Emma Rawicz | Inkyra | October 31, 2025

‘In jazz, there’s always more to learn,’ says saxophonist Emma Rawicz. Since the release of her ACT debut album Chroma in August 2023, she has emerged as one of the most acclaimed and in-demand European jazz musicians of her generation. For Emma Rawicz, jazz is above all a never-ending source of creative inspiration. ‘There’s always something new to discover,’ she says. ‘While you practise, there are so many new things which can be developed.’ Emma Rawicz sets herself a gruelling work schedule. During the coronavirus pandemic, she started documenting her practice routines on Instagram, which has led to tens of thousands of people keeping track of her development ever since. She tours throughout Europe, playing in major concert halls, headlining at important festivals, while also constantly writing new music. She leads her own Emma Rawicz Jazz Orchestra, and recently became a BBC New Generation Artist – joining the uniquely prestigious scheme through which the BBC supports ‘some of the world’s most promising new talent’, across several genres of music. As The Guardian has written: ‘Emma Rawicz hit the ground running – and the warp speed of her evolution is showing no sign of slowing.’
Emma Rawicz is never one to seek out the easy paths, and her desire to challenge audiences is also something fundamental. And yet…she always does it with a smile. Confrontation doesn’t interest her, but rather the discovery and the experience of new music which has never previously been heard, and which can transcend everyday clichés. The album Inkyra, recorded with the sextet Gareth Lockrane (flute), David Preston (guitar), Scottie Thompson (keys), Kevin Glasgow (electric bass) and Jamie Murray (drums), breaks boundaries in many ways. It is completely alive with energy, ideas, colours and rhythmic and harmonic complexity. Rawicz herself impresses here, with a tone that is as weighty as it is agile, deep musical intellect paired with great sensuality and a feel for subtle nuances, and gradations of textures. Rawicz and her band tried out the new music for the first time in a small, standing-only London venue – and in front of a very diverse audience. There is something of a statement here: the first trial of new music is not about seeing how it will fit under the players’ fingers, but rather whether an audience can “get it” and be carried along by it, about whether the people in the room are going to be moved emotionally by the music – and are also going to move physically with it.
‘This album means a lot to me. It’s something special,’ says Rawicz about Inkyra. ‘I’ve been playing with this band for more than three years. We’ve worked very intensively on this music. After the first concert last summer, we all invested a lot of time, practised and developed the programme further in workshops. So everyone has left their mark on it.‘ The influences on the music come from many sources – including some you might not immediately expect: ‘Some of the inspiration for the music comes from Joni Mitchell. That might sound strange at first, because the pieces don’t sound like singer/songwriter music. Nevertheless, I immersed myself in her music before composing the programme. I am fascinated by her way of structuring melodies, her use of harmony, unusual tunings and unfamiliar chords that you don’t hear in jazz. That influenced me on the piano and in turn shaped my work as a composer. The result is a unique identity. I also took inspiration from the lyrics, which appear in the titles of the pieces and have also inspired the fantasy name of the album.’
“The music of Inkyra sounds at least as colorful as Rawicz’s ACT debut Chroma (from the Greek for colour and a nod to Emma Rawicz’s unique perception of sound and color as a synesthete). ”The anthemic intro, for example, has its roots in the spiritual sound of the sixties. There are dense, towering textures that reach into prog rock, as in Moondrawn (dreaming), or references to Brazilian rhythmic roots, as in Marshmallow Tree. Some tracks – Anima Rising for example sound like, as if not just a sextet but an entire jazz orchestra is playing; other parts – such as Time, And Other Thieves – sound like a mixture of heavy indie beat and shimmering psychedelia, especially thanks to Gareth Lockrane’s expansive and authoritative flute playing.
The album somehow brings to mind the image of a spaceship, one in which Emma Rawicz – who currently lives in Berlin having spent several years in London – is definitely heading in new directions: ‘Sometimes it felt like we were leaving orbit, boundless in our improvisations. Like we could just take off and leave the rest behind. For me, it’s like a cosmic journey. We don’t know where we’re going to land – only that when we do, it will be together.’
Line up
Emma Rawicz | tenor & soprano saxophones
Gareth Lockrane | flute, alto flute, bass flute, piccolo
David Preston | guitar
Scottie Thompson | Rhodes, piano, Prophet
Kevin Glasgow | electric bass
Jamie Murray | drums
Track Listing
Earthrise
Particles of Change
Time and Other Thieves
A Portrait of Today
Lunar
Moondrawn (dreaming)
Anima Rising
All My Yellow Afternoons
Marshmallow Tree
A Long Goodbye
PR Quotes
Downbeat (USA)
“She shows off her serious chops in building a soaring improvisation that, at its conclusion, left this listener saying, “Whew!””
The Guardian (UK)
“dreamily cinematic soundscapes, snappy polyrhythmic tenor-sax groovers and atmospherically songlike meditations“
Paris-move (FR)
“Emma Rawicz does not so much follow in the footsteps of Shorter and Zawinul as walk alongside them, extending the path into new terrain. The future of jazz fusion, it seems, has found one of its most compelling voices.”
Jazz.sk (SK)
“a bouquet full of brightly colored and fragrant flowers will truly bloom in front of you.”
Backseat Mafia (UK)
“The fluency of the sextet throughout ‘Inkyra’ is breathtaking, they seem to effortlessly change mood or perspective while keeping each tune’s story intact”
Esensja (PL)
“The musicians understand each other perfectly; they speak the same artistic language; they form a tightly knit unit”
Bebop Spoken Here (UK)
“what an enjoyable listening experience this has been.”
Stereophile (US)
“Inkyra confirms Emma Rawicz’s position as one of the most promising young artists on the European jazz scene right now.”
The Observer (UK)
“Landmark, bravura stuff”
UK Jazz News (UK)
“a thrilling, multi-coloured, chromium-plated rollercoaster of a ride”
Jazz in Europe (UK)
“For listeners interested in contemporary jazz that balances exploration with structure, this album offers a significant and rewarding experience.”
JazzMania (BE)
“a tone that is both powerful and agile, with a profound musical intelligence combined with great sensuality and a sense of subtle nuances and gradations of texture”
Jazzflits (NL)
“Emma Rawicz is a phenomenal saxophonist who writes intriguing, melodic, and harmonically sophisticated compositions.”
Jazz Views (UK)
“This is a thrilling album from beginning to end, and superb addition to Rawicz’s discography, catching as it does one of our most enterprising and original young improviser and composer amid another exciting time in her development.”
Lira (SE)
“a unique, fascinating piece of music“
OffTopic Magazine (IT)
“A dense sonic world, full of edges and surprises”
Cuttings