Guitar - Duos

The Free Jazz Collective 0

By Paul Acquaro

In my last installment of guitar focused reviews, I covered solo recordings (see part 1, part 2), here I expand the focus to duos. If I were being stringent, I'd also stick to straight guitar duos, but I did not feel like limiting it so much, therefore to get into this batch the requirements was at least one guitar and one something else. Part 2 of duos will come soon, it is in the works.

the why - ...this earth (s/r, 2020) ****


Guitar and Drums. A nice combo with many possibilities for rhythm, melody and harmony - or even none at all. On ...this earth, the why, the duo of guitarist Anders Nilsson and drummer Jeremy Carlstedt, employ all three with gusto. The opening track 'Sunset' is 10 minutes of sturm und drang. Carlstedt generates a big, supportive sound that is deceptively primitive (I mean this in a very positive way) and highly effective. Anders, after a building tempest of twisting single note lines, lets out a distorted knot of chord fragments. The two then continue at maximum power until nearly the end of the track. In contrast, the track 'Rustling Trees' holds back the tension for a long, long time. The nearly 7-and-a-half minute track sees Nilsson delivering a repetitive harmonic figure over roiling drums. Then, just a little over the half-way mark, thick distorted chord and snippets of melody, like reverb-laden leaves whoosh past. 'Dawn', the last track, catches the ear with some swagger as blues-ridden riffs ripple from Nilsson's guitar propelled with abandon by Carlstedt. The two have collaborate before, notable on the drummer's quartet recording Sound Escapes with saxophonist Brian Settles and bassist Danton Boller, also from last year.

..this earth by the why


Samuel Blaser and Marc Ducret - Audio Rebel (Blaser Music, 2020) ****

 
Guitar and Trombone. Here is another instance where I've let you all down. I've been selfishly enjoying guitarist Marc Ducret and trombonist Samuel Blaser's duo recording Audio Rebel for the past year and not sharing it with anyone. Recorded at an event at the venue Audio Rebel in Rio de Janeiro in September 2013, this archival recording is still as fresh as can be. Blaser is always an exciting trombonist and Ducret's work is similarly beyond compare, and they both brought effervescent energy and enthusiasm to the stage that night. Opening track 'Audio Rebel' begins with Ducret striking a chord and then teasing out some lingering vibrations from the lower strings, while Blaser slides deliberately into long tones and short figures. Over the course of 10 minutes, the two of them develop a wild dialog that really catches fire towards the middle. The follow up, 'Rio,' showcases Ducret at first playing knotty single note runs and stretching our some chordal tones. Blaser then joins in with low pedal tones and a series of multiphonics. The two seem caught in discussion, but operating on their own wavelengths, resulting in a bifurcated dialog that feels simultaneously reactive and independent. An excellent album and just one of several recordings that Blaser has made available on his Bandcamp site during the past year.

Audio Rebel by Samuel Blaser & Marc Ducret

Wendy Eisenberg-Stephen Gauci - Pandemic Duets (gaucimusic, 2021) ****

Guitar and Saxophone. Saxophonist Stephen Gauci is a top-notch musician and a tireless concert organizer in New York City. When the pandemic hit, his ongoing musical series in Brooklyn was put on hold and he turned to releasing digital releases of new recordings called the "Pandemic Duets." There is a whole series of these available on this Bandcamp site. Two of the 19 recordings feature guitarists, and together they really highlight how different one can approach the instrument! 

Guitarist Sandy Ewen, starts off their collaboration sounding like an angry R2 unit from a galaxy far, far away. Gauci reciprocates, maybe a little more forcefully, but certainly more playfully, than an exasperated C3P0, . They come to terms quickly, and on the next track (the sequence is simple numbered 1 - 14) the guitarist and saxophonist engage in an a mutual call and response with quick statements. It can get rather wild at times and as the numbers progress it seems that two settle into a shared musical language. '#7' is interesting as Ewen adds some tasty, crunchy distortion and engages in a thrilling chase with Gauci, who employs all sorts of extended techniques as he runs along.

Wendy Eisenberg/Stephen Gauci, Pandemic Duets by gaucimusic

Jonathan Goldberger-Stephen Gauci - Pandemic Duets (gaucimusic, 2021) ***½


Guitar and Saxophone. With Jonathan Goldberger, things start out quite differently. Whereas Ewen used pretty much a clean, dry tone, Goldberger kicks off with a thick, drippy distorted one. Looping a thick, drippy 'base'-line, he then adorns it a smattering of chords. Gauci responds with a somewhat chaotic mix of straight ahead playing and urgent squawks. The sounds spill over into track #2, where Goldberger's loop is now an underlying pulsation, over which the saxophonist wrangles out some eviscerating sounds. Only towards the end of the track does the guitarist come in with mirroring of the aforementioned sax lines. On #4, the two relax a bit and the guitar delivers some spacious melodic lines, the result is one of the more accessible tracks on a challenging recording.

