22nd May 2026: Trypl’s ‘Phantasticus’ out on all platforms today: Exclusive Unboxing and JazzWise Review
The brand new album from London based three-piece band TRYPL: ‘Phantasticus’ now available everywhere on streaming platforms, CD, DL and 180 gram LP.
If you would like autographed copies of the CD/LP sent directly by the band, visit their artist link (both links here)
ABOUT THE ALBUM

Every now and again, their packed schedules permit them to take time out to make their own music, drawing on their shared love of the Latin jazz tradition, and whenever this happens, they’re collectively known as TRYPL. Recently, they’ve found themselves with some rarely shared downtime and the opportunity to commandeer the capacious Big Jelly Studios. The next step was to assemble the tunes and contact their favorite singers and players, including pianists Alex Wilson and Ross Stanley, guitarist Giorgio Serci, bassists Javier Fioramonti and Davide Mantovani, and Roberto Pla, Edwin Sanz and Davide Giovannini on percussion, with newcomer Sophie Stevenson on voice and vibraphone. Family and friends dropped round to provide an informal in-studio audience. Drawing inspiration from their shared love of the classic salsa sound pioneered by Fania Records in 1970s New York, given a twist by their own individual musical personalities, they’ve created Phantasticus – an album of joyously uplifting music that distils all the conviviality and good humor with which it was created into a heady yet feel-good brew. It’s the perfect antidote to our nervous, fragmented times.
Each of the leaders contributes original tunes showcasing their own unique take and reverence to the Latin jazz legacy. Booth’s
Booth drew on his experience growing up in Spain to create ‘Tres Amigos’ with Davide Giovannini singing and Giorgio Serci playing guitar over the lilting flamenco-rumba rhythm, and ‘Paseo De Amor’ has a wordless vocal from Sophie Stevenson adding mystique to its elegant Latino waltz. Mires penned the albums title track ‘Phantasticus’ with some major themes in mind: “I was thinking of the dawn of creation and the beginning of humanity,” while Quigley’s ‘Send Me The Sin File’ delights with its supple and ingenious soli writing, being named for nothing more profound than its author’s susceptibility to typos. The up-tempo mambo of ‘It’s Coffee Time’ pays tribute to Quigley’s dependence on the sustaining power of caffeine, while Booth’s ‘Tulsa Time’ features Giorgio channelling Carlos Santana for some rousing Latin rock fusion.

Watch the exclusive unboxing video by saxophonist and flautist Paul Booth, coupled with a gleaming album review courtesy of JazzWise Magazine.





