A man with blond locs and wearing a bright green jacket plays an electric guitar on stage while singing into microphone with his eyes closed
Eric Burton of Black Pumas triumphantly won over the crowd © Love Supreme Jazz Festival

Within earshot of the bow-tied picnickers at Glyndebourne’s opera season, another venerable music genre was celebrated in the rolling hills of the South Downs at the weekend. Six decades after the John Coltrane album that gives the festival its name, the idea that jazz could attract crowds of around 25,000 a day in Sussex seems fanciful. But since it launched in 2013, Love Supreme’s bookers have struck a smart balance between purist credibility and an open-arms policy that also welcomes soul, disco, R&B and hip hop. People might come for the wedding reception hits of Kool & the Gang but find themselves swept away by the multi-keyboard mania of Japanese virtuoso Hiromi’s Sonicwonder.

Older musicians dominated, some apparently in disguise. Someone near me hadn’t realised that Sananda Maitreya was Terence Trent D’Arby until the jaunty melody of “Wishing Well” popped up. He changed his name in 2001 and has released bucketloads of music to little commercial interest in the past few years. However, his powerful rasp was still instantly recognisable, and like Yusuf Islam (formerly Cat Stevens), the new identity didn’t mean a refusal to play the old hits. “Sign Your Name” and “Delicate” were also delivered in rawer, rockier forms.

A man wearing a grey brimmed beret, light grey sweater and round sunglasses, plays a grey-white electric guitar whilst singing on stage
Sanada Maitreya, the former Terence Trent D’Arby © Love Supreme Jazz Festival

With his beard, cap, sunglasses and baggy denim, Eddie Chacon could have been appearing on stage in the witness protection programme. He even allowed his band to play for a full 15 minutes before he wandered on. Not many will have realised that this was the Eddie half of Charles & Eddie, the American soul-pop duo who had a worldwide number one with “Would I Lie to You?” in 1992. They split in 1997, Charles Pettigrew died of cancer aged just 37 in 2001 and Chacon faded into a photography career. In one of music’s less likely comebacks, he has released two albums since 2020 in collaboration with the pianist and producer John Carroll Kirby, and they’re fantastic. His emotional falsetto was backed here by a fluid set-up of flute, keys, bass and drums. Songs such as “Comes and Goes” and “Sundown” drifted past in a blissful haze.

There was no shortage of octogenarians: Dionne Warwick, 83, appeared in the South Downs tent not long after 80-year-old drummer Billy Cobham. Warwick ought to have been a big-enough name to play the main stage, but on hearing her weakened voice and docile backing band, it was obvious she could have been drowned out by sweet wrappers. A sight to tick off the legends list and wish you’d seen her decades ago.

An older woman with bleach-blond hair and wearing a pink zip-up sweatshirt, smiles and holds a microphone in one hand
Dionne Warwick © Love Supreme Jazz Festival

Among the new guard, London soul singer Olivia Dean was a charming presence on Saturday night, but a surprising choice for headliner status given that her debut album only came out a year ago. A week earlier, Glastonbury’s organisers had put her on the Pyramid stage at lunchtime. Although her songs largely lacked the energy to excite the gathered masses, they were catchy and delivered with style.

For the younger faction of the audience, she made her smooth ballads feel modern and relatable. Every new number came with its own story: “This is a song about how all my ex-boyfriends unfollowed me on Instagram,” she said before “Dangerously Easy”. “Be My Own Boyfriend” was a beguiling highlight, with Dean extolling the power of self-validation over a gently rolling bassline: “I don’t wanna get involved, no, with all these men I’m so much better than.”

A young woman stands with her arms outstretched in front of a microphone on a dramatically lit stage. A backing band and more lights are stood behind her.
Olivia Dean gave her songs personal introductions © Love Supreme Jazz Festival

High winds and a few big showers made it difficult to engage in the activity that suits this festival best: lounging on the grass half-listening to music you might not seek out at home. While there were plenty of teenagers moving in giddy packs around what makes for a very safe first-festival without mum and dad, you were also likely to become entangled in camping chairs and blanket-smothered legs if you tried to make your way from one side of the field to the other. Some fairly standard festival sights looked incongruous here: a stag do in matching shirts; a crowd gathered around presumably the only person on site with working mobile data, experiencing England’s penalty shootout against Switzerland by osmosis.

Sunday felt busier on site as Chaka Khan returned to top the bill with her disco-era singalongs for a second time and Kool & the Gang offering a tightly delivered barrage of old favourites. On the second stage, the crowd-pleasing came from more interesting directions. Hiromi was a joy, bouncing between her piano and keyboards in a ballooning yellow dress and zapping her songs off in umpteen different directions.

It’s one thing to see a headlining band playing their best tunes to an audience of fans, but when a half-curious festival crowd is completely won over, that is a special kind of triumph. Such was the case for Texan rock and soul band Black Pumas, whose singer Eric Burton had enough charisma to singe your eyebrows. He quickly had everyone raising their hands, swaying in time like a gospel choir, stepping down into the front rows to conduct their enjoyment at close quarters. During “More Than a Love Song” he held some extraordinarily long notes, while the band built a muscular backing around him. “Ice Cream (Pay Phone)” was another joyful highlight.

A woman wearing a black sweater with a white flower pattern joyfully holds a microphone to her mouth in one hand and raises the other hand above her head. Behind her are pink and yellow stage lights with a neon sign that says ‘Love Supreme Jazz Festival’.
Noname was a welcome political voice at Love Supreme © Love Supreme Jazz Festival

Noname, the stage non-identity of the Chicago rapper and poet Fatimah Warner, brought another welcome broadening of the bill. As with Little Simz, who was here last year, Love Supreme would not go amiss hosting a few more rappers from the conscious, political side of the genre. Shooting out tongue-twisting lyrics in her high, sharp voice, she was unafraid to call out the big shots. “Namesake” criticised Rihanna, Beyoncé and Kendrick Lamar for performing at the Super Bowl, which she called “propaganda for the military complex”. Ouch.

It was a fiery way to wrap up a weekend which at times felt too cosy (and too windy) but still offered plenty of surprising thrills in the corners.

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