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Drummer snared by the Birmingham beat

Jazz drummer, composer and band leader Jonathan Silk is making a huge contribution to the city's jazz scene after studying here. He chats to Peter Bacon

Jonathan Silk, jazz drummer and composer, who studied at Birmingham Conservatoire

Scottish drummer Jonathan Silk is one of a growing number of young musicians drawn to Birmingham by its educational opportunities, then staying in the city to contribute to its culture.

And he is one of the most active.

Last week he was part of pianist and fellow Birmingham Conservatoire jazz course graduate Andy Bunting’s Quintet, playing in the Symphony Hall cafe bar and The Spotted Dog pub in Digbeth.

On Friday he will be back at the Symphony Hall cafe bar leading his own quintet (with Bunting doing his bidding this time around). That band will also be at The Yardbird on March 20. And on the following day, Friday March 21, he will be showcasing his Big Band in a special Jazzlines concert at the CBSO Centre in Berkley Street.

In between, he’ll be spending three days a week, as usual, at his day job, teaching percussion instruments to young people as part of Birmingham Music Services.

He will be back at The Spotted Dog every Tuesday introducing the bands who play there and collecting donations from the crowd, and he’ll be behind the drums again at the Red Lion in the Jewellery Quarter on March 7 as co-leader of The Forgotten Fairground Project.

Then there is the chance he will be sitting in with young student musicians back at the Conservatoire if they need him to, and playing with other bands around the city.

Yes, when it comes to repaying his debt to Birmingham for the fine education one of this city’s institutions gave him, Jonathan is certainly well into the black.