Home » Jazz Articles » Live Review » Emma Rawicz At Roscommon Arts Centre
Emma Rawicz At Roscommon Arts Centre

Courtesy Mario Lazoladz
Roscommon Arts Centre
Roscommon, Ireland
June 6, 2025
If the best method to hone one's all-round skills as a leader, soloist and composer is in the live arena, then Emma Rawicz is going about things in the right way. Since releasing her debut album Incantation (Self Produced, 2022) at the age of 19, there has not been a single month when the Devonshire saxophonist has not been on the road. The highways and byways of the UK and Europe will soon be as familiar to her as the colors she sees when she hears music.
Her chromesthesia was behind the title to Chroma (ACT Music, 2023)an album that garnered hefty media attention; Compositions from that release were augmented by several unreleased tunes before a small but engaged audience at the Roscommon Arts Centre. Snuggled in the center of Ireland, the Roscommon stop was the third gig of an eight-date Irish tour promoted by Ireland's indefatigable Music Networkset to celebrate its 40th anniversary in 2026.
Six-string electric bassist
Kevin Glasgow
bass
Asaf Sirkis
drumsb.1969

Elliot Galvin
pianoRawicz' tightly structured arrangements left generous space for her colleagues to express themselves as soloists. Glasgow delivered a beauty on the 22-minute epic "Quirky," his unhurried lyricism giving way to a fierier response from the leader over broiling rhythms. Sirkis' and Glasgow's infectious groove underpinned a funk-laced solo from Galvin and a wonderfully flowing response from the leader. Rawicz let the collective steam all but evaporate before setting up a three-way vamp that set Sirkis loose. The jazz vamp is a well-travelled device, somewhat predictable even, but the
Lighthouse Trio
band / ensemble / orchestra
Soft Machine
band / ensemble / orchestrab.1966
The quartet went into the break with "A Wide, Wide Sea;" Glasgow delivered a sparkling solo marked by lyricism and economy, before Rawicz shifted quickly through the gears with a barreling improvisation of sustained inventionspurred on by the rhythm section.
There was no let-up in intensity in the second set, with the bustling

Wayne Shorter
saxophone1933 - 2023
The lively "Duende" saw Rawicz switch to soprano saxophone. A composition of newer vintage, its dancing rhythms reflected her appreciation of Brazilian music. Back in May 2022, Rawicz was part of the 22-piece National Youth Jazz Collective that accompanied

Hermeto Pascoal
fluteb.1936
It was an hour into the set before Rawicz took the covers off a ballad with "Honeydew Ginger." Tender and introspective, the spare architecture framed fine solos by Galvin and the leader, on tenor. Reverting to soprano for the "Cowboys and Aliens"a barnstorming slice of

John Coltrane
saxophone1926 - 1967
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