Jakob Thorkild Trio – Art Sleaze (Tyrfing, 2014) ****
By Chris Haines
Bogdo Ula – Cult of the Harmonic Oscillation (Bandcamp, 2014) ***½
By Chris Haines
Starting with a soaring guitar sound and the monstrous punctuations of bass and drums in unison, this album immediately launches itself into progressive rock territory. However, this is no pre-composed set of pieces as the six tracks on this album have been selected from five days worth of intense improvising. The music is fluid, which has a lot to do with the bass and drums ability to ground the music without falling back on to a pattern that might resemble a clichéd rock rhythm. The album seems to borrow between two particularly distinct styles. That of a progressive rock oriented approach and sounds that are often found within a more experimental domain. The continuity in sound, playing and style combines these approaches and the music we get is of an interesting set of improvisations that complement each other well. This is the eighth album by this Finnish trio and they sound like they may have enough energy for another eight!
EFT – Spatial Awareness (OutNow, 2014) ****½
Anthony Pirog – Palo Colorado Dream (Cuneiform, 2014) ****
Dylan Ryan’s Sand – Circa (Cuneiform, 2014) ****
Ronny Graupe’s Spoom – As they are (Shoebillmusic, 2013) ****
Spoom is a trio founded by German guitarist Ronny Graupe with Christian Lillinger on drums and Jonas Westergaard on bass, their music is both notated as well as improvised while – as they say – the improvised part reflects the notated one. The improvisations do not follow classic short themes, though, they are rather a processing of musical ideas. On As they are this can be seen on “Borders“, the longest and most complex track of the album. It starts off as a classic modern jazz track, but soon it gets lost in new classical music before the band seems to throw harmonic structures to the wind just to pick up some strict repetitive patterns. The rest of the track are explorations in silence, chords and single notes that float through space aimlessly before the track goes back to the modern jazz beginning.
Graupe’s style is somewhere in between Wes Montomery and Mary Halvorson and he is supported by a fantastic band. Lillinger is the most interesting of the young German drum generation, he likes the grand gesture but then his technical repertoire is simply sensational (listen to his drum & bass hellfire in “Square Tango”),while Jonas Westergaard draws a lot from cool jazz history.
As they are is available on vinyl, the LP contains an audiofile download code.
Listen to “Square Tango” here:
Andymusic – Heavydance (Auand Records, 2014) ****½
By Chris Haines
Andymusic is a versatile guitar trio who mix-up funk, bop, cool jazz and rock elements into an interesting concoction of strict tight structures, which form the basis for more open and improvised lead breaks. The composed forms take on a collage-like structure with the feel of swung sections immediately rubbing-up against straighter jazz-funk rhythms, whilst irregular meters, odd phrasing, quirky melodies and busy textures are common place to add to the interjection and intensity of the contrasts. However, unlike more obvious sound collages the music flows very carefully, albeit with jerky abandon, throughout the pieces and has a consistent feel to it across the whole album. The musicianship is second to none, the bass and drums forming a tight and inventive unit whilst the guitar of Manlio Maresca (his more angular lead playing being reminiscent of Marc Ducret) weaves in and out of the rhythmic unity. At times punctuating and supporting the existing structure and at other times moving freely and with great articulation whilst soloing around them. This is a very well conceived album full of creativity and invention, which seems to get better with every listen.
Wolfgang Muthspiel – Driftwood (ECM, 2014) ****
By Paul Acquaro
Wolfgang Muthspiel’s Driftwood, is a gorgeous guitar trio effort that adheres to the ECM aesthetic in many regards – crystalline production and measured playing, but it also has its share of fire. Muthspiel is an incredibly fluid player and his fleetness on the nylon string guitar is delightful.
On Muthspiel’s first recording for the label, he brings along bassist Larry Grenadier and drummer Brian Blade. This is not an unseasoned trio of musicians and their experience infuses the tracks with depth and vitality. For example, the spontaneous and delicate ‘Driftwood’ showcases such rich interplay you may think it was composed as such. The track ‘Uptown’ is a perfect example of both the fire and finesse, with Muthspiel’s nylon string riding over a jaunty rhythm. Another highlight is ‘Highline’ – the rich tone of the bowed bass and warm acoustic sound contrasts nicely with the distorted electric guitar and deep slightly akimbo pocket of the rhythm section. Driftwood fits easily into The ECM discography sitting beside John Abercrombie, Gateway, and Ralph Towner (with whom Muthspiel collaborated with on Towner’s Travel Guide last year).
John Zorn – Valentines Day (Tzadic, 2014) ****½
John Zorn doesn’t play on his album Valentines Day, but he did write the tunes specifically for this trio of bassist Trevor Dunn, drummer Tyshawn Sorey and guitarist Marc Ribot. The album is a scorcher – really showcasing the best of Ribot’s aggressive guitar playing with the imaginative support of the Dunn and Sorey. Kicking off with ‘Potions and Poisons’, Ribot is slashing and burning his way through a dense forest of percussion over a ominous rumble of bass. Sorey doesn’t keep a straight beat but his pulse is all rock, essentially another lead instrument. ‘Blind Owl and Buckwheat’ finds the trio in a bit of a hoe down mood before splintering into a fractured dance. Before the album wraps, Dunn makes sure to get in some musical punches on ‘And the Clouds Drift By’ – which may be true as you are lying on your back, looking up, knocked out by the power of this trio.