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

18656 (and counting) posts since we started blogging 18 years ago. 520 of them this year alone and, so far this month (June 25) 72

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

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.

July

Wed 01: Vieux Carré Hot 4 @ 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: Vieux Carré Hot 4 @ The Millstone, Mill Rise, South Gosforth, Newcastle. 1:00pm. Free.
Thu 02: Paul Skerritt @ Angels' Share, St George's Terrace, Jesmond, Newcastle NE2 2SX. 8:00pm. Free. Booking advised (0191 200 1975). Skerritt w. backing tapes.
Thu 02: De’Sean Jones & Blaque Dynamite feat. Urban Art Orchestra @ Cluny 2, Newcastle. 7:30pm (doors). De’Sean Jones (MD, tenor sax); Blaque Dynamite (Mike Mitchell, drums); Jamie Murray (drums) with UAO horns & strings.
Thu 02: Tees Hot Club @ Dorman’s Club, Middlesbrough. 8:30pm.
Thu 02: Howlin’ Mat @ Newcastle Arts centre. 7:30pm. Free. Acoustic

Fri 03: Classic Swing @ Cullercoats Crescent Club. 1:00pm. Free.
Fri 03: Rendezvous Jazz @ The Monkseaton Arms. 1:00pm. Free.
Fri 03: New Orleans Preservation Jazz Band @ The Oxbridge Hotel, Stockton. 1:00pm. £5.00.
Fri 03: Paul Donnelly Quartet @ Saltburn Community Hall. 7:30pm.
Fri 03: Martin Taylor @ Arc, Stockton. 8:00pm. Taylor (solo guitar).

Sat 04: Spats Langham’s Hot Fingers @ St Augustine’s Parish Centre, Darlington. 12:30pm. £10.00. Darlington New Orleans Jazz Club.
Sat 04: Michael Woods @ Cycle Hub, Quayside, Ouseburn. 1:30-2:30pm & 3:00-4:00pm. Free. Acoustic blues guitar. An Ouseburn Festival event.
Sat 04: Play Jazz! workshop @ The Globe, Newcastle. 1:30pm. £27.50. Tutor: Steve Glendinning. Take the ‘A’ Train to Summertime: From Melody to Masterclass. Enrol at: learning@jazz.coop.
Sat 04: Rendezvous Jazz @ The Red Lion, Earsdon. 8:00pm. £3.00.

Thursday, May 07, 2026

Five-Way Split @ Pizza Express, Soho - April 27

Quentin Collins (trumpet/flugelhorn); Vasilis Xenopoulos (saxes); Rob Barron (piano); Matyas Hofecker (bass); Matt Home (drums)

There’s something about a Monday night at Pizza Express Jazz Club, Soho that always feels like it’s holding something back… like the room knows more than it lets on. You walk down those steps, past the hum of the street, and the world tightens. Sound sharpens. Conversations soften. And then, without fuss, five musicians walk on and remind you why this place still matters.

 

Five-Way Split don’t arrive with ego. They arrive with intent. A collective in the truest sense—no bandleader, no hierarchy, just five voices moving as one. You feel that immediately. Not in what’s said, but in how they listen to each other. Space is shared, not taken.

 

There’s a danger in calling a band a democracy—it can sometimes feel like a soft compromise, a levelling out where edges are dulled and nothing quite catches. That’s not what’s happening here.

 

With Five-Way Split, the democracy is the engine. Any one of them can bring a tune forward for consideration. No hierarchy, no deference, no sense that one voice carries more weight than another. And what that does—what you feel as a listener—is a shift. Your ear stops searching for a focal point in a person and instead finds it in the music itself. The composition becomes the centre of gravity. The conversation becomes the point.

 

You hear it in the way ideas are offered rather than imposed. A melody introduced not as a statement, but as an invitation. A solo that doesn’t push forward to claim space, but opens out to let the others in. It creates this constant state of awareness—five players listening as much as they’re playing. No one stands out… and because of that, everything does.

And then there’s the picture.

 

Because this—this is what people think of when they think of jazz, whether they realise it or not. A room like this, tucked away below the noise, the light just low enough, the air carrying that quiet anticipation. Five sharply dressed musicians, understated but completely assured, stepping into that space at the top of their game. Not performing at it, just existing within it.

Other projects, other directions, everything else they each carry—that’s all put to one side. For this moment, it’s just this. A shared space. A shared intent. And you can feel that commitment in every note. It’s not casual. It’s chosen.

The set unfolds almost conversationally. Stories drift between tunes—Greek mythology, Soho in-jokes, a penchant for expensive brandy, the kind of detail that folds the audience further into the room rather than holding them at arm’s length. It never feels like filler. It feels like part of the music.

A tribute to Wayne Shorter opens things out early on—not in imitation, but in spirit. They introduce the opening piece as one of their own (written by Vasilis Xenopoulos), a song from their first album and a tribute to one of his great heroes following his passing.

 

So rather than covering Footprints or Speak No Evil, they lean into Shorter’s language: that sense of harmonic ambiguity, lines that don’t resolve where you expect, that feeling of searching rather than stating.

