Skip to content
  • Home
  • News
  • Reviews
  • Interviews
  • Features
  • The Scene
    • Listening Room
    • Melbourne Jazz
    • Jazz in Sydney
    • Adelaide Jazz
    • Perth Jazz
    • Brisbane Jazz
    • Canberra Jazz
    • Darwin Jazz
    • Hobart Jazz
    • Kiwi Jazz
  • Nostalgia in Fed Square
  • About
    • Policies & Guidelines
    • How to support us
    • Contact

AustralianJazz.net

  • Home
  • News
  • Reviews
  • Interviews
  • Features
  • The Scene
    • Listening Room
    • Melbourne Jazz
    • Jazz in Sydney
    • Adelaide Jazz
    • Perth Jazz
    • Brisbane Jazz
    • Canberra Jazz
    • Darwin Jazz
    • Hobart Jazz
    • Kiwi Jazz
  • Nostalgia in Fed Square
  • About
    • Policies & Guidelines
    • How to support us
    • Contact
Curated

From Downbeat: Phillip Johnston on Australian Jazz

Posted on9 April 20121 February 2013AuthorMiriam

Title: Jazz Down Under Rises to the Top

Publication: Down Beat Magazine

Date: 9 April 2012

Phillip Johnston writes this piece for Down Beat in which he talks about the richness of he Australian jazz scene

Read the article on www.downbeat.com >

Share this:

  • Tweet
  • Print

Related

Posted in CuratedTagged Downbeat Magazine, Phillip Johnston

Post navigation

Mike Gibbs pays tribute to Gil Evans
Media release: National Jazz Awards – entries open

LIKE!

LIKE!

Australian Jazz: the playlist (work in progress)

Jazz for Beginners: An ever-expanding playlist

Top-10

  • Megan Burslem - my songlines
    Megan Burslem - my songlines
  • Toshi Clinch: 'Jazz Melbourne aims to grow Australia's musical footprint through performance and education'
    Toshi Clinch: 'Jazz Melbourne aims to grow Australia's musical footprint through performance and education'
  • Rai Thistlethwayte - a bit mongrel-ish
    Rai Thistlethwayte - a bit mongrel-ish
  • Rita Satch: 'I thrive in those unplanned moments at gigs'
    Rita Satch: 'I thrive in those unplanned moments at gigs'
  • Adam Rudegeair: 'Lake Minnetonka is my attempt to blend jazz and heavy funk'
    Adam Rudegeair: 'Lake Minnetonka is my attempt to blend jazz and heavy funk'
  • YolanDa Brown: "This is a good time to be a woman in jazz"
    YolanDa Brown: "This is a good time to be a woman in jazz"
  • Phoebe Day & Joel Sena: 'We are constantly creating and moving each other forward'
    Phoebe Day & Joel Sena: 'We are constantly creating and moving each other forward'
  • Emanuele Arciuli: "Round Midnight is a classical music project, not jazz."
    Emanuele Arciuli: "Round Midnight is a classical music project, not jazz."
  • Sean Foran: it's time for some Trichotomy music
    Sean Foran: it's time for some Trichotomy music
  • Tina May: 'Songs are the most wonderful way of speaking'
    Tina May: 'Songs are the most wonderful way of speaking'

OUT OF THE PAST

April 2012
M T W T F S S
 1
2345678
9101112131415
16171819202122
23242526272829
30  
« Mar   May »

Tags

3 Questions Allan Browne Andrea Keller Arjun von Caemmerer Barney McAll bass Bernie McGann Bird's Basement Chris McNulty Eugene Ball Gian Slater Jamie Oehlers Jazz on Lockdown Jeremy Rose JMI live John Clare John Hardaker John Shand Jonathan Zwartz Julien Wilson Kristin Berardi Mace Francis Marc Hannaford Matt McMahon melbourne international jazz festival Melbourne Recital Centre MIJF Mike Nock NJA Paris Cat Jazz Club Paul Grabowsky Peter Knight Phil Slater Sam Anning Sam Keevers Sandy Evans Saxophone Scott Tinkler SIMA Simon Barker Stephen Magnusson Stonnington Jazz The Jazz Lab voice Wangaratta Festival of Jazz and Blues

What is Australian Jazz?

https://australianjazz.net/wp-content/uploads/Peter-Knight-Way-Out-West-04-Latest-and-Breaking.mp3

TIP JAR




KEEP IN TOUCH

Enter your email address to subscribe to AustralianJazz.net and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Join 4,140 other subscribers

ACKNOWLEDGEMENT OF COUNTRY

 

Australian Jazz acknowledges that we work on Aboriginal land and Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples as the traditional custodians of this country we call home. We pay our respect to Indigenous elders past, present and future and to the elders of other communities.

Social

  • View australianjazz’s profile on Facebook
  • View austjazznet’s profile on Twitter
  • View australian_jazz’s profile on Instagram
© 2023 AustralianJazz.net
Powered by WordPress / Theme by Design Lab