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Jazz review: Scottish Jazz Awards

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Published Date: 24 June 2009
TRON, GLASGOW
AMID much banter and some exuberant music, the inaugural Scottish Jazz Awards were presented on Monday night as part of the Glasgow Jazz Festival. As MC Stephen Duffy of Radio Scotland's The Jazz House observed, if a bomb had gone off, it would have
been "the end of Scottish jazz as we know it" – and the event reflected something of just how vibrant a scene that is.

"It's all coming together," was how Tommy Smith put it, receiving the Woodwind award, and reminding us that the country's first jazz academy was due to open at the RSAMD in Glasgow this autumn.

Another tenor sax player and an early inspiration for Smith, Bobby Wellins, now in his seventies, was handed a Lifetime Recognition award by another seasoned player, Bobby Wishart. Wellins had just finished a smoky rendition of When the Sun Comes Out, prompting Wishart to remark: "I could not say anything more eloquent about this man than he said when he played for us a few minutes ago."

There was also some rumbustious playing from pianist Brian Kellock, bassist Euan Burton and drummer Alyn Cosker, the trio also accompanying Best CD winner Carol Kidd, who celebrated with a suitably effervescent rendition of A Nightingale Sang in Berkeley Square.

• You can find the list of winners at www.jazz-in-scotland.co.uk.





The full article contains 230 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
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  • Last Updated: 24 June 2009 10:09 AM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: Jazz reviews
 
 

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