Jazz Journal writes, “Overall, this is a classy, mature set of great distinction.”
Paul Booth Quartet Pitch Poignant Musical Postcards at Brighton's Verdict
Jazzwise’s Eddie Myer writes, “Booth is a confident and welcoming host with an easy line in relaxed banter that belies the seriousness of the musical intent.”
Booth Scores Another Rave Review!
Jazz Views’ Eddie Myer writes, “The band are superbly balanced, and the performances, captured live in the studio often in first take, are marvellously controlled and executed.”
PAUL BOOTH - Travel Sketches
Ubuntu - UBU0034
Paul Booth - tenor sax; Steve Hamilton - piano; Dave Whitford - bass; Andrew Bain - drums
Paul Booth has spent a great deal of the last 20 years travelling with his saxophone in a dizzying range of high-end musical contexts. His many employers have been drawn for the A-list ranks of soul and rock performers, and from what you might call the contemporary edge of the jazz mainstream - Geoffrey Keezer, Ingrid Jensen, Eddie Henderson, Michael Janisch. This album is presented as a travelogue: a series of musical postcards from places that have left an abiding impression. Booth’s other projects have tended towards the ambitious - both Patchwork Project and Bansangu Orchestra have featured an extensive cast and expansive musical palette - but this project is restricted to a simple acoustic quartet format, with Booth on tenor throughout. Steve Hamilton’s precise, warmly rhapsodic piano sets the tone: his intro to the title track is a lesson in tasteful restraint, and Booth uses him to set up the mood for several of the other selections - ‘Byron Bay’ is quietly yearning, ‘Seattle Fall’ has a pastoral, major-key lightness, the accessible harmony of ‘Red Rocks’ carries its melodic sophistication easily. Andrew Bain’s own projects burn with an Elvin Jones inspired intensity, but here he’s all tasteful, supportive restraint. Only the modal hustle of ‘Medina Scuffle’ hints at the Coltrane-ish as the band up the stakes after Dave Whitford’s satisfying, typically well-conceived introductory statement - it’s a moment of abandon in an otherwise tightly controlled environment. Booth’s tone is clear and centred, his execution crisp and logical and his articulation flawless as you’d expect from such a seasoned, in-demand pro.The band are superbly balanced, and the performances, captured live in the studio often in first take, are marvellously controlled and executed: yet alongside the obvious craftsmanship there’s a direct sincerity of expression and the overall effect is very intimate. Busy session musicians’ own outings can sometimes seem to deliver more in the way of performance than vision, but Booth and co have created a very personal statement that really gives the impression of a collection of letters home, full of the sincerity of feeling born of what the Brazilians call saudade. The closing version of Peter Gabriel’s “Don’t Give Up” encapsulates the appeal of this nicely judged creation.
Reviewed by Eddie Myer
REVIEW: Paul Booth – 'Travel Sketches'
LJN’s Peter Jones writes, “There is a calm, muscular authority in the playing of tenor saxophonist Paul Booth that makes it obvious why he is the reedsman of choice for the likes of Steve Winwood, Steely Dan and Rod Stewart.”
Paul Booth Quartet (Travel Sketches album launch) at Pizza Express
LJN’s Dominic Williams writes, “…the kind of wit and intelligence that is rarer than it should be and means that the album should reward repeated listening.”
Marlbank Interviews Paul Booth
Stephen Graham writes, '“Blessed with a warm and powerful tenor sound there is a pastoral aesthetic at work on Travel Sketches…”.
REVIEW: Paul Booth 'Travel Sketches' ★★★★
All About Jazz’s Chris May writes, “It is lyrical and intimate and muscular. Like Getz's music, it is balm for the soul.”
Rave Review for Paul Booth's 'Travel Sketches'!
Bebop Spoken Here’s Lance Liddle writes, “Every so often a CD comes along that jumps the queue and this is just such a one.”
Bebop Spoken Here: Ubuntu Music Signs Tenor Sax Titan Paul Booth
Lance Liddle writes, “Paul is one helluva tenor player which is why this new recording is well worth waiting for with baited breath.”