Jonathan Goldberger/Stephen Gauci, Pandemic Duets by gaucimusic


Francois Houle & Samo Salamon - Unobservable Mysteries (s/r, 2021) ****


Guitar and Clarinet. Another true pandemic collaboration, Slovenian guitarist Samo Salamon and Canadian clarinetist Francois Houle hooked up over the internet at the guitarists initiation. In the liner notes Salamon explains "We have never played together, although we played with many musicians in common ... I contacted Francois if he wanted to do it and he was really enthusiastic about it… the process was so smooth and seemed like we were actually playing live and with each other since there was such a connection immediately." Exchanging 6 recordings each, they improvised over each others half creations with the end result of this excellent album full of interesting and engaging song co-creations. The opening 'Secret Pools' begins with a gentle melody from Houle, then as the tempo picks up through his wonderfully elliptical statements, Salamon joins with clean - I believe electric but played acoustically - six string guitar. I mention the six strings because there is also 12-string employed elsewhere, like on 'The Wandering of Waters,' which is built upon open ended, repetitive figures from the guitarist. There is a great deal of variety over the run of the album, for example 'Longing, Leaving, Staying' does all three, while 'Jug of Breath' is a more frenetic and seemingly free interaction, making it all the more impressive.

Unobservable Mysteries by Samo Salamon & Francois Houle

Skúli Sverrisson & Bill Frisell - Strata (Newvelle, 2021) ****½


Guitar and Bass. Guitarist Bill Frisell has been as busy as ever, recently releasing the brilliant Valentine with a trio and several sumptuous duo recordings with bassist Thomas Morgan and appearing in many other configurations, like the excellent new one from Charles Lloyd, Tone Poem. This album, Strata, was released previously on LP by the members-only label Newvelle Records. Like the quote attributed to Stewart Brand, 'information wants to be free,' it seems like the label has freed the information from gem from the exclusive vinyl grooves to the bits and bytes of the internet. Good for us! This first time meeting between the hyper-sympathetic American guitarist and the seemingly like-minded Icelandic bassist and the results are fantastically melodic and unassailably empathetic. Kicking off with "Sweet Earth', we are in sublime Frisell country. Gentle open ended melodic statements seem to effortlessly emanate from the flowing tune. Neither musician tried to outshine, it sounds rather like tacit mutual agreement. 'Instants,' the next track, could fit easily on an early Frisell album like In Line (ECM, 1983). Sverrisson provides solid but reserved support for the guitarists arpeggiated statements and slightly tension filled chord stops. 'Cave of Swimmers' is built on a haunting chord progression sketched out using widely placed intervals and the closing 'Her Room' is hymn like, with Sverrisson using an ethereal effect that hints at a choir. Soothing, yes; hypnotic, sure; excellent, absolutely.

Strata by Skúli Sverrisson with Bill Frisell


Joel Harrison - Guitar Talk (AGS Recordings, 2021) ****


Guitar and Guitar / Bass Guitar. Joel Harrison has been a vital force in the New York contemporary jazz scene for a number of years. I recall several different events that involved a who is who of musical heroes - like tributes to Carla Bley and Pat Metheny as well as festivals featuring unique combinations of musicians (writing from my flawed memory is absolutely dangerous and unreliable, but I think I have the spirit of it, at least, right). So, an album of duos that places Harrison in combination with a who-is-who of top rate modern/contemporary jazz guitar players is in perfect fuzzy alignment. 

For Guitar Talk, Harrison composed many simple, highly melodic songs that left adequate space for mutual invention. Of course the album of duos begin with a trio and ends with a solo performance, but those are mere details, what we hear are relaxed, sophisticated collaborations that draw on the sensibilities of the involved musicians, like Ben Monder, Steve Cardenas, Pete McCann, and David Gilmore. The sublime counterpoint with McCann on "Sunday Night with Vic" - a tribute to the late Vic Juris - is just one of many highlights. In fact, the two collaborations with Steve Swallow are more than worth the price of the album - hearing the nimble and ever inquisitive Swallow's bass guitar work is a pure joy. The final two tracks are solo pieces, and as far as I could tell, they do use overdubs, rather just incredible rich chord melodies. The last track is a post-modern take on "America the Beautiful" that is as abstracted, refracted, and fragile as the actual place.

