Joe Webb
Neath Beat

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Out now!

Neath Beat is the follow-up to the Mercury Prize-shortlisted Hamstrings & Hurricanes from celebrated pianist and composer Joe Webb, featuring Will Sach and Sam Jesson — rooted in his Welsh heritage and driven by a striking fusion of stride piano tradition and contemporary edge.

Release date: 22 May 2026

Joe Webb Piano

Will Sach Double Bass

Sam Jesson Drums

Joe Webb - Piano
Will Sach - Double Bass
Sam Jesson - Drums

Music composed by:
Joe Webb except:
“Dy-Na-Mi-Tee” (Niomi Arleen McLean-Daley, Salaam Remi Gibbs, Clement Seymour Dodd & Lennie Hibbert)

“I’m Confessin’ That I Love You” (Chris Smith, Doc Daugherty, Al J Neiburg & Ellis Reynolds)

“Myfanwy” (Joseph Parry)

Produced by
Joe Webb, Will Sach & Sam Jesson
Executive producer Dave Stapleton

Recorded by
Patrick Phillips

Mixed by
Alex Bonney

Mastered by
Alex Bonney

Album artwork by
Oli Bentley, Split

Photography by
Benthe de Vries

Thank you to:
Will Sach & Sam Jesson for everything they do, on and off the stage
Dave and Edition Records for their continued support
Pizza Express Dean street for allowing us to record our sets during the 2025 London jazz festival
Art Tatum for kicking my ass every single day

Neath Beat is the new album from Joe Webb, following the acclaimed and Mercury Prize-shortlisted Hamstrings & Hurricanes. Arriving at a defining point in his rapidly rising career, Webb delivers the next chapter with the momentum of a musician whose audience and reputation are expanding quickly. National television appearances on Later… with Jools Holland and the Jools’ Annual Hootenanny introduced his explosive piano style to millions, while collaborations with RAYE and performances alongside Wynton Marsalis mark Webb as one of the most compelling emerging voices in British jazz.

At the centre of Neath Beat is Webb’s distinctive piano language – the rhythmic drive of stride, the melodic instinct of Britpop, and the storytelling shaped by the music he absorbed growing up in South Wales. His trio playing carries the lineage of pianists such as Oscar Peterson and Duke Ellington, channelled through the songwriting culture of bands like Oasis. The result is music that feels urgent, melodic and unmistakably personal – a pianist pushing forward with imagination, clarity and the confidence of an artist whose story is gaining real momentum.