Artist's albums
Yellow (Deluxe)
2022 · album
Yellower Vol. 2
2022 · EP
Sun (Jitwam & EJT Remix)
2022 · single
Golden Green
2022 · single
The Break Up (Emma-Jean Thackray Remix - Edit)
2022 · single
Spectre (Theo Kottis Remix)
2022 · single
Venus (Black Science Orchestra Remix)
2022 · single
Talking Therapy
2022 · EP
Erax (Original Score From The Netflix Film)
2022 · single
Yellower Vol. 1
2022 · single
Yellow
2021 · album
Our People
2021 · single
Spectre
2021 · single
Say Something
2021 · single
UM YANG 음 양
2020 · single
Blackbird (Emma-Jean Thackray Remix)
2020 · single
Open - Remix
2020 · single
Brand New
2020 · single
Rain Dance
2020 · EP
Too Much (Emma-Jean Thackray Remix)
2020 · single
Movementt
2020 · single
Rain Dance / Wisdom
2020 · single
Too Shy (12" Version)
2019 · single
Won't Get Better
2019 · single
Ley Lines
2018 · album
Similar artists
Kamaal Williams
Artist
Moses Boyd
Artist
Yazmin Lacey
Artist
Alfa Mist
Artist
Butcher Brown
Artist
Oscar Jerome
Artist
Kokoroko
Artist
Blue Lab Beats
Artist
Ezra Collective
Artist
Makaya McCraven
Artist
Nubiyan Twist
Artist
Joe Armon-Jones
Artist
Ashley Henry
Artist
Nubya Garcia
Artist
Shabaka
Artist
Yussef Kamaal
Artist
Biography
Bandleader, multi-instrumentalist and producer, Emma-Jean Thackray was born and raised in Yorkshire but is today a resident of Catford, south-east London. Her 2020 EPs Um Yang 음 양 and Rain Dance marked Thackray out as standard-bearer of a spiritually-minded, dancefloor-angled take on jazz that stood at a slight remove from the broader UK scene. But Yellow – her debut album - feels like a further step into a fresh and distinct space. Its 14 tracks bloom with brass and strings, choral segments and ecstatic chants. But this deeper, richer sound is not at the expense of immediacy. “The groove is the most important thing,” says Thackray. “Even if it’s a tune that’s really mad and free, all kinds of crazy shit happening, there’s usually a groove there - an anchor, locking it down.” Emma-Jean Thackray’s debut album feels exactly like the sort of thing we’ve been longing for over the last 12 months: a transcendent, human, shared experience. Across its 47 minutes, Yellow draws glowing lines between ’70s jazz fusion and P-Funk, the cosmic invocations of Sun Ra and Alice Coltrane and the gorgeous orchestration of the Beach Boys.