With an ornate, highly elaborate improvising style that joins the dots between the otherwise disparate approaches of McCoy Tyner and Keith Jarrett while also drawing heavily on the traditions of the Romantic-era classical composers, earlier albums of Neve’s such as 2007’s Nobody is Illegal – particularly on a track such as the extraordinary ‘Nothing But A Casablanca Turtle Slide-Show Dinner’ with its baroque chamber exuberance somehow in the mind’s eye of an improviser who knows his post-Beatles pop and jazz culture as much as he does classical music – made it clear that a big fully formed new talent had landed in our midst.

Neve is up there with the best new generation European jazz pianists – in the same elite bracket as players such as Michael Wollny, Gwilym Simcock, Ivo Neame and Stefano Bollani – at ease in classical and contemporary jazz contexts, his signature style entertaining a strong contrapuntal dimension, vaultingly exuberant at times but crucially also capable of huge tenderness and improvisational clarity.

Jef Neve

Mostly a solo piano album One, a partial theme of the upcoming London concert, was recorded during a marathon 13 days in a variety of European studios including La Chapelle and Blue Tree in Belgium and at Abbey Road not too far from Kings Cross over in St John’s Wood, and includes Neve’s own compositions and a fine version of Billy Strayhorn’s ‘Lush Life’ – a standard the pianist performed with singer José James on 2010’s For All We Know. 

Jef Neve, above, in a publicity shot

The concert is in Hall 2 of Kings Place (click for details) on 10 March