Guitar Talk by Joel Harrison


Eric Hofbauer & Dylan Jack - Remains of Echoes (Creative Nations Music, 2019) ****


Guitar and Drums. With so many albums from 2020/2, why go back to 2019? Well, Remains of Echoes is one that has been on my mind for a while and it seems to just fit in well here. Boston area guitarist Eric Hofbauer has many varies projects, may on his Creative Nations Music label, and all are worth a look. This duo with Hofbauer and drummer Dylan Jack focuses on songs from musicians that have been mutual influential such as Duke Ellington, Charlie Parker, Thelonious Monk, Mingus, Miles Davis, Ornette Coleman, and Don Cherry as well as choice members of the rock tribe. The album begins with fun arrangement of the Police's 'Walking on the Moon,' which starts out high on the verisimilitude scale, but then starts fracturing in captivating, satisfying ways. Monk's 'Let's Call This' is as halting and beautifully pointillistic as it should be. A highly enjoyable album.

Remains of Echoes by Eric Hofbauer & Dylan Jack: Remains of Echoes

Tatsuya Nakatani & Shane Parish - Interactivity (Cuneiform, 2021) ****


Guitar and Drums. Same combo as above but what a different outcome - or approach - well, both. Guitarist Shane Parish and drummer Tatsuya Nakatani are have been performing together for a decade (Parish lives in Ashville, North Carolina and Nakatani in New Mexico) and Interactivity is their aptly titled second album. Parish is heard here on acoustic guitar, digging deep into folk and finger style playing, and often is the centering force as Nakatani shifts from providing an organic pulse to textural disturbances. 'Threadbare' begins with a quiet storm of drums and a simple repeating finger picked figure on the guitar. The melodic figure widens, more notes fill in, leading tones and sympathetic harmonies at once arise, while the palette of percussion grows more intense with crashes, scrapes and well chosen chimes. The guitar work borders on classical at times, with strict rhythmic patterns and consonant passages, and with the expressive percussion it flows naturally. The next track 'Sight Lines' is a great example of the breadth of their collaboration - the guitar work is excitingly jagged and the percussion follows and fills perfectly. A wonderful collaboration that engages the listener with a push and pull of the familiar as well as alluring danger.

Interactivity by Tatsuya Nakatani & Shane Parish


E. Jason Gibbs & Nat Baldwin - Microstates (577Orbit, 2021) ****


Guitar and Bass. Here is an excerpt from 577 Orbit's website about Microstates: "the album is full of fragmented and immersive musical interludes, testing the boundaries of their instrument’s intended usages and the structure of composition." This is as good as any description that I may come up with.
I wrote about E. Jason Gibbs' recent solo recording Wolves of Heaven in my last roundup of solo guitar works, in which I mentioned how he "plucks, bends, wiggles, and likely whacks the instrument, letting the natural sounds and overtones fill the air around him." This is still partially true on Microstates, but here Gibbs is joined by bassist Nat Baldwin for a series of splintered duets that, as the quotes suggest, do not allow what the instrument is supposed to do limit their approach. The interactions focus on the microscopic, but the larger picture is not ignored, as each track follows an innate narrative structure building on a musical language the two musicians have been developing for some time together. Bowed bass tones, harmonic mayhem, and acoustically unboundedness abounds on these 7 improvised tracks.

Microstates by E. Jason Gibbs / Nat Baldwin


Jack Cooper & Jeff Tobias - Tributaries (Astral Spirits, 2021) ***½


Guitar and Saxophone. So this is one that I had a bit of a heads up on as it does not release until next month. Tributaries from guitarist Jack Cooper and saxophonist Jeff Tobias are two 'side long' compositions based on the tone row compositional method that were then used to improvise over. The result is a meandering rivulets of music that come together in accessible melodies featuring wide intervals. The combination of instruments and note choices sometimes even end up sounding like an accordion at times. A meditative experience.


Tributaries by Jack Cooper & Jeff Tobias

Sat Jun 12 04:00:00 GMT 2021

The Free Jazz Collective 0

By Paul Acquaro

Part two in the series of recent guitar duos, before we move onto trios. We begin today with a couple actual guitar duos and continue from there ...

