Bebop Spoken There

Melissa Aldana: ''Having to play a ballads album, which is something very revealing for a saxophone player, would help me to question some new aspects of how to go deeper into sound." (DownBeat May, 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

18621 (and counting) posts since we started blogging 18 years ago. 485 of them this year alone and, so far this month (June 14) 37

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

June

Wed 24: Vieux Carré Hot 4 @ Cullercoats Crescent Club. 1:00pm. Free.
Wed 24: Darlington Big Band @ Darlington & Simpson Rolling Mills Social Club, Darlington. 7:00pm. Free. Rehearsal session (open to the public).
Wed 24: Take it to the Bridge @ The Globe, Newcastle. 7:30pm. Free.

Thu 25: Vieux Carré Hot 4 @ The Millstone, Mill Rise, South Gosforth, Newcastle. 1:00pm. Free.
Thu 25: Jazz Appreciation North East @ Brunswick Methodist Church, Newcastle NE1 7BJ. 2:00pm. £5.00. Subject: Forgotten Ones & Any Quintets.
Thu 25: Edgar Ho Trio @ Newcastle Arts Centre. 7:30pm. Free. Brilliant alto sax, piano & double bass trio. Unmissable!
Thu 25: Paul Skerritt @ Angels' Share, St George's Terrace, Jesmond, Newcastle NE2 2SX. 8:00pm. Free. Booking advised (0191 200 1975). Skerritt w. backing tapes.

Fri 26: Finn-Keeble Group @ The Gala, Durham. 1:00pm. £9:00.
Fri 26: Classic Swing @ Cullercoats Crescent Club. 1:00pm. Free.
Fri 26: Rendezvous Jazz @ The Monkseaton Arms. 1:00pm. Free.
Fri 26: New Orleans Preservation Jazz Band @ The Oxbridge Hotel, Stockton. 1:00pm. £5.00.
Fri 26: Clark Tracey @ Live Theatre, Newcastle. 7:30pm. Newcastle Jazz Festival. £26.00. Day 1/2.

Sat 27: OUTRI @ Live Theatre, Newcastle. 1:00pm. £13.01. 1:00-1:45pm. Newcastle Jazz Festival. Day 2/2.
Sat 27: Tees Bay Swing Band @ Richardson & Westgarth Sport & Social Club, Hartlepool. 1:30pm. Free. Open rehearsal. Note change of venue.
Sat 27: House of the Black Gardenia + Magpies of Swing @ The Cumberland Arms, Newcastle. 2:00pm. Free.
Sat 27: Mark Toomey Quartet @ Live Theatre, Newcastle. 2:15-3:15pm. £13.01. Newcastle Jazz Festival. Day 2/2.
Sat 27: Alexia Gardner Quintet @ Live Theatre, Newcastle. 3:45-4:45pm. £13.01. Newcastle Jazz Festival. Day 2/2.
Sat 27: Rory Ingham @ Live Theatre, Newcastle. 5:30-6:30pm. £19.51. Newcastle Jazz Festival. Day 2/2. Ingham w. Dean Stockdale, Ian Paterson, Dave McKeague.
Sat 27: Castillo Nuevo Trio @ Revoluçion de Cuba, Newcastle. 5:30pm. Free.
Sat 27: Laura Jurd @ Live Theatre, Newcastle. 8:00pm. £26.00. Newcastle Jazz Festival. Day 2/2. Sat 27: Brass Fiesta @ Revoluçion de Cuba, Newcastle. 10:30pm. Free.

Sun 28: Musicians Unlimited: Big Band Blast @ West Hartlepool RFC. 1:00-3:00pm . Free.
Sun 28: More Jam @ The Globe, Newcastle. 2:00pm. Free.
Sun 28: Paul Skerritt @ Hibou Blanc, Newcastle. 2:00pm. Free. Table reservations (0191 261 8000). Skerritt w. backing tapes.
Sun 28: Tim Kliphuis Trio @ St Mary’s Church, Wooler. 3:00pm. £18.00., £6.00. A Wooler Arts Summer Concerts event. Tim Kliphuis (violin); Nigel Clark (guitar); Roy Percy (double bass).
Sun 28: Ruth Lambert Trio @ Juke Shed, North Shields. 3:00pm. Free.
Sun 28: 4B @ The Ticket Office, Whitley Bay. 3:00pm. Free.
Sun 28: An Evening of Jazz @ St James’ Church, Copper Chare, Morpeth. 7:30pm. Tickets: £10.00 from 01670 788869 or 01670 519923. Mid Northumberland Chorus (MD Robin Forbes, Emma Straughan, piano) w. jazz trio featuring Edgar Ho, Oscar Ho & Dave McKeague & special guest Emily Masser. Performance inc. Bob Chilcott’s A Little Jazz Mass + George Shearing’s Songs & Sonnets.
Sun 28: Led Bib @ The Globe, Newcastle. 8:00pm. £15.00., £12.00. JNE.

