
Sarah Tandy (piano), Poppy Daniels (trumpet), Binker Golding (tenor saxophone), Jihad Darwish (bass), Jamie Murray (drums)
Ronnie Scott’s, London, 2 June 2026
by John Earls
“There’s nothing like breaking yourself in gently,” I whispered ironically to my companion as Sarah Tandy finished a blistering piano solo in the opening number of this show. It was clear from the outset that this was going to be something special.
I have seen Tandy play live quite a few times but only as part of saxophonist Binker Golding’s band (most recently at Ronnie Scott’s in April 2024 – you can read my review here). So it was great to see her performing her own compositions as band leader, and what a band they are. Golding on tenor saxophone, Jihad Darwish on bass, Jamie Murray on drums and Poppy Daniels who was magnificent on trumpet.
The concert comprised of two sets showcasing tunes from Tandy’s forthcoming album Delicious Capricious due for release in the autumn. After the breathtaking start, the first, mostly acoustic, set continued the pace, with the exception of a short meditative electric bass loop intro from Darwish. All the band got to shine with Golding and Daniels particularly in the spotlight giving bebop-ish flourishes. Murray let loose with some controlled drum thumping at the end of Bradbury Street, the only delve into Tandy’s excellent 2019 debut album Infection in the Sentence.
The second set was a more electric affair with Tandy focusing on electric piano and synthesiser but continuing to show marvellous keyboard virtuosity. Golding’s sax solos continued his earlier intensity but Daniels’ trumpet playing replaced the first set’s rapidity with a more reflective, melodic shaping that was no less enthralling.
Towards the end the band were joined for two numbers by MC Tee Peters whose rapping was a fast, fluent and well matched accompaniment to the music (although this Chelsea supporting reviewer couldn’t get on board with the pro-Arsenal sentiment of the second song).
On a day that had seen London smothered with heavy showers, the concert closed with a glorious version of On the Sunny Side of the Street kickstarted by Tandy before the band tore into it with joy and vigour concluding with Golding playing out a teasing finale. Among the many interpreters of this jazz standard was the great saxophonist Sonny Rollins who had died aged 95 the previous week and is one of artists in the framed gallery of pictures adorning the walls of Ronnie’s (a place he played). Whether intended as a tribute or not, it seemed a fitting end to the evening by this supremely talented younger generation of jazz musicians.
John Earls is Director of Research at Unite the Union and posts at @johnearls.bsky.social on Bluesky and @john_earls on X. You can subscribe (free) to his Hanging Out a Window Substack column here: https://johnearls.substack.com/
Published post no.2,909 – Saturday 6 June 2026



