Reviews of A New Kind Of Wilderness, The Marching Band, Good One and Magic Farm by MARIA DUARTE, ANDY HEDGECOCK and MICHAL BONCZA

The Eastside Jazz Club, Leytonstone, London E11
HERE’s an unlikely venue for some hot jazz: the Leytonstone Ex-Serviceman’s Club, East London.
Up the stairs and it’s a large, comfortable chamber with a lively bar and excellent acoustics. And who were playing tonight? A quartet of Caribbean-rooted luminaries with powerful, liberating sounds, led by saxophonist Vaughan Hawthorne-Nelson, with Stepney-born drummer Mark Mondesir, master pianist Robert Mitchell from just up the Central Line in Gants Hill, and veteran bassist Larry Bartley.
Hawthorne-Nelson’s prowess on alto and soprano saxophones is outstanding. As he opened with his alto’s fleeting, lightning runs on his own tune, Cereal Killer, with Mitchell swinging his keys like a sonic athlete, Bartley walking his bass expertly and Mondesir chomping on his drums, it was soon clear that this was to be a luminous night of music.

CHRIS SEARLE wallows in an evening of high class improvised jazz, and recommends upcoming highlights in May


