19th September 2011: 4 Star Guardian Review for Alex Garnett’s ‘Serpent’

A rave review from one of the leading UK jazz critics, John Fordham, has appeared in the Guardian for Alex’ Garnett’s debut album ‘Serpent’  Known for rarely giving ‘straight ahead jazz’ albums more than a 3 star rating, Fordham has given Alex Garnett’s album ‘Serpent’  a 4 star rating and a great review to go with it, which is excellent news (not that we don’t think it much deserves it!! :-)).  It’s great to read that Fordham agrees there’s something special about Alex’s playing that sets him apart from the sea of records that come out in his particular style of jazz, that being ‘contemporary straight ahead’.   Here’s the article below:

From the Guardian, SEPT 15, by John Fordham:

Like the late Michael Brecker in the US, British saxophonist Alex Garnett has spent a couple of decades helping other people’s music to sound good (he’s worked with everybody from the Stones to Humphrey Lyttelton) before stepping into the limelight himself. This New York-recorded session of original pieces with a terrific transatlantic quartet not only reflects his vast experience, but reveals a compositional sharpness that makes this new solo career look like a long-term one. The idiom is superficially very familiar – tightly swinging updated hard bop, and soulful tenor-sax balladeering. But Garnett’s combination of a brusque, hard-punched sound has a rare conviction – suggesting early Coltrane, the work of such elegant long-gone hard-boppers as Ronnie Scott and 60s Blue Note sideman Hank Mobley. The themes of uptempo pieces such as the opening Lydia and the Tubby Hayes-like Blueprint are full of exhilarating melodic turns, and smokey ballads such as the languid Three for a Moor and Dracula’s Lullaby take Garnett, pianist Anthony Wonsey and bassist Michael Janisch on constantly absorbing trips. It’s an unexpected gem.


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