Rubén Reinaldo & Kely García Guitarra Jazz Dúo - Acuarel (Free Code Jazz Records, 2020) ****


Guitar and Guitar. I've confessed before about my reverence for the guitar duo - and by this I mean simply two guitars playing together. To my simple ears, the musical ground that a pair of guitarists, attuned to their instruments and in tune with each other, is boundless. A sensitive pair can switch from quiet introspection to explosive outpouring effortlessly, leading the listener almost anywhere. The duo of Rubén Reinaldo & Kely García, two accomplished guitarists and educators from the Galician region of Spain, are exemplars of this configuration. Hailing from different generations, the younger Reinaldo and the established Garcia find much common ground in navigating the tunes of Acuarel. With nods to tradition, both musically and culturally, the two weave fluid melodic lines through rich harmonic passages, filling the musical space generously but still leaving plenty of room to not drown the listener. A wonderful example is the track 'Coscovals' - a modern jazz melody pings off a lilting comp, bright, light, but with a depth that invites the listener to dive deep. The title track is rhythmically alluring piece featuring an intricate interlocking melody. The final track, 'Berimar Blues' takes the album out in a blues-tinted flourish.

The duo reminds me, in some ways, of some of the exemplary guitar collaborations festooning my collection - like Bill Frisell and Dale Bruning, or Joe Pass and Herb Ellis, or - one of my evergreens - Vic Juris and Bireli Lagrene (not actually a duo, but good enough), or even Julian Lage and Nels Cline - no, none of these are truly comparable, but they all demonstrate compatibility, tunefulness, and selflessness. Added bonus: for the guitar players out there, the recording (even the download) comes with a book of transcriptions.

Acuarel by Rubén Reinaldo & Kely García Guitarra Jazz Dúo

Ivar Grydeland & Henry Kaiser - In The Arctic Dreamtime (Rune Grammofon, 2021) ****


Guitar and Guitar. Apparently the product of a spontaneous decision to record, American guitarist (and arctic explorer) Henry Kaiser met up with Norwegian guitarist Ivar Grydeland in Oslo and made a soundtrack to the documentary Ellsworths flyveekspedition 1925, an early silent film about arctic explorer Roald Amundsen’s second attempt to reach the North Pole. Less than two hours after starting, they were done, notable more successful than Amundsen in fulfilling their mission. 
 
The opening track already signals that it will be an atmospheric journey, 'Roald Amundsen 1925' opens with an evocative drone and blips of electric guitar. Over a sinuous backdrop, melodic intentions build, reaching a searing altitude around half way trough the 17+ minute track. Projected against bleakness, the guitar's distorted buzz is electrifying and lonely, it feels very much like we're soaring over a endless cracked icy white landscape, listening to the fears in our heads. It is, in a sense, frighteningly gorgeous. The track 'Spitsbergen' is different, arpeggios with a touch of blues, a little Morricone, and a little bit of the musical language from Grydeland's group Huntsville. It feels open ended, somewhat jagged, and tempting. Each track seems to capture a similar mood just a little differently, 'To the North Pole' seems a bit hopeful, 'N-25' a bit forlorn, and Into the Arctic Dreamtime, somewhat terrifying. Quite an evocative recording!


Csaba Palotai, Steve Argüelles - Cabane Perchée (BMC, 2021) ***
½


Guitar and Percussion. This recording, from a Hungarian guitarist Csaba Palotai and British drummer Steve Argüelles was a pleasant and unexpected surprise. The two musicians, collaborators living in France, have certainly built their Cabane Perchée - tree house, or as DeepL will have it, 'perched cabin' on some strong branches of rhythm and repetition. Through the crisp, lively recording comes clear, developed ideas that build-up thir energy through circular motifs and strong grooves. 'Bulgarian Rhythm 1' opens the album with a swiftly moving cluster of chords and bare bones percussion accompaniment. The full sound is somewhat surprising given the instrumentation, but it is no exception, as the second track 'Phosphore' shows. Again a repetitive figure from the guitar and a laser focused set of percussive devices keeps the music lively and when Palotai breaks up the figure with short melodic runs the contrast is alluring. However, just as soon as one thinks there is a pattern forming, 'In Tents', the third track, shakes things up. Argüelles plays a prepared acoustic guitar, giving Palotai's acoustic guitar a much different rhythmic base to build on, which he does with slowly expanding chordal voicings, ending with an emotive solo passage. A very nice, composed, acoustic recording.

