Posts Tagged ‘Digbeth’

Trio VD at Jazz Club February 2010

trio-vd-by-russ-escritt

The latest in our series of podcasts of Jazz Club gigs is from Trio VD. As ever one track is here and the entire gig is on our Downloads page.

Continuing with our loosely themed bands with a rock influence series at Jazz Club, we had the mighty Trio VD in February 2010. The force of the band was something to behold; the sheer volume of air moved by the P.A. a statement of intent. Superb musicianship and excellent writing made this one of the most memorable Jazz Club gigs for some time.

 Trio VD

Birmingham Jazz at St Patrick’s Festival Parade

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Aaron Diaz and the Rustin Brass Band
Sunday 14th March
St Patricks Parade
Camp Hill to Digbeth

Birmingham jazz are proud to announce their involvement in the city’s biggest community event – the St Patrick’s Parade on Sunday 14th March.  Always an impressive spectacle this year’s event looks bigger and better than ever .Joining over 15 traditional marching pipe and drum bands, 2 samba bands and the Dhol Blasters  will be  marching jazz band the Rustin Brass Band. Led by Aaron Diaz the Rustin Brass Band will be performing  their own dixie/irish fusion as they march the parade route and finish with an impromptu performance outside The Rainbow pub.  Highly recommended  and it’s all FREE!

For more information go to: www.stpatricksbirmingham.com

Jonathan Bratoeff Quartet

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Wednesday 26th May
Jazz Club @ The Rainbow, Digbeth
9pm
£4

A great band featuring F-Ire collective’s Bratoeff on guitar , Mark Hanslip on tenor sax, Tom Mason on bass and James Maddren on drums.

Led Bib

Led Bib

Wednesday 27th January
Jazz Club @ The Rainbow, Digbeth
9pm
£4

With a Mercury Music Prize nomination under their belt for their latest release Sensible Shoes this band really is firing on all cylinders for their return to Jazz Club. The band are not just some Johnny-come-latelies however, their Mercury nomination was for their fourth album. Add to that extensive touring around the UK, and you get a band which are sounding tighter and more mature than ever before. Their sound owes as much to rock as it does to jazz, and is “like a hot chainsaw through butter” (The Wire). We can’t wait!

Listen to Led Bib on Spotify:

The cast may change but the story continues…

(photograph by Russ Escritt)

Thanks to everyone who came down to Jazz Club at The Rainbow last wednesday for the invigorating performance by The Sub Ensemble.  Please have a read of Peter Bacon’s review ( Jazz writer at The Birmingham Post and Birmingham Blogger).

Jazz Club, The Rainbow
26-08-09

Getting the right band together is difficult enough in itself; keeping them together down the years in an uncertain world needs great determination and forbearance. Bassist Chris Mapp is managing just fine with the band that grew out of Sugarbeats, but last night illustrated the ongoing challenge.

It was the last gig for the drummer who has been there from the start, Alan Gardiner. He is sliding south to Brighton, and will, I reckon, be sorely missed. His ability to play a rock solid groove and yet bring light and energy to it as well has always been one of the band’s strong points.

But it was also the first gig with the band for trumpeter Aaron Diaz, and here there is great cause for celebration. Slightly reticent at first (or rather slightly down in the mix due to his softer tone when compared with that of fellow trumpeter Mike Adlington), he quickly started to look and sound at home and  played some of the evening’s strongest solos. The two-trumpet line-up was one of the things I liked most about later incarnations of Sugarbeats, and the chrome brightness it gives to the horn section suits perfectly the shiny vibe of the music.

So, as one door closes another opens, then… and I am sure there are some hot drummers around just longing to lock into the tight rhythm team of Mapp, keyboardist Rob Norman and percussion man Mark Robertson.

And up front? Needless to say Adlington continues to do the business, in his cool, always assured manner, and Colin Mills provides the wild card on baritone. There was one tune last night which paired Mills’ and Mapp’s bass clef instruments that I thought was particularly effective, and points to how Mills might be best used in the future. There is a tendency for his excellent solos to get lost in the mix if they are treated as conventional horn improvs against full rhythm backing (especially if Norman is feeling enthusiastic, as he was last night).

The band played lots of familiar favourites – 22-21, For You, Dual-eyed Entity, Beautiful Spring – and they were all sounding as fine as I have heard them, but the real stand-out of the evening was the band’s reworking of the 4Hero piece Humans. Like the encore, a Dee Dee Bridgewater tune (”done in one of my favourite styles: fast latin!” as Mapp told us), it showed the originality the band can bring to other material (though it must be stressed, Humans, is a near fresh creation compared to the original).

It is this strong and individual band character, and the huge bonus of the tunes former Sub saxophonist Mike Fletcher has bequeathed to them, that ensures them a healthy future. The cast may change but the story continues.

From Peter Bacon’s  Blog : http://thejazzbreakfast.wordpress.com/

www.myspace.com/thesubensemble

Autumn Programme Launch

Birmingham Jazz would like to invite you to a very special free party at our new home in the beautiful Fazeley Studios, Digbeth, Birmingham on Wednesday 16th September at 7.30pm and share with you some great live jazz from the Hans Koller Trio to launch our fantastic Autumn Season 09 Programme.

Please click on www.birminghamjazz.co.uk/autumnprogramme to register your invitation request.

We are delighted to announce that this special event will be sponsored by Barefoot Wine

Barefoot Wine


Sam Wooster Quartet

Wednesday 28th October
Jazz Club @ The Rainbow, Digbeth
9pm
£4

We’re back at The Rainbow for our boundary-stretching series of concerts, Jazz Club. As well as playing host to some more familiar names, Jazz Club has long been a platform for up-and-coming British talent, and this gig is no exception. Sam is a recent graduate of the Conservatoire, and formed this band while studying there. He was fortunate enough to work with trumpeter Cuong Vu when he visited us back in January, and Sam’s music shares a certain affinity with his mentor’s. Jimmy Brewer on Guitar, Tom Sinnett on Bass and Jim Bashford on Drums will be joining Sam in weaving fluid improvisation with textural soundscapes.

Zed-U

ZED-U

Wednesday 25th November
Jazz Club @ The Rainbow, Digbeth
9pm
£4

Zed-U are bass player Neil Charles, Clarinet/Saxophonist Shabaka Hutchings and on this gig, drummer Seb Rochford. A mix of Jazz, Electronica and all points inbetween, their fantastic debut album Night time on the middle passage is well worth checking out.

Listen to Zed-U on Spotify:

“Essential breeding ground for talented musicians”

BBC Midlands Today have reported on the huge public support for the Save The Rainbow Campaign following the Noise Abatement Order issued  to the home of Jazz Club. Click on the link below to see the full report broadcast on BBC Midlands Today.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/8119566.stm

The Destroyers launch their debut single

The fantastic Destroyers are releasing their debut single next week. Out of Babel is a collision of careering Klezmer rhythms and explosive Balkan brass, and features the raw beat poetry alongside an all-consuming and unforgettable chorus. To celebrate this, they will be playing a show at The Rainbow Warehouse in Digbeth on Friday 19th June making this a great opportunity to support not only The Destroyers but this endangered venue.

The launch party will also feature live performances from ska band extraordinaire 360, sets from the award winning Night Times resident DJ Marc Reck plus feel-good beats and breaks from the Home Cookin’ collective.

www.thedestroyers.co.uk
www.myspace.com/thedestroyersplaymusic
www.myspace.com/rainbowevents


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