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There’s a special kind of ache that jazz knows how to dress in satin and pour into a lowball glass. Aly Berry’s The Wrong Man does just that – and maybe lights a cigarette while it’s at it. I told her that saying I love you to the wrong man is a scar that hums when it rains. She liked that line. Said she was excited to read my thoughts. That’s when I knew I was doomed. I’d never written about jazz before. But I’ve listened. Oh, I’ve listened. And as a producer, you don’t ignore what jazz teaches you – with its instinct dressed in elegance.
Aly Berry handed me a slice of a dimly lit life chapter with this song, wrapped in brass and heartbreak. So here’s what I tasted:
Aly Berry hauled herself into jazz – North England grit in one pocket, modelling gigs in the other, and a heart already half-melody by the time she hit London at 18. Fourteen-year-old Aly was posing for cameras. Eighteen-year-old Aly was chasing soundchecks and late-night open mics. She worked as a live sound engineer in Mayfair – because life’s expensive and dreams don’t pay until they do.
Then came Paul Higgs. A gentleman jazzman with a resume that reads like liner notes from a time when albums were religion. They met, played, and clicked. And before long, they were composing, arranging, building something worth remembering.
Now fast forward. Her debut album is a gentle earthquake. She rolled in with a jazz gang built for soul and swing: Scott Hamilton spinning fire on tenor sax, Dave Green grooving deep on double bass, Neil Bullock lighting the drums with quiet confidence, Andy Watson on guitar, and Higgs himself on piano and production. Call it what you want, but that crew sounds like a jazz council laying down law.
Let’s talk about the track that started this all: The Wrong Man. If songs had scent, this one would be velvet smoke with a whiff of bourbon regret. Taste it bellow:
She sings it like she’s lived every syllable. “I said I loved you to the wrong man” comes straight from lived-in heartbreak – bruises turned melody, dignity rising with each bar. Nothing fancy. Just a sax pulling weight, clearing smoke, making sure you feel exactly what you’ve been avoiding.
The delivery is bare, lived-in, and sharp where it needs to be. There’s a part where she croons, “So where’s my crown?” and it hits with the force of every woman who’s ever held a door open and been left outside. That lyric is champagne poured over ashes, and I’m here for it.
Paul Higgs didn’t call her “a once-in-a-generation voice” out of courtesy. You don’t get that kind of backing without showing up and delivering, every damn time. Aly Berry phrases like she owns the tempo. Every line leads. Nothing follows.
And here’s the thing: jazz needs this. Not reinvention. Just a reminder that the genre was always meant to breathe, to adapt, to speak in present tense. Aly Berry is doing that. Her songs carry a familiar scent but arrive in fresh clothes. She’s got the timing of a veteran and the hunger of someone who still remembers why they started.
From where I’m standing – a producer, a writer, a night-shift daydreamer – The Wrong Man was a reminder that music, when done right, gets seasoned. Jazz like this stays sharp, time only adds flavour.
And Aly? She’s cooking with soul. And this was just the opening number. For the full set, follow Aly Berry on Facebook, Instagram, Spotify, and YouTube.
Written by: Flav
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