Lotus Lungs - Guitar Improv Summit Vol. 1

The Free Jazz Collective 80

By Gregg Daniel Miller

This is an unusual record. Improvising guitar trios are not unheard of, but not often, perhaps not enough. If you’re looking for something you haven’t heard before, this may be it. In Bill Horist, Tom Scully, and Matt Benham, we have three extremely accomplished, creative musicians playing a mix of electric and acoustic guitars. The full panoply of effects are at their disposal. In addition to picking, bowing, and a few heavy metal chords, their guitars turn into gongs and bells, birds, the human voice, computery glitches and pops, shimmers, screeches, warbles, plus any and all of them backwards. It’s a bit like being in an industrial kitchen with a wandering ear which focuses on different sound sets. The emphasis is on tones, timbre, and rhythms: wavering, still, caustic, calming. All the moods are represented, some all at once, none for too long, some for not long enough. Only the first and ninth songs are truly annoying. The fourth and sixth tracks (“Floating Mountain” and “The Steam in Sand”) are the most coherent. But throughout, if you don’t like one of the conjunctures, just wait a moment, you’ll get there. The three guitarists do not really develop a sound; instead they are leaping from sound palette to sound palette, testing which will float, sink, or sail. They don’t seem to be guided by math or roadmaps, sequences or cycles. The sounds are more like nature in an urban setting. We hear nature’s rustling, but cross-traffic intervenes, and each intermittently becomes the support for the other. This music is both experimental and creative. I can’t hear any real conversation happening across the 3 guitars. It’s more that each guitarist takes a decidedly different strip of sound, and the 3 voices together interleave to get the result. A very cool, short video of their recording session using prepared guitars is here:



The recording can be found on Bandcamp, or here.

Right Brain Records is the new, digital only, Seattle-based non-profit “label” of sound engineer Scott Schaffer, dedicated to putting out new experimental music. The subject of digital-only labels came up recently in Jeremiah Cymerman’s 5049 podcast in an interview with guitarist and studio wizard James Plotkin. Plotkin remarked to the effect of: “Who needs a digital-only label? I have an internet connection, I can put out my own stuff on Bandcamp.” It’s a good question, and maybe one of the answers has to do with curatorial judgment. Put enough strong outings under the same moniker, who knows, maybe a digital-only label can take off.

Full disclosure, I have played with Tom Scully and Matt Benham in different musical configurations, but I solemnly pledge that if I didn’t like this record, I would faithfully do my duty and let you good readers know.

Guitar Improv Summit Vol.1 by Lotus Lungs

Mon Jun 03 04:00:00 GMT 2019