Bebop Spoken There

Christian McBride: ''We knew back in the day that Emmet [Cohen] had it.'' (DownBeat July, 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

July

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: Castillo Nuevo Trio @ Revoluçion de Cuba, Newcastle. 5:30pm. Free.
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: Strictly Smokin’ quintet + House of the Black Gardenia @ Sunset Festival, Transmission Dynamics, Cramlington. 5:00-9:30pm. Free. Tickets: Eventbrite. Multi-bill.
Sat 04: Tweed River Jazz Band @ Repas 7 by Night, Berwick. 8:00pm. Free.
Sat 04: Rendezvous Jazz @ The Red Lion, Earsdon. 8:00pm. £3.00.

Sun 05: Smokin’ Spitfires @ The Cluny, Newcastle. 12:45pm. £10.00.
Sun 05: Ian Bosworth Quintet @ Chapel, Middlesbrough. 1:00pm. Free. Feat. guest Kevin Eland (trumpet).
Sun 05: Michael Woods @ Cycle Hub, Quayside, Ouseburn. 1:30-2:30pm & 3:15-4:00pm. Free. Acoustic blues guitar. An Ouseburn Festival event.
Sun 05: Lydia Rae Quintet @ Central Bar, Gateshead. 2:00pm. £10.00. Rae (vocals); Sam Lightwing (alto sax, tenor sax); Ben Lawrence (piano); Andy Champion (double bass); John Bradford (drums).
Sun 05: Sax Choir @ The Globe, Newcastle. 2:00pm. Free.
Sun 05: Paul Skerritt @ Hibou Blanc, Newcastle. 2:00pm. Free. Table reservations (0191 261 8000). Skerritt w. backing tapes.
Sun 05: Storytellers Street Band @ Ouseburn Woodland, Ouseburn. 5:00-6:00pm. Free. An Ouseburn Festival event.
Sun 05: Gerry Richardson’s Big Idea @ The Globe, Newcastle. 8:00pm.
Sun 05: Jambone @ Glasshouse, Gateshead. 8:15-9:45pm. Free but ticketed.

Mon 06: Friends of Jazz @ Cullercoats Crescent Club. 1:00pm. Free.
Mon 06: Saltburn Big Band @ Saltburn House Hotel. 7:00-9:00pm. Free. Rehearsal session (open to the public).

Tue 07: Alan Law Trio @ The Ticket Office, Whitley Bay. 2:30pm. Free.
Tue 07: Jam session @ The Black Swan, Newcastle. 7:30pm. Free. House trio: Ben Lawrence (piano); Paul Grainger (double bass); John Bradford (drums).
Tue 07: Customs House Big Band @ The Masonic Hall, Ferryhill. 7:30pm. Free.

Wed 08: Vieux Carré Hot 4 @ Cullercoats Crescent Club. 1:00pm. Free.
Wed 08: Darlington Big Band @ Darlington & Simpson Rolling Mills Social Club, Darlington. 7:00pm. Free. Rehearsal session (open to the public).
Wed 08: Take it to the Bridge @ The Globe, Newcastle. 7:30pm. Free.
Wed 08: Sax on the Tyne @ St George’s Church, Jesmond, Newcastle. 7:30pm. £8.00. Feat. Sax on the Tyne & St George’s Community Choir.
Wed 08: Abbie Finn Trio @ Elder Beer, Heaton, Newcastle. 8:00pm. £12.00. JNE.

Thu 09: Vieux Carré Hot 4 @ The Millstone, Mill Rise, South Gosforth, Newcastle. 1:00pm. Free.
Thu 09: Jazz Appreciation North East @ Brunswick Methodist Church, Newcastle NE1 7BJ. 2:00pm. £5.00.
Thu 09: Paul Skerritt @ Angels' Share, St George's Terrace, Jesmond, Newcastle NE2 2SX. 8:00pm. Free. Booking advised (0191 200 1975). Skerritt w. backing tapes.

Friday, June 26, 2026

Album Review: Knats – A Great Day in Newcastle (Gearbox)

Cooper Robson (vocals); Stanley Elvis Woodward/King David Ike-Elechi/Ferg Kilsby (vocals) (track 9); Stanley Elvis Woodward (bass guitar/synths); King David Ike-Elechi (drums/percussion); Ferg Kilsby (Trumpet, flugelhorn); Sandro Shargarodsky (piano, keyboards, synthesiser); George Johnson (tenor saxophone); Otto Kampa (alto saxophone); Tom Ford (guitar); Geordie Greep (guitar) (tracks 4 and 7); Josh Mitchell-Rayner (piano) (track 1); Viviane Ghiglino (flute) (track 1); Lucy Rowan (alto flute) (track 1); Frank Barr (clarinet) (track 1); Sebastian Barley (French horn) (track 1); Tobias Amadio (trumpet) (track 1); Bertie Beaman (trombone) (track 1); Dillon Pinder (trombone) (track 9); Enya Barber (violin); Congling Wu (violin); Natalia Solis Paredes (viola); Morgan Key (cello)

There’s a wonderful Northern defiance that runs through much of this album like a steel rod. It’s two fingers up to the South and advice to tell them that they can stick their ingrained entitlement and belief in their superiority where the sun don’t shine. (Ironic suggestion, I know, in the middle of a heatwave).