Álvaro Domene & Killick Hinds - Hocket Pulsar (Iluso, 2021) ***½


Guitar and String Instruments (and some electronics). According to the liner notes, it was Henry Kaiser who introduced the Georgia (USA) based Killick Hinds and New York based Álvaro Domene based on a feeling that they were musically compatible. His hunch proved correct as the duo quickly set forth to create Hocket Pulsar. On first listen, one could be forgiven thinking there is a glitch in their Bluetooth speaker connection. The opening title track is a long, patient expansion of sound. There are glitchy pops and fizzes of electronics over a drone for half of the track, while a more traditional electric guitar appears now and then in the mix. As the track evolves, the guitar takes over with rhythmic plucking of the lower strings and other elongated tones. It takes patience, but the effect is a rewarding experience. The next track 'Voces Magicae' offers a contrast, less electronic sounds and more percussive used of stringed instruments provide the setting. The other guitar strikes a minimalist melody, for a bit, until it becomes goopier both acoustically and electronically. 'Kinesis in Unlimited Dimensions' explores other sounds, growls from the guitar mesh with digital spouts, while 'Meditation on Mediation' takes a quieter but still very active approach, seemingly processing the sounds of the guitar other instruments into an effective blend. Overall a successfully experimental mélange of acoustic/electronic/digital sounds.

Hocket Pulsar by Killick Hinds & Álvaro Domene

Lars Larsson and Gunnar Backman - A Love Supreme (Simlas, 2021) ***½


Guitar and Saxophone. Before we veer out of the electronics, let's talk about (virtual) guitarist Gunnar Brakeman and saxophonist Lars Larsson's A Love Supreme. I suspect naming a recording as such could quickly set up opposing sides: there will be those who hear the music through the lens of John Coltrane and only hear it in comparison to the original, and others who hear the music filtered through the influence of the original. It is best to do the latter here, and in fact, one could be tempted to do the same with Backman's instrument. He pays the virtual fretted guitar, which I would be hard pressed to describe except that the duo used Abelton Live to create an actual musical environment that sounds more like a full band than a duo. The opening track, 'Acknowledgement' evolves into a thick groove with a shredding virtual guitar, which is where the second track 'Resolution' also goes. It seems like Larsson's role is often to provide a connection to the original, whereas Backman takes us deep into a sonic epiphany. There is a lot of incidental sound as well, misty shrouds wafting through underground tech-dystopias, like on the intro 'Pursuance.' In the middle of the track, after a long attractively abrasive guitar heavy sound collage, the saxophonist takes a lengthy, melodic solo, his tone refined. The wisdom of calling your album 'A Love Supreme' is debatable, but the concept employed here, seeing each movement of the original as a stand alone piece to then reshape acknowledges the sincere indebtedness the world has to Coltrane's masterwork, as well its enduring malleability as a source of inspiration.

A Love Supreme by Lars Larsson // Gunnar Backman

Chris Alford & Justin Peake - Turning On Our Own Time (2021) ****


Guitar and Bass. The duo of New Orleans based guitarist Chris Alford and bassist Justin Peake have created an excellent free-jazz/folk recording that pulls the listener deep into a place where the surreal feels visceral. Cleanly plucked notes and lingering reverberation of strings stand on equal footing as the two instruments converse. Bursts of ideas follow long expositions, and as busy as it may get, the two never get in each others way. The opener 'Mullerian Mimicry' features a pointy, abstract melody led by the guitar and supported by an insistent bassline that adds percussive elements and counter melodies. The title track takes a more atmospheric turn, the reverb is turned up and the echoing instruments cast a chanting-like pallor over the track. "Ancestral Murmurs' goes even deeper into reverie, this time with less echo, but with similar determination. 'A Course in Water' is a flowing solo finger-picked chord melody and 'Issaquena' features a somewhat indistinct bass thrumming overlaid by a lightly picked single note melody that dips generously into American folk. 'Turning On Own Own Time' is a spare, but generous album that over the course of 14 tracks stays fresh and engaging.

Turning On Our Own Time by Chris Alford & Justin Peake

Ross Hammond and ... (s/r, 2020 - 2021) ****




Guitar and Drums, Vocals, Table. At the start of the pandemic California based, Kentucky born, guitarist Ross Hammond released a couple of EPs on his Bandcamp page. They were a diverse lot, an engagement with drummers' Mike Pride and Calvin Weston, one with vocalist Jay Nair, and another with tabla player Sameer Gupta. A strong connecting theme across these diverse duos is Hammond's deep plunge into Appalachian, blues, folk and the hard to describe but you-know-it-when-you-hear-it twang of Americana.  
 
