Music journalism, books and more

The digital home of music journalist Nicholas Jennings, author of Lightfoot, the bestselling biography of Gordon Lightfoot. Includes a searchable database of current and archived work, including thousands of record reviews and feature articles.

Feature Article: QuiQue Escamilla's Mexican fusion

It’s a chilly March night in Toronto during a brutal winter seemingly without end. But inside the Lula Lounge, the city’s home of Latin, jazz and world music, it’s a tropical heat wave as Mexican roots star QuiQue Escamilla is performing his fiery blend of ranchera, mariachi, huapango, blues rock and reggae. Launching his excellent debut album, 500 Years of Night, Escamilla is joined by an equally diverse set of musical friends. Bluesman Paul Reddick plays harp on “Canción Mixteca,” giving the Mexican folksong a powerful, haunting feel not heard in Ry Cooder’s version on Paris, Texas. Belle Starr’s Stephanie Cadman provides stirring Celtic fiddle and step dancing on “Huapango del Tequila.” A...

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Feature Article: Souljazz Orchestra and the Inner Fire

Listening to the Souljazz Orchestra is like to taking a rhythm-crazed, horn-drenched trip across the planet, hopping from Latin salsa and Caribbean funk to African beats and jazz from east and west. For a dozen years, the tropically inspired, Ottawa-based band has crisscrossed Europe and North America, introducing its exotic musical mosaic to enthusiastic audiences and critical acclaim. This summer is no different, as the group—hot on the heels of its excellent sixth album, Inner Fire—continues to blaze a trail at festivals on both continents. Souljazz leader Pierre Chrétien says the six-piece ensemble also hopes to reach South America and Africa for the first time this year. That Souljazz h...

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Joseph Kabasele - Le Grand Kallé: His Life, His Music

Congolese music is characterized by sweet melodies and Latin rhythms. Kabasele gave birth to that sound. This two-CD set reflects the enormous influence he had at home and throughout Africa. Determined to create a non-colonial style, Kallé, as he became known, formed African Jazz in 1953 and began incorporating Afro-Cuban styles like the rumba and cha-cha, giving them a distinctly Congolese spin. Over the next 15 years, Kallé’s band—which featured big names like guitarist Dr. Nico, saxophonist Manu Dibango and singer Rochereau—recorded hundreds of popular recordings. Many are included here, including Baila, boasting Kallé’s appealing tenor vocals, and Table Ronde, with its cascading guitars....

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Coldplay - Ghost Stories

Gwyneth Paltrow went public first about her marriage breakup to Chris Martin—now it’s the Coldplay frontman’s turn. On “True Love,” Martin sings “I’ve lost you now, you let me go,” before adding in spooky falsetto “Tell me you love me, if you don’t then lie to me.” On “Another’s Arms,” he notes “Late night watching TV, used to be you here beside me.” Surprisingly chilled-out but understandably reflective, the album also includes the singing debut of nine-year-old daughter Apple on the dreamy opener “Always in My Head.”

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Lily Allen - Sheezus

Allen has a notoriously cheeky side. On her early hits like “LDN” and “Smile,” she delivered witticisms in Cockney over reggae rhythms. Her insouciance caused controversies, but she always remained undeniably charming. After a pair of albums, Lily took a break in 2009 to have two daughters. Now she’s back with her typically brazen observations. On the title track, she expresses fear about rejoining pop’s “changing” game while name-checking frontrunners like Beyoncé. On “URL Badman” and “Silver Spoon,” she skewers online haters and takes a satirical view of her showbiz upbringing. But much of Sheezus is a reflection of married life. Lily’s love for her husband, builder-decorator Sam Cooper, s...

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