The Jazz Defenders – King Phoenix promo page

Bristol’s jazz daddies The Jazz Defenders drop their second album for Haggis Records. King Phoenix is a statement in itself; after 2 years of music being destroyed by the pandemic and many musicians inactive, the band have risen from the ashes with a new vigour and energy.

 

ARTIST: The Jazz Defenders

TITLE: King Phoenix

LABEL: Haggis Records

FORMAT: LP / CD / Digital

CD / DIGI RELEASE DATE: March 18th 2022

LP RELEASE DATE: April 1st 2022

CATALOG N.: HR006

GENRE: jazz / bebop / hard bop, hip-hop

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The Jazz Defenders drop their second album for Haggis Records (home of UK funk kings The Haggis Horns), in March 2022 and it’s a real departure from their debut release Scheming (released in 2020). Whereas that album was a homage to the late 1950s/early 1960s classic jazz style known as hard bop, this release moves into new territory with hip-hop/jazz, cinema soundtrack flavours, Latin rhythms and soul jazz all upfront in the mix.The album was anticipated by three taster releases: double-sider 45 “The Big Man” / “Love’s Vestige”, “Live Slow” (featuring US rapper Herbal T), and single “Perfectly Impefect” (featuring UK rapper and actor Doc Brown), all received great radio support from the likes of Craig Charles (BBC 6 Music), Helen Mayhew (Jazz FM), Jamie Cullum (BBC Radio 2), Ashley Beedle and Colin Curtis (Worldwide FM) amongst many others, all loving The Jazz Defenders‘ musical fusion of retro meets modern.

The classic sound that has inspired the band this time is very much from the mid-late 1960s era and the merging of soul and funk beats with jazz solos/improvisation. Tracks like “Wagger Jaunt” and “Munch” nod to the piano and organ led soul jazz of artists like Ramsey Lewis, Herbie Hancock, Reuben Wilson and Jimmy Smith. Meanwhile “Saudade” and “Love’s Vestige” feature Brazilian bossa rhythms but with some added film soundtrack overtones. Speaking of movie soundtracks, “The Oracle” is a pure homage to the classic cinematic compositions of maestros like John Barry (James Bond, The Ipcress File) or Lalo Schifrin (Mission Impossible, Bullet) right down to the very impressive string arrangement, beautifully scored and orchestrated by bandleader George Cooper.

A big departure from the previous album comes via the two hip-hop/jazz tracks, both which feature guest MCs. “Live Slow” has US rapper Herbal T blessing the mic over an uptempo soul jazz number whilst “Perfectly Imperfect” features London MC/actor Doc Brown rapping on a nice and slow 90’s style head-nodding hip-hop groove. Both compositions show George Cooper‘s love for old school boom-bap hip-hop (by the way, he also plays keys with renowned UK hip-hop big band Abstract Orchestra). For classic jazz lovers who dug the first album, there are two pure jazz tracks that join the dots between that debut release and this sophomore one – “Twilight” and “From The Ashes” – with plenty of vibrant solos for the discerning listener..