Press & Reviews

Emily Remembered

Our leading female jazz guitarists join forces again to celebrate t he work of American guitarist Emily Remler, who wished to be remembered for “Good compositions, memorable guitar playing and my contributions as a woman in music”.

publication: Musician Magazine
Date: 1 March 2011

Dyson and Cartwright, like their role model, are both unshowy but sure-footed and musicianly players, and their interplay (particularly striking on the album’s closer, ‘Whirligig’) is a delight throughout a varied and consistently entertaining set, but the highlight of the proceedings (appropriately enough, since it was also a great Remler live feature) is the wafting but cogent Jobim classic ‘How Insensitive’, which neatly encapsulates the duo’s strengths. A fitting tribute to an important jazz figure, who is also memorialised at All Things Emily.

by: Chris Parker
publication: London Jazz Blog
Date: 2 March 2011

Cartwright and Dyson exchange murmuring lines on Softly after a theme of gleaming harmonics, and push each other more insistently in the later stages of a live All the Things You Are. Cartwright’s lilting bossa Hello World and the earthy, clanging blues catch the ear, but it’s the free-flowing, improvised 8 on 12 and a brooding and then reharmonised Afro Blue (turning into a Sarah P poem dedicated to Remler) that avoid the more routine aspects of traditional standard-song jazz jamming.

by: John Fordham
publication: Guardian
Date: 18 February 2011