That’s why it lands the way it does.

 

It’s not about recognition—it’s about spirit. A 10-minute opener that sets the tone for the whole night, not by looking back, but by absorbing what Shorter represented and letting it filter through their own writing.

 

If anything, it tells you more about the band than playing a standard ever would. a sense of searching, of lines that don’t resolve where you expect them to. You hear it in the writing, in the way the band leans into those ideas rather than trying to contain them.

 

Dr. Stol—that neat inversion of Lots Rd, home to the 606 Club—sits right in that late-night pocket. Cool, unforced, the kind of tune that belongs in a room like this. Glasses paused mid-air, the audience leaning in without realising they’ve done it.

 

The title track, Modus Operandi, reveals itself slowly. Built from a melodic idea that circles and reshapes, it becomes less about destination and more about process. You start to hear the individuality of each player not as something that pulls away from the whole, but as something that strengthens it.

 

XO Blues lowers the temperature completely. All atmosphere. A slow burn that doesn’t rush because it doesn’t need to. It lingers, hangs, lets the room settle into it.

 

And then, without warning, you’re taken somewhere else entirely. Viennese Whirlwind shifts the palette again, like a change in light. You can feel the shift immediately—the band opening the windows, letting something brighter, more expansive flood in. There’s a sense of movement to it, not rushed, but alive… like turning a corner into a city that’s steeped in music at every step.

 

You hear that classical weight in it—not in a heavy-handed way, but in the architecture of the tune, the way it holds itself. It swirls, lifts, then settles just long enough for you to take it in before moving again. And just as you think you’ve found your footing, it begins to dissolve, almost imperceptibly, reshaping itself in real time.

 

What follows feels less like a transition and more like a quiet sleight of hand.

 

Suddenly, you’re somewhere else entirely slipping seamlessly into the world of Henry Mancini, handled with the same sense of restraint and respect for the material.

 

Out of that European elegance emerges the unmistakable shape of Dreamsville, drawn not with words but with tone. And in that moment, the room tightens again. The energy drops, not in intensity, but in weight—everything becoming more intimate, more exposed. In the hands of Quentin Collins, the melody isn’t delivered, it’s revealed. Unhurried, unforced, every note given the space to land exactly where it needs to.

 

It’s that same feeling of stepping from a grand, open boulevard into a quiet, late-night street.

 

I remember walking into Ronnie Scott's Jazz Club for the first time, years ago now, to hear Stacey Kent sing Dreamsville. One of those moments that doesn’t fade, just settles somewhere deeper over time. The kind that becomes part of how you understand this music, this part of London, this whole world that exists just beneath the surface.

 

That tune has stayed with me ever since.

 

So when it appeared here tonight, it didn’t arrive quietly. It carried all of that history with it. All of that weight.

 

But what unfolded wasn’t nostalgia.

 

No words this time. No familiar phrasing to guide you. Just the melody, laid bare. And in that space, it shifted.

In the hands of Quentin Collins, it found something else. Something unforced. The tone sat perfectly—no need to push, no need to decorate. Just breath, line, and that instinctive sense of space. The kind that makes a room lean in without realising it.

 

And you could feel it happen.

 

It took the tune back to its beginning. Before the associations, before the memory. To that place where someone, somewhere, heard it for the first time. And for a few minutes, so did we.

 

That’s the trick. That’s the art of it.

 

To take something so familiar and make it feel like it’s just arrived.

Still beautiful—of course it is. That never leaves. But here it felt more immediate. More present. Not tied to what it was, but fully alive in what it had become.

 

From there, the set continues to open out. Soho Soirée feels like a love letter to this pocket of London, full of movement and quiet energy. 

By the time they close, the room has shifted again. The Monday has disappeared. The outside world feels further away than it should.

And maybe that’s what stays with you most.

 

Not a single standout moment. Not one player rising above the rest. But the collective. The trust. The sense that five musicians, each with their own paths, have chosen—deliberately—to meet in the middle.

 

To put everything else aside and let the music speak.

 

This their second album launch feels like the start of a musical journey, it has that freshness, not one celebrating its sixth birthday.

 

And then, almost reluctantly, you’re climbing back up. That wrought iron staircase, step by step, leaving the underworld behind. The air changes before you even reach the top. You can feel Soho waiting.

 

The door opens and it spills out at you.

 

Dean Street alive again—bars breathing onto the pavement, voices layered over one another, laughter cutting through the night. Music drifting on the breeze, impossible to place—Bossa rhythms tangled up with something rawer, bluesier, something that belongs to the street as much as the stage. It’s messy, vibrant, alive.

You stand there for a second, caught between the two.

 

And as Dean Street gives way to Chinatown, the colours, the noise, the movement—it all folds into itself. Suddenly Soho Soirée isn’t just a tune from the set. It’s here. It’s this. A heady mix of everything the night has been building towards.

 

The room, the music, the street. Glenn Wright

No comments :

Blog Archive