Bebop Spoken There

David Bailey (photographer): ''When I was 16 I wanted to look like Chet Baker. He was my idol - him and James Dean.'' (Talking Pictures documentary : Four beats to the bar and no cheating April, 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

18445 (and counting) posts since we started blogging 18 years ago. 309 of them this year alone and, so far this month (April 20 ) 43,

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

April

Fri 24: Noel Dennis Trio @ The Gala, Durham. 1:00pm. Dennis, Mark Willams, Andy Champion. SOLD OUT!
Fri 24: Classic Swing @ Cullercoats Crescent Club. 1:00pm. Free.
Fri 24: Rendezvous Jazz @ The Monkseaton Arms. 1:00pm. Free.
Fri 24: New Orleans Preservation Jazz Band @ The Oxbridge Hotel, Stockton. 1:00pm. £5.00.
Fri 24: Trio Grand @ Land of Oak & Iron, Winlaton. 6:00-9:00pm. Free.
Fri 24: Ben Vince + The Exu @ Cobalt Studios, Newcastle. 7:00pm (doors). £14.33., £11.16, £8.00. A ‘jazz adjacent’ gig!
Fri 24: Daniel John Martin w. Swing Manouche @ The Ship Isis, Sunderland. 7:30pm. £13.20 (inc. bf).

Sat 25: Giles Strong Quartet @ Hindmarsh Hall, Alnmouth. 7:30pm. CANCELLED!
Sat 25: Daniel John Martin w. Swing Manouche @ The Old Cinema Launderette, Durham. 7:30pm (7:00pm doors). £13.20 (inc. bf).
Sat 25: ‘Portrait in Evans’: Noa Levy & Alan Barnes w. Paul Edis Trio @ The Glasshouse, Gateshead. 8:00pm. £24.00. Sage Two. ‘Portrait in Evans’. Levy, Barnes, Edis, Andy Champion & Steve Hanley.

Sun 26: Musicians Unlimited: Big Band Blast @ West Hartlepool RFC. 1:00-3:00pm . Free.
Sun 26: Daniel John Martin w. Swing Manouche @ Central Bar, Gateshead. 2:00pm. £10.00.
Sun 26: More Jam @ The Globe, Newcastle. 2:00pm. Free.
Sun 26: Ruth Lambert Trio @ Juke Shed, North Shields. 3:00pm. Free.
Sun 26: Ni Maxine + Nauta @ Cobalt Studios, Newcastle. 7:00pm. £17.51., £14.33., £11.16.
Sun 26: Joe Steels @ The Pele, Corbridge. 7:00pm. Free (donations direct to the musicians). Joe Steels & Friends.
Sun 26: C.A.L.I.E @ The Globe, Newcastle. 8:00pm. £16.00., £14.00., £7.00.

Mon 27: Friends of Jazz @ Cullercoats Crescent Club. 1:00pm. Free.
Mon 27: House of Blues @ the Globe, Newcastle. 7:00pm. £7.00., £5.00. advance. A student-led jazz session. ‘House of Blues’ is, perhaps, a misnomer.
Mon 27: Littlewood Trio @ Cluny 2, Newcastle. 7:30pm (doors). £10.00 + bf, £7.00. + bf.

Tue 28: Long/Remon/Zilker @ The Black Swan, Newcastle. 7:30pm. Free. Tom Remon plays Irish folk!

Wed 29: Vieux Carré Jazzmen @ Cullercoats Crescent Club. 1:00pm. Free.
Wed 29: Darlington Big Band @ Darlington & Simpson Rolling Mills Social Club, Darlington. 7:00pm. Free. Rehearsal session (open to the public).
Wed 29: Long/Remon/Zilker @ The Ship Isis, Sunderland. 7:00pm. £10.00. + £1.00. bf. Tom Remon plays Irish folk!
Wed 29: Take it to the Bridge @ The Globe, Newcastle. 7:30pm. Free.
Wed 29: Hackney Colliery Band @ Alnwick Playhouse. 7:30pm. £25.00.

Thu 30: Jazz Appreciation North East @ Brunswick Methodist Church, Newcastle NE1 7BJ. 2:00pm. £5.00. Subject: International Jazz Day & JANE AGM.
Thu 30: Duke Junction @ The Globe, Newcastle. 8:00pm. £14.00., £12.00., £7.00. Nadim Teimoori (tenor sax); Jeff Hewer (guitar); Martin Longhawn (organ); Steve Hanley (drums). An International Jazz Day event & the 12th anniversary of Newcastle Jazz Co-op acquiring the Globe!