It ranges from big boots on the ground, declaimed poetry, through rapid-fire punk rock to jazz-rock, some blues-soul and an occasional sweeping elegance that all holds together because these are all constituent parts of their portrait of the North. Heresy, I know, but it reminds me of Ezra Collective in the way that Knats have incorporated their roots into the music, meanwhile, the imagery in Cooper Robson’s poems add enormous strength to anchoring the group into the local soil.

Opener, 7 Bridges To Burn is one of Robson’s poems over bold, beautifully arranged, sweeping strings and warm brass and woodwinds. Images from local geography and 200 years of social and political history and of sporting life emerge from the gentle music. The tight focus on one broken character moves to the hopes and dreams of a new generation with “7 bridges to burn” which in turn soars over a historical sweep from “Romans… to Roundheads to Reivers,…Ship workers to Shearer…Pit ponies turned coal dolies” with equal contempt for Thatcher and Ashley. It’s all of Kynren in 40 lines and is quite an achievement.

Gainsborough Grove/Wor Jackie follows. The Grove in question sounds posher than it is, as it’s up Arthur’s Hill in Fenham. Brass fired prog that flows into pure soul and back out again via a rich voiced tenor and into a spiralling bass solo with simple themes that rise above the proggy breakdown. Wor Jackie is a paean to those men physically broken by heavy industry and the pits with ferocious screams and wailing souls; it’s violent and dramatic. Lyrically, it’s a second cousin to Elvis Costello’s Shipbuilding from the time of the Falklands War. Messy-In is more chilled and reflective to open with a complex bassline decorated with electric piano and a lovely trumpet solo before the pure 70s soulful jazz funk of Azure Blues; all grooves with a furious, expansive bass solo, insistent drums, pulsing piano and it all seems to hang off a single chiming cowbell. It’s one for white suits on the Tuxedo Princess and is to be played loud. It closes with a gentle, reflective, early dawn, mellow, home stretch.

Bigg Market Scrappa is all angles and punches in the music to capture the lyrical sketch of the aforementioned Scrappa who ends with his “Head spinning like the donner in the window pane.” Carpet Doctor opens as a story blues, its subtlety undermined by a driving pulsing bass line before it explodes into something bolder. The Doctor of the title is another ex-prisoner trying to make his way in the world in the face of general mistrust. He’s carried along by music that is equal parts jazz and splenetic punk rock fury that reminded me of The Ruts, more than any others, with a scything guitar struggling to rise above the melee. There is defiance in the lyric as the man struggles his way through, but he is, he states “not the caterpillar, I am the butterfly” though the sheer heft of the music does serve to undermine the delicacy of the butterfly metaphor as a furious musical pile on forces the voice forward just to be heard. Never Gonna Be A Boxer is a nice piece of solid rolling jazz funk with soaring brass, some 70s squelching synth and a probing bass, all sharp turns and minor excursions around the main theme, a groove that really digs in.

There is melancholy aplenty in closing lament, Farewell Johnny Miner, which features Kilsby’s excellent trumpet playing as part of a rich, rounded, full voiced arrangement. For those of us who are old enough, it’s another reminder of the Miners’ Strike of the mid 80s and the opportunity to consider whether to get our hopes up as the King of The North waits to be crowned. I suspect that many of us are thinking NOT.

The question has been raised of whether this very North East centric music will travel and I hope that it will. The voice and the words are stridently defiant but far from incomprehensible and, it’s just a small revenge for having to put up with Chas & Dave in the 70s. More importantly, it’s a musically and lyrically powerful album, made with passion and commitment, defiantly and, more importantly, proudly, northern.

Dave Sayer

1 comment :

Chris Kilsby said...

A very perceptive and thoughtful review, as ever. review. Thanks Dave.

Your comparison of "Shipbuilding" (presumably with "Farewell Johnny Miner") hadn't occurred to me but is very apt and not only from a socio-political standpoint. Although I like the Robert Wyatt ( ex Softs drummer) version best, the Elvis Costello version does of course have the famous Chet Baker trumpet cameo. More history for the boys to assimilate?

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