Some jazz artists play within the tradition; others reshape it from the inside. Nabou Claerhout, the Belgian trombonist and composer behind N∆BOU, clearly belongs to the second group. Born in Antwerp, she has become one of the most distinctive voices in contemporary jazz in Belgium and the wider Benelux scene. You can explore her work on Belgium Booms, her official website, and AB’s artist page.
What immediately sets Nabou apart is her relationship to the trombone. Rather than treating it as a supporting instrument, she places it at the center of the music’s emotional and sonic architecture. With N∆BOU, she builds a sound that is atmospheric, melancholic, and quietly inventive, using effects and textures to create a musical world that feels both intimate and expansive.
A sound that refuses easy labels
N∆BOU’s original line-up — trombone, electric guitar, double bass, and drums — gives the music a particular flexibility and openness. The quartet’s compositions move between groove, abstraction, and reflection, often beginning with rhythm rather than melody, which adds to the sense of unpredictability and depth. It is jazz, yes, but jazz that keeps extending its own boundaries.
The project first drew attention with the EP Hubert and later with the album You Know, which helped establish Nabou as one of the pillars of the new jazz generation in Belgium. Across these releases, what remains constant is the sense that the music is always looking for another angle, another shade, another way of listening.
From Antwerp to the European scene
Nabou discovered jazz at the age of nine, when she first picked up the trombone. Since then, she has built a career that combines technical discipline, compositional imagination, and a clear artistic identity. Her path has included studies in Rotterdam and London, as well as collaborations with major figures such as Bert Joris, John Ruocco, Dave Holland, and Dave Douglas.
That background matters because it gives her work a rare combination of rigour and freedom. Nabou is not trying to prove that the trombone can do everything; she is showing what happens when an artist listens closely enough to make one instrument feel like an entire landscape. Her music has been praised for its fresh approach, its sonic depth, and its strong collective chemistry on stage.
Why KET should care
Nabou’s music feels especially relevant to KET because it values sensitivity without making it fragile. Her compositions are emotionally open, but structurally confident; they invite you in rather than pushing themselves forward. In that sense, N∆BOU offers a kind of jazz that feels contemporary not because it chases trends, but because it understands fluidity, contrast, and atmosphere as forms of strength.

There is also something quietly radical in the way Nabou centers her own voice within a genre still often coded through inherited hierarchies. She turns the trombone into a space of exploration, not only sonically but symbolically: a place where softness, tension, and curiosity can coexist.
For readers of KET, Nabou is an artist worth following closely — not just as a standout musician, but as part of a broader conversation about who gets to define the future of jazz, and how that future might sound when it is led with both precision and freedom.
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