LIVELY Latin beats and a soulful splash of saxaphone rounded off the summer in Botley.

Tap Social Movement welcomed big-band musicians for its end-of-summer party on Sunday, staging an afternoon of live music.

Cuban-style band Ran Kan Kan headlined alongside jazz and reggae group Horns of Plenty, both based in Oxford.

The latter is known to many for its vibrant street performances at Cowley Road Carnival and May Morning on Magdalen Bridge.

Horns, flutes, guitars and string instruments provided an eclectic clash of sounds at the craft brewery in Curtis Industrial Estate, which provides training courses for people serving prison sentences.

Attendees entered for free and enjoyed hours of energetic jazz tunes and DJ sets,

The multicultural theme also translated to street food stalls at the event, which served Indian, Ethiopian and Eritrean cuisine.