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Brick Lane Jazz Festival 2025—A Rookie's Review

Brick Lane Jazz Festival
London
April 25-27, 2025
The Brick Lane Jazz Festival is now in its fourth year, and although it has been on my radar for a while I've never made it. I've had very little excuse. The UK jazz scene is arguably the most invigorating on the planet. I don't live in London but fairly close in the county of Essex, and the festival's location is walkable from my main station in, Liverpool Street. I know the Brick Lane area well, having spent many nights at venues there in my more youthful clubbing days, and nowadays from frequenting the Rough Trade East record shop. There is a buzzing multicultural vibe, excellent food and drink options, and perhaps unique for London, it still feels real and not too touristy. To say I was excited to attend this year was an understatement.
Preparing to go, I faced the usual festival FOMO -what acts could I absolutely not miss, who was clashing with who, how packed were the venues going to be, how early did you need to start queuing to get in and get a good spot. Armed with a hit list, I headed in on the Saturday and Sunday. The festival started on Friday evening and had an after-party DJ-led club events later each night, but I was going in with a less-is-more attitude to see what would transpire. You can't do everything I told myself, an anti-FOMO strategy. The line-up was a smorgasbord of established, up-and-coming, and legendary UK jazz acts plus some international artists, covering jazz in all its forms.
Arriving on Saturday around 1:15pm, collecting the weekend wristband was easy with no queue or fuss. The weather was good. I grabbed some dumplings from the Tibet Kitchen stall and sat down to eat before my first planned gig. I couldn't help listening in to a conversation on another table, three people clearly with knowledge of jazz, young musicians, recalling a story of a bassist who slept in the instrument's case after a particularly heavy night. I had to interrupt, asking who they were looking forward to seeing at the festival but also to ask who the bassist was. They wouldn't tell me as I would "definitely know them." Interestingly they had not been to the festival before either, more to gigs at larger venues like the Barbican and the South Bank in London. They hadn't really decided who to see (youthful pre-FOMO for you) but were looking forward to seeing
Jasmine Myra
saxophone, altoThen onto act one,

Jay Phelps
trumpetMost sets at the festival were 45 minutes long, but Phelps was billed for an hour so I left before the end to go to the next on the list. Saxophonist

Xhosa Cole
saxophone, tenorAdam from Jazz re:freshed then told us about the next act coming up, a serious talent that we should not miss an opportunity to see play, as he had yet to release any music. The pianist
Deschanel Gordon
piano
Chick Corea
piano1941 - 2021

Nubya Garcia
saxophone
Courtney Pine
saxophoneb.1964

Mark Kavuma
trumpet
Ezra Collective
band / ensemble / orchestra
Shabaka Hutchings
woodwindsBack in on the Sunday, warm and sunny again. Laid-back music from the Signature Brew bar caught my attention, it was Miriam Adefris on harp with a saxophonist creating a gentle vibe to match the weather. But first on today's list was Mark Kavuma and his Banger Factory band at Juju's Bar & Stage. Chosen as although I've really enjoyed Kavuma's previous albums, his latest work Magnum Opus was another I'd not been hooked by and keen to see performed live. In my mind, the album was a bit too "obvious." The band featured Kavuma on trumpet, three on saxophone, trombone, guitar, keyboards, bass and drums. A big presence and they rocked the room, I couldn't keep still. Blasting my snobbish critique away with pieces like "Pink Sky" and other high-tempo tracks from the album.
Artie Zaitz
guitar, electricThen over to Rich Mix to see saxophonist from Leeds, Jasmine Myra. A short walk from Brick Lane with the venue strategically placed between there and the act I wanted to see next, at Village Underground. I felt I knew what to expect from Jasminethoughtful, spiritual-leaning music typical of

Matthew Halsall
trumpetAgain I had to leave the gig before the end, as the next at Village Underground was a crucial one.

Gary Crosby
bass, acousticb.1955

John Coltrane
saxophone1926 - 1967

Pharoah Sanders
saxophone, tenor1940 - 2022

Sun Ra
piano1914 - 1993

Ornette Coleman
saxophone, alto1930 - 2015

Roy Ayers
vibraphone1940 - 2025

Denys Baptiste
saxophoneb.1969

Steve Williamson
saxophoneb.1964
It was then time to check train times home, and to see if there was anything else possible to squeeze in. " data-original-title="" title="">Bruno Berle was on at Rich Mix, and a brief visit there confirmed his status as a torch bearer for modern Brazilian MPB. Short pieces of delight from both his albums, Berle singing and playing guitar with his trio. Beautiful. Back quickly to Village Underground, I caught 15 minutes of " data-original-title="" title="">Flock. They were stretching out tracks from their albums and I wished I could have stayed longer to see where the performance went. It was building up to something, the room an electronic jazz ashram. Then that was a wrap, time to head home. I'd seen the acts I most wanted to see, and made some new discoveries. Perfect.
There are many other jazz festivals in the UK, but Brick Lane encapsulates what the UK jazz scene is and where it is going like nothing else. An essential event on the calendar and I will definitely be back. No excuses.
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Live Review
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Xhosa Cole: On A Modern Genius (Vol.1)
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Nubya Garcia
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Mark Kavuma & The Banger Factory: Magnum Opus
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Gary Crosby
John Coltrane
Pharoah Sanders
Sun Ra
Ornette Coleman
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Roy Ayers
Denys Baptiste
Steve Williamson
Bruno Berle
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