Mon 29: Friends of Jazz @ Cullercoats Crescent Club. 1:00pm. Free.

Tue 30: Alan Law Trio @ The Ticket Office, Whitley Bay. 2:00pm. Free.
Tue 30: Eva Fox & the Sound Hounds @ The Black Swan, Newcastle. 7:30pm. Free.

Monday, May 18, 2026

Album review: De-Phazz - belooped (MPS)

There’s a point somewhere deep into the evening — the last cocktail glasses catching the low light, conversations beginning to dissolve into the room’s soundtrack — where De-Phazz have always made perfect sense. Not in the traditional jazz-club way where audiences sit motionless in reverential silence, but in those beautifully blurred spaces where rhythm, atmosphere and memory seem to move together.

That has always been the magic of De-Phazz.

 And with belooped, that world collides with another equally distinctive one.

Taking the legendary MPS catalogue — recordings tied to the immaculate sound of Hans-Georg Brunner-Schwer and performances by artists like Oscar Peterson, Ella Fitzgerald and George Duke — and threading them through De-Phazz’s unmistakable electro-organic aesthetic could easily have become heavy-handed. Instead, it feels strangely natural, as though these recordings had been waiting patiently for someone to open a different door into them.

What makes belooped work so beautifully is its restraint.

Nothing here feels forced into modernity. The originals are never overwhelmed. Instead, the album moves with a kind of quiet confidence; subtle rhythmic shifts, warmth added underneath familiar melodies, textures that gently pull these recordings towards contemporary listening spaces while leaving their character completely intact.

Wave drifts rather than pushes. Both Sides Now keeps its soft haze intact. This Girl’s In Love with You still revolves entirely around the emotional pull of Ella’s vocal, the production wisely stepping back whenever it needs to. Elsewhere, Feel Like Making Love unfolds with an effortless late-night ease, while Capricorn allows George Duke’s groove to breathe in a completely different light.

And throughout it all, there’s atmosphere everywhere.

This is an album that feels made for movement — city lights reflected in windows, late-night hotel bars, rain on pavements, conversations half-heard over low bass frequencies. De-Phazz have always understood how to make sophistication feel effortless, and belooped continues that tradition beautifully.

It also reminds you why tracks like The Mambo Craze connected so widely in the first place. When it appeared on Buddha-Bar II back in 2000 — mixed by the legendary Claude Challe — it became part of a cultural moment that transformed lounge music from niche after-hours listening into something global. Now, twenty-six years later, those Buddha-Bar compilations feel like the blueprint for an entire strand of sophisticated downtempo culture; records built around jazz textures, world rhythms, electronics and mood rather than genre boundaries. In many ways, they became a breeding ground for exactly the kind of music De-Phazz were making so naturally.

And that connection still hangs over belooped.

The album carries the same sense of cosmopolitan cool that once drifted through those Buddha-Bar compilations — music equally suited to hotel rooftops, dimly lit bars or solitary late-night listening — but now filtered through the warmth and depth of the MPS archive. There’s sophistication here, certainly, but also playfulness and movement. Nothing feels academic. Nothing feels preserved behind glass.

What’s most impressive is that the album never feels like a museum piece dressed in modern clothing. Nor does it chase dance-floor relevance for the sake of it. Instead, it finds a balance between preservation and reinvention that feels genuinely musical.

You can almost imagine these tracks existing in parallel worlds at once; the warmth of analogue tape and living-room recording sessions somehow meeting modern after-hours culture without either side losing its identity.

The closing version of The Continental featuring Malia brings everything together perfectly. Elegant, understated and quietly hypnotic, it carries echoes of the same after-hours sophistication that made The Mambo Craze such a huge crossover moment all those years ago. There’s that same sense of cosmopolitan cool running through it; music that feels equally at home drifting across a hotel rooftop bar, a late-night lounge or the final moments of an evening when the city outside has started to slow. Released now as the album’s lead single, The Continental feels like the perfect doorway into belooped ahead of the full album release on 24 July.

Some records ask for complete silence and concentration.

belooped understands something slightly different: that music can still carry depth and beauty while becoming part of the room itself. The kind of album that slips into the evening unnoticed — and somehow ends up defining it. Glenn Wright

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