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Jazz Diary with Peter Bacon

Peter Bacon rounds-up the coming week of jazz events in the West Midlands.

Trumpeter Laura Jurd(Image: Andy Sheppard)

Birmingham Jazz has backed a winner this week and tempted young trumpeter Laura Jurd and her band up from London. I think this could be her first gig in the West Midlands since her debut album, Landing Ground, made considerable waves in the jazz critics’ sea.

Landing Ground revealed a composer and player who not only has considerable ambitions – it includes a string quartet as well as a jazz group, and some complex extended fully-scored writing – but a characterful and original sound on her instrument, which incorporates everything from a full open tone to smears and high, choked notes in the Kenny Wheeler tradition.

In Landing Ground she goes from Latin-tinged group arrangements to piano and trumpet duo improvisations, to mad circus band antics.

As I wrote, when reviewing the album last December, it would be an impressive achievement as a fourth or fifth release; that it was the debut of a 22-year-old who was still studying at Trinity College was astounding.

For the Birmingham Jazz date she brings her long-standing quartet – they have supported Chris Potter at Ronnie Scott’s in London - comprising Elliot Galvin on piano, Conor Chaplin on bass and Corrie Dick on drums.

The Laura Jurd Quartet plays The Red Lion in Warstone Lane, Jewellery Quarter, from 7.45pm tomorrow. Tickets are £10 (£8 for members) on the door, and you can find out more at

* Another driving force in jazz around London is singer Georgia Mancio, and Midlanders get a rare chance to hear her in collaboration with guitarist Nigel Price at Huntingdon Hall on Saturday evening.

Georgia also performs in a wide variety of bands but the inspiration for this duo came from that of Ella Fitzgerald and Joe Pass. The blend of voice and electric guitar is a highly efficient, no strings attached way of making good vocal jazz music.