Jonny Mansfield (vibes); Dominic Ingham (violin); Midori Jaeger (cello); Will Sach (bass); James Maddren (drums)
Kenny Wheeler Jazz Prize winner and Ivor Novello nominee Jonny Mansfield is critically regarded as one of the UK’s most original compositional voices in jazz. Since signing to Edition Records for his acclaimed 2019 debut Elftet — a record widely described as “Mercury-worthy” for its inventive large-ensemble writing — Mansfield’s trajectory has been one of refinement and depth. His follow-up, The Air in Front of You (Resonant Postcards), was praised for its introspective lyricism and the close-knit interplay of his chamber-like quintet.
Now, with
Light Finds A Way In, Mansfield returns to that same ensemble to further explore the delicate intersection between composition and improvisation.
The album takes its title and thematic spark from Mieko Kawakami’s short story Wisteria, in which the Wisteria, lying in a darkened room, gradually perceives light seeping through even the smallest of openings observing the passage of time and impermanence through light itself, something Kawakami often uses as a metaphor for awareness, memory, and the slow fading of life.
The stillness of the scene echoes Japanese aesthetics like mono no aware (the beauty of transience): Wisteria’s quiet observation of light becomes a way of meditating on everything that has slipped away — friendship, youth, love, and purpose. Mansfield invites the listener to enter a similar space: one of stillness, attentiveness, and gentle observation.
The listening experience is intentionally contemplative. By sitting in a quiet room, eyes closed, the subtle interplay of strings, vibraphone, bass, and drums becomes palpable. The music unfolds gradually, revealing textures and harmonies that might otherwise go unnoticed — moments of light emerging organically from silence. This immersive approach echoes Kawakami’s meditation, turning listening into an act of patience and awareness.
Tracks such as Semantic via Somatic, Gari, and the forthcoming single Both demonstrate Mansfield’s gift for balancing lyrical composition with improvisational freedom. Ingham’s violin and Jaeger’s cello weave through the resonant tones of Mansfield’s vibraphone, while Maddren and Sach provide a subtle rhythmic foundation. Every gesture, every harmonic shift, is given space to resonate fully, rewarding careful and repeated listening.
The album’s mixing and mastering by Alex Bonney captures these nuances with clarity and warmth, ensuring that the listener experiences the music as a living, breathing environment. In this sense, Light Finds A Way In is not merely an album but a space — a room in which to sit, reflect, and let the music reveal itself gradually, just as Wisteria experiences the quiet emergence of light.
In transforming introspection into shared experience, Mansfield confirms his status as one of British jazz’s most distinctive voices. Like the light in Wisteria, the music finds its way in — quietly persistent, luminous, and deeply human.
A contemplative, radiant work that turns listening into an immersive, reflective experience. Glenn Wright
Album available Nov. 26
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