Theo Jackson (born 4 January 1986) [1] is an English jazz songwriter, pianist and singer. Jackson has released two albums, Jericho (2012), and Shoeless and the Girl (2015). Jackson has toured the UK, performing at such venues as Pizza Express Jazz Club in Soho and the 606 Club, performed in New Zealand and Germany, and is due to make his American debut in November 2015.
Jackson was born in London and grew up predominantly in Thanet, Kent. [2] He attended Chatham House Grammar School and subsequently Durham University where he read for a BA in Music. [3] In January 2011 Jackson appeared at the 606 Club, London Jazz News wrote that he "leads his band from the piano, with a confidence and assurance that comes from being a true musician, and the trust and knowledge that the other guys on the stand are too" and his "...well-worked solos develop logically, being both thoughtfully-crafted and dexterously-impressive, and above all making sense, without resorting to flashy finger-wiggling". [4] Jackson has also regularly performed at the Pizza Express Jazz Club in Soho.
Jackson independently released his debut album Jericho, in 2012. It was named for the suburb of Oxford where he was living at that time. Jericho was positively reviewed by Bruce Lindsay in All About Jazz who described it as "a welcome creation...the work of a young male vocalist who is steering a route that avoids the well-trodden paths of The Great American Songbook and heads towards a potentially fascinating musical destination". [5]
Later in 2012 Jackson was invited to be a headline act at Manawatu International Jazz & Blues Festival in New Zealand. He performed a solo show and opened the headlining show featuring the jazz saxophonist and composer Bob Mintzer. [6] [7] Whilst in New Zealand Jackson was invited to play live on the morning television show Good Morning on TV One and also gave masterclasses for students at the New Zealand School of Music and Massey University. [8] [9]
In 2013 Jackson's inaugural UK tour saw him appear at numerous notable venues including the Cheltenham Jazz Festival and The Stables. [10] [11] Later in 2013 Jackson was invited to appear twice as part of the London Jazz Festival and also appeared live on BBC Radio London with Simon Lederman. [12] [13] He set a lyric to Scott LaFaro's composition "Gloria's Step", which was published by Concord Music Group. [14]
2014 saw Jackson appear at the Love Supreme Jazz Festival, Cadogan Hall and The Late Night Jazz Series at the Royal Albert Hall. Later in the same year it was announced that Jackson had signed to the American record label Dot Time Records. [15] [16] [17]
In April 2015 Jackson released his second album, Shoeless and the Girl, on Dot Time Records with a launch show at St James Theatre in London. The album featured eight compositions by Jackson alongside two lyrical adaptations of original compositions by saxophonist Wayne Shorter. [18] [19] Reviewing Shoeless and the Girl for All About Jazz, Bruce Lindsay wrote that "Jackson's voice has matured since his debut, gaining resonance and lower-register strength. He's developing into a superb singer, a stylist whose voice communicates with a welcome clarity" and the album was "...an old-fashioned kind of record. That's "old-fashioned" as in melodic, swinging, understated, lyrically engaging—old-fashioned in a really good way." [20]
In May 2015 Jackson was featured at Jazz Ahead in Bremen, Germany, in his European debut. [21] Jackson is due to make his American debut at the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in November 2015. [22]
Akiko Yano is a Japanese pop and jazz musician and singer born in Tokyo and raised in Aomori and later began her singing career in the mid-1970s. She has been called "one of the major musical talents of the Japanese popular music world", and her vocals and singing style have been compared to English singer Kate Bush.
David Ian "Joe" Jackson is an English musician, singer and songwriter. Having spent years studying music and playing clubs, he scored a hit with his first release, "Is She Really Going Out with Him?", in 1979. It was followed by a number of new wave singles, before he moved to more jazz-inflected pop music and had a Top-10 hit in 1982 with "Steppin' Out". Jackson is associated with the 1980s Second British Invasion of the US. He has also composed classical music. He has recorded 21 studio albums and has received five Grammy Award nominations.
Randolph Denard Ornette Coleman was an American jazz saxophonist, trumpeter, violinist, and composer. He is best known as a principal founder of the free jazz genre, a term derived from his 1960 album Free Jazz: A Collective Improvisation. His pioneering works often abandoned the harmony-based composition, tonality, chord changes, and fixed rhythm found in earlier jazz idioms. Instead, Coleman emphasized an experimental approach to improvisation rooted in ensemble playing and blues phrasing. Thom Jurek of AllMusic called him "one of the most beloved and polarizing figures in jazz history," noting that while "now celebrated as a fearless innovator and a genius, he was initially regarded by peers and critics as rebellious, disruptive, and even a fraud."
Norah Jones is an American singer-songwriter and pianist. She has won several awards for her music and, as of 2023, had sold more than 50 million records worldwide. Billboard named her the top jazz artist of the 2000s decade. She has won nine Grammy Awards and was ranked 60th on Billboard magazine's artists of the 2000s decade chart.
This is a list of notable events in music that took place in the year 2004.
Soft Machine are an English rock and jazz band from Canterbury formed in 1966 by Mike Ratledge, Robert Wyatt, Kevin Ayers, Daevid Allen and Larry Nowlin. As a central band of the Canterbury scene, the group became one of the first British psychedelic acts and later moved into progressive and jazz rock, becoming a purely instrumental band in 1971. The band has undergone many line-up changes, with musicians such as Andy Summers, Hugh Hopper, Elton Dean, John Marshall, Karl Jenkins, Roy Babbington and Allan Holdsworth being members during the band's history. The current line-up consists of John Etheridge, Theo Travis, Fred Thelonious Baker and Asaf Sirkis.
Allen Richard Toussaint was an American musician, songwriter, arranger, and record producer. He was an influential figure in New Orleans rhythm and blues from the 1950s to the end of the century, described as "one of popular music's great backroom figures." Many musicians recorded Toussaint's compositions. He was a producer for hundreds of recordings: the best known are "Right Place, Wrong Time", by longtime friend Dr. John, and "Lady Marmalade" by Labelle.
Everything but the Girl are an English musical duo formed in Kingston upon Hull in 1982, consisting of lead singer, songwriter, composer and occasional guitarist Tracey Thorn and guitarist, keyboardist, songwriter, composer, producer and singer Ben Watt. The group's early works have been categorized as sophisti-pop with jazz influences before undergoing an electronic music turn following the worldwide success of the 1994 hit single "Missing", remixed by Todd Terry.
David Irving McAlmont is an English vocalist, essayist and art historian. He came to prominence in the 1990s as a singer, particularly through his collaboration with Bernard Butler. In the 2010s he returned to academia, working with the University of Leicester and the Architectural Association School of Architecture.
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Joey DeFrancesco was an American jazz organist, trumpeter, saxophonist, and occasional singer. He released more than 30 albums under his own name, and recorded extensively as a sideman with such leading jazz performers as trumpeter Miles Davis, saxophonist Houston Person, and guitarist John McLaughlin.
Alexandria "Sandi" Thom is a Scottish singer-songwriter and multi-instrumentalist from Banff, Scotland. She became widely known in 2006 after her debut single, "I Wish I Was a Punk Rocker ", topped the UK Singles Chart in June of that year, as well as in Australia and Ireland. The single became the biggest-selling single of 2006 in Australia, where it spent ten weeks at the top of the ARIA Singles Chart.
Susan Cadogan is a Jamaican reggae singer best known for her hit records in the mid 1970s.
This topic covers notable events and articles related to 2009 in music.
The 1932 Chatham Cup was the tenth annual nationwide knockout football competition in New Zealand.
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