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Jack DeJohnette, jazz drummer who played with Miles Davis, dies at 83

Jack DeJohnette, the prolific and versatile jazz drummer who played with Sonny Rollins, Herbie Hancock, Pat Metheny, Charles Lloyd, Bill Evans, Freddie Hubbard and Miles Davis — including on Davis’ groundbreaking 1970 album “Bitches Brew,” which helped kick off the jazz fusion era — died Sunday. He was 83.

His death was announced in a post on Instagram, which said he died at a hospital in Kingston, N.Y., near his home in Woodstock. DeJohnette’s wife, Lydia, told NPR the cause was congestive heart failure.

As a member of Davis’ band in the late ’60s and early ’70s — a group that also counted Chick Corea, Wayne Shorter, Keith Jarrett and Billy Cobham among its members — DeJohnette pumped out psychedelic rock and funk rhythms that put Davis’ music in conversation with that of artists like James Brown and Sly Stone. In addition to “Bitches Brew,” which was inducted this year into the Library of Congress’ National Recording Registry, DeJohnette played on Davis’ “At Fillmore,” “Live-Evil” and “On the Corner” albums, the last of which was panned by critics when it came out but now is regarded as a jazz-funk landmark.

DeJohnette won two Grammy Awards on six nominations; in 2012, he was named a Jazz Master by the National Endowment of the Arts.

Living Colour’s Vernon Reid, who played on DeJohnette’s 1992 album “Music for the Fifth World,” called DeJohnette “the GOAT” on social media on Monday and wrote that his “influence & importance to Jazz, and contemporary improvised music can not be overstated.”

DeJohnette was born Aug. 9, 1942, in Chicago. Encouraged by an uncle who worked as a jazz radio DJ, he learned to play piano as a child and went on to play with Sun Ra as he circulated among the forward-looking artists of Chicago’s Assn. for the Advancement of Creative Musicians. He moved to New York in the mid-’60s and joined Charles Lloyd’s quartet before collaborating with Evans and then with Davis.

“We couldn’t wait to play,” he said of his tenure in Davis’ band in a 1990 interview with The Times. “Miles developed our talents by allowing us to progress naturally, having us play his music and accept the responsibility that goes with discipline and freedom. He learned from us, and we learned from him.”

After leaving Davis’ band, DeJohnette continued collaborating with Jarrett, the influential pianist; the two formed a long-running group known as the Standards Trio with the bassist Gary Peacock that focused on material from the Great American Songbook. The drummer also led the bands New Directions and Special Edition and formed groups with Ravi Coltrane and with John Scofield.

In 2016, he released “Return,” a solo-piano album that served as a sequel of sorts to 1985’s “The Jack DeJohnette Piano Album.” According to the New York Times, DeJohnette’s survivors include his wife, who also managed his career, and their two daughters.



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Emily Scarratt: I could have played on, but retirement now is perfect

It was Scarratt’s only game time of the campaign, but she says she feels that her contribution on the sidelines and around the camp was just as crucial as her more obvious involvement in four previous World Cups.

“I genuinely really enjoyed the whole tournament, obviously I am a rugby player and therefore want to play rugby, but this tournament was slightly different and my role was not probably never going to be front and centre of playing,” she said.

“I always have tried to be the team player, but for such a long period of my career I was always starting, therefore I think it is a lot harder to show it.

“But it has always been quite important to me to be able to show the strength of a team is the entire team, no matter what role you have within that.”

Left out of the matchday squad, Scarratt frequently carried the water bottles for the Red Roses as they closed in on victory.

She had the role for the final in front of 81,885 fans as England successfully saw off Canada to win the World Cup once more.

“I was very conscious of keeping an eye on the clock and doing my job, but there was a point with about 30 seconds to go when I was on the radio,” she remembered.

“I looked up to the coaches boxes and probably said a few expletives along with ‘we’re world champions’.

“That feeling in that stadium, it was unbelievable. I never thought I would experience something like that, because I didn’t see it happening in our game.

“To be at home, to be successful in front of that many people – I was very glassy eyed at the end… and probably also because I knew it was going to be the end [for me] as well.”