Sunday, February 01, 2026

Album review: Tina Carr - Moon Over Mildmay

Tina Carr (vocals); Matt Robinson (piano, M.D.); Aanu Sodipe (violin); Miguel Gorodi (trumpet); Kieran McLeod (trombone); Sam Newbould (alto sax); Tom Ollendorf (guitar); Oli Hayhurst (bass); Rob Oughton (drums)

Every so often, an album arrives that feels less like a release and more like a quiet revelation. Moon Over Mildmay is exactly that - a record that sidles into your life with the intimacy of a late-night conversation and leaves you wondering how this voice has been hiding in plain sight.

Carr has been steadily shaping a reputation across London’s jazz rooms - Hoxton Hall, Vortex Jazz Club, the usual haunts - but here she steps fully into her own light. There’s a confidence, a clarity, a sense of artistic selfhood that places her among the great storytellers: the honesty of Carmen McRae, Liane Carroll’s fearless emotional openness, June Christy’s cool-school understatement, Annie Ross’s quicksilver lyricism, even the occasional flash of Betty Carter’s elastic phrasing when she stretches time to breaking point.

But let’s be clear - Tina Carr isn’t imitating anyone. Her vocal signature is immediate: warm, smoky, conversational, with that slight ache of vulnerability that invites you in rather than holding you at a distance.

From the first bars, the album glows with a delicious after-hours atmosphere - shaped in no small part by Miguel Gorodi’s trumpet, which lends the whole record a candlelit, late-set shimmer. The band is a dream: Matt Robinson’s piano is spacious and elegant, Tom Ollendorff’s guitar lines drift like shards of moonlight, and Oli Hayhurst grounds everything with quietly authoritative bass. It’s the kind of ensemble that breathes as one.

There’s also some beautifully judged playing from the wider cast. Kieran McLeod’s trombone brings a burnished, late-night warmth to the arrangements - never showy, always shaping the emotional contour of a tune with that soft, sighing tone he does so well. Sam Newbold’s alto sax threads in and out of Carr’s vocals like a second narrator, conversational and lyrical without ever overstating its presence. Rod Oughton’s drumming is a study in intuition - brushwork that seems to think alongside the singer, cymbal colours that hang in the air just long enough to deepen a mood. And Matt Robinson, handling both piano and musical direction, is the quiet architect of the album’s sound world: spacious, patient, unhurried, giving every melody the room it needs to bloom. 

And then there’s Aanu Sodipe’s violin, which brings an entirely different kind of magic. It doesn’t ground you in north London at all; instead, it feels as though you’ve been lifted and set down somewhere near Montmartre - that same romantic melancholy, the suggestion of cobblestones at dusk, windows glowing above narrow streets. Carr’s lines float over the ensemble like half-remembered dreams, adding a distinctly cinematic sweep to a record already steeped in moonlight and meaning - and in particular on the title track, Moon Over Mildmay, Carr’s original lyric, set to David Raksin’s Love Song from Apache, is a standout: the sort of tune that feels as though it has always existed, waiting quietly for her to claim it in this configuration.

The Crazy Woman, adapted from the Gwendolyn Brooks poem, is delivered with equal parts sensitivity and bite, Carr shaping the text with an actor’s instinct for subtext. And Ouve o Silêncio - reimagined from Cláudio Santoro’s classical prelude - is simply exquisite, Carr replacing the later-added lyrics with her own and singing it as though the piece had always been destined to carry her words.

Another quiet triumph of the album is the way it bristles with compositions and standards by Mercer, Bernstein, Rodgers, and Strayhorn - heavyweights in their respective corners of the tradition - yet Carr and the band make them feel utterly lived-in. These classics don’t sit beside her self-penned lyrics; they’re woven through them, in dialogue with them. The old and the new, the canon and the personal, each illuminating the other. It’s a delicate balance, and Carr handles it with remarkable poise: nothing feels reverential, nothing feels forced. Instead, the album becomes a kind of musical conversation across decades, styles, and sensibilities - a reminder that the jazz songbook is a living thing, not a museum exhibit.

What binds the album together is truth - her truth. When Carr describes this as a personal record about “otherness… where I am, who I’ve been… trying to find meaning and beauty,” you hear every shard of that journey in the music. There’s no front, no gloss, no theatrical armour. Just a woman rediscovering her love of singing and quietly allowing us to witness it.

Moon Over Mildmay is that rare thing: an album that honours the jazz tradition without ever being constrained by it. Classic yet contemporary, refined yet profoundly human. Even at this early point in the year, could it be a contender for vocal jazz album of 2026.

Tina Carr celebrates the launch at The Mildmay Club on 18 February 2026. If this album is anything to go by, it’s going to be a cracking night. Glenn Wright

1 comment :

Laurence said...

So great to read this rave review, I am sure the whole concert will be brilliant!

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