks but it still stands out after the gentler tunes in the central parts of the album. Backman then chooses to subvert it all again with a closing, driving section of Kraftwerk-ian machine music to accompany his closing sax solo, through which Eze Jackson struggles to make his voice heard.

This is a fascinating, witty, defiant album. Its parts, separately, take the listener in all sorts of different directions, but that means that no single identity emerges but, ultimately, it’s less than the sum of those aforementioned parts. Dave Sayer

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