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Great Dane creates double the energy at Birmingham's Town Hall

Double bass player Jasper Høiby brings one of the most exciting bands in modern jazz to Birmingham Town Hall on Saturday. Peter Bacon reports

Jasper Hoiby and his band Phronesis.

Over the last 10 years the striking presence of Jasper Høiby beside a double bass on a bandstand has been, for me, something of a guarantee.

He ensured that not only would the music be expertly played, solidly rooted and have an elastic, surging momentum, but also that it would be performed with an exuberant commitment and a deeply compelling soulfulness.

The 37-year-old Dane has brought that strength and character to countless groups since moving from Copenhagen to London in 2001 to study at the Royal Academy of Music, but none more so than Phronesis, the trio he formed in 2005.

This band, with Swedish drummer Anton Eger and British pianist Ivo Neame, has built an impressive reputation for exciting performances, with acclaim from critics and audiences alike. It has a new album out called Life To Everything, on Edition Records.

I ask Jasper, who is travelling between stops on the band’s current tour, how it all started.

“The beginning of this band is somehow linked to my older sister losing her sight back in 2005. It happened suddenly and was extremely sad so I made the decision to move back to Denmark for a while to help.

“As I’d spent pretty much my entire musical life up until that point in London I knew next to nothing about the Danish scene apart from one guy, an awesome Swedish drummer named Anton Eger,” he explains.

Was it always intended to be that classic jazz line-up, the piano trio?