In the aftermath of England’s victory, it was reported that R360 – a proposed new global series involving top players – had contacted England stars to recruit them as figurehead signings for the inaugural 2026 edition., external

The Rugby Football Union, in coordination with other leading nations, subsequently banned any R360 players from representing their national sides.

“I don’t know if I should be offended, but I definitely wasn’t approached to play in it!” Scarratt joked.

“Potentially for the women’s game, it is slightly different to the men’s – we are constantly looking for investment and financial support.

“It is going to be an interesting time with players deciding whether international stuff or the lure of potential money [is the right choice for them]. I’d love there to be a place for it all.”

Scarratt will continue her involvement in the game as an assistant coach for Loughborough Lightning, a television pundit, a podcast presenter and working with the RFU on the development of young talent.

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Princess Charlotte ‘loves’ K-Pop Demon Hunters’ – and a song from the Netflix hit was played during Changing the Guard

PRINCESS Charlotte loves Netflix smash K-Pop Demon Hunters, a six-year-old fan claims.

Ivy Brown wrote asking if the ten-year-old had seen the animated musical, calling it the “best movie ever”.

Ivy Brown and her mother Louise King smiling while holding a letter from Kensington Palace.

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Six-year-old Ivy Brown wrote to Princess CharlotteCredit: Chris Eades
Letter from Kensington Palace to Ivy Brown, thanking her for her letter to Princess Charlotte and mentioning "Golden" from K-Pop Demon Hunters being played at Buckingham Palace.

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Ivy received a letter back from Buckingham PalaceCredit: Chris Eades

K-Pop Demon Hunters is currently Netflix’s most popular film ever and has been streamed a whopping 236 million times.

Within a week, a letter from Kensington Palace arrived at Ivy’s home in Wokingham, Berks.

It said: “You may be interested to know Golden from K-Pop Demon Hunters has been played during Changing the Guard at Buckingham Palace.”

It also thanked Ivy for her “support for Princess Charlotte”.

She said: “I think that Charlotte loves K-Pop Demon Hunters, so I’m happy.”

Asked where she keeps her letter, she added: “I keep it safe, I keep it in the kitchen.

“I took it to show-and-tell at school.

“I told my friends that I had a letter from Princess Charlotte and they were like, ‘Really?’

“Then I showed it to them and they were like, ‘Wow!’”

Why Princess Charlotte is the royal family’s REAL secret weapon

Her mum Louise said: “It was lovely to get such a personal note.

“Ivy was ecstatic.”

Illustration of K-pop superstars Rumi, Mira, and Zoey, with demon hunters, with four demons flying in the air, inside of a plane.

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Ivy is a big fan of Netflix’s K-Pop Demon HuntersCredit: ©2025 Netflix
Catherine, Princess of Wales, and Princess Charlotte of Wales, smiling at the Trooping the Colour ceremony.

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Ivy said: ‘I think that Charlotte loves K-Pop Demon Hunters, so I’m happy’Credit: Getty

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Uefa ‘reluctantly’ approves La Liga & Serie A games to be played abroad

Uefa says it consulted stakeholders and found “widespread lack of support” for league matches to be played abroad, echoing concerns raised by fans, other leagues, clubs, players and European institutions.

But it said world governing body Fifa’s regulatory framework is “not clear and detailed enough” for it to block the plans.

Fifa set up a working group last year to look at the impact of playing competitive domestic matches overseas.

Last year, La Liga said it wanted to hold Barcelona v Atletico Madrid in Miami before dropping the idea because of time constraints.

In 2019, Barcelona also planned to stage a league match against Girona in Miami, but the idea was scrapped after opposition from Spain’s football association and its players’ union.

Other one-off matches, such as the Italian Super Cup and Spanish Super Cup, have been held abroad in recent years.

Premier League chief executive Richard Masters said in August there are no plans to play an English top-flight match abroad.

The idea of the Premier League playing an extra round outside England – the so-called ’39th game’ – was raised in 2008 but shelved after criticism from fans and media.

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