Earth Music, his duo with Mike Pride, begins with a gentle finger picked melody claw-hammer style on the banjo over a solid pulsating drum beat. 'Waiting' drinks deep the country blues, and 'Walking Through' features Hammond's slide playing over a folksy, earthy drone. On Root, with Calvin Weston, Hammond strikes out with a more forceful blues on his slide guitar, employing a lowered tuning to get some gut grabbing tones. 'Snakeline' is swampy and mysterious, while 'Blue Eye' is bright and nearly pop music in comparison! Weston's drumming is groove based, giving Hammond propulsion. 
 
With table player Sameer Gupta on Live at Gold Lion Arts, Hammond's playing is lighter and a touch more open ended. On the beautiful opener 'Misdirection,' Hammond plays open chords, with gentle, bright leading tones weaving around the sound of Gupta's gulping percussion. 'Gone National' must refer to the National Steel guitar, as the sound is different, more muffled and metallic, than the previous track. Here Gupta's rhythmic prowess is a main feature. The tabla and acoustic guitar combination feels timeless and this is expressed nowhere better than on the hopeful sounds of the last track 'Happily Outnumbered.' The final collaboration with vocalist Jay Nair, Hope (a full length album), adds a entirely new dimension to Hammond's work. Dark and expectant, the opening track 'Mother of Compassion' finds a deep and ready connection between Indian musical stylings (the labels Carnatic and Hindustani come from the Bandcamp page) and American blues/folk. The track 'Ocean of Bliss' feels like it pulls to closer to American folk side with open and hopeful sounding chord-melody. Nair's complex melody graces the outlines of Hammond's guitar work elegantly.

Hope by Ross Hammond and Jay Nair
Live at Gold Lion Arts by Ross Hammond and Sameer Gupta
Earth Music by Ross Hammond and Mike Pride
Root by Ross Hammond and Grant Calvin Weston

Kevin Kastning & Mark Wingfield - Rubicon I (Greydisc, 2021) **** 


Guitar and Guitar (and a little Piano). The album came with the following genre labels: Jazz, New Age, Ambient, Avant-garde, Progressive rock. Rubicon I, the 9th album of the duo of guitarists Kevin Kastning and Mark Wingfield fits - but never entirely - under all of these labels. Throughout the tracks, there is a gradual accumulation of intent and tension as layers of foundational ambiance build, while injections of clean, incisive lines of electric guitar cut and the buzz of acoustic guitar strings add texture. There are also the unusual timbres and tones to consider, as Kastning uses his self-invented 36-string Double Contraguitar and a 17-string Hybrid Extended classical guitar to contrast against Wingfield's electric guitar and live-electronics. Together the two cover a wide swath of sonic territory that is sometimes familiar, sometimes treacherous (listen to the intro of 'Comoving Distance,' imagine yourself lost and floating between perceptual dimensions, it could get potentially pretty bewildering, no?) and generally fascinating. The tracks are very textural and fraught with possibilities - it seems at any moment something may develop. On 'Dynamic Horizon' an electronic ring can be heard throughout the track, while Kastning switches to the piano and provides a sparse melodic framework that Wingfield soars around with a frazzled guitar tone. 'The Lensing' continues with Kastning's piano and works off a somewhat more traditional musical interaction - Kastning provides deliberative melodic statements and punctuating chords to Wingfield's swooshing lines. The album ends with the 20 minute 'Particle Horizon', which finds Kastning back on guitar, likely the 36 string one. The track begins with atmospheric fill and a clean toned, staggered melody and expands patiently, layering in new sounds, but still keeping a threads of ideas stretching to a climatic moment three-quarters of the way through.

Rubicon I by Kevin Kastning

Kevin Kastning & Soheil Peyghambari -- The First Realm (Greydisc, 2021) ***½


Guitar and Bb & Bass Clarinet.
My two favorite instruments: guitar and bass clarinet. Maine based guitarist Kevin Kastning's is paired up here with Iran/France based Soheil Peyghambari on their first recorded collaboration The First Realm. Like the previous album, it features Kastning on an assortment of unusual guitars that he has invented, which extend the standard range of the instrument in multiple directions. Peyghambari's clarinet meanwhile adds its own expressive range to the mix. Opening track 'Sleep Memory Walking' starts off in the lower registers of one of Kastning's extended guitars, shortly thereafter joined by soft, low tones from Peyghambari. The two engage deliberately and offer gently unfolding counter melodies, extending each other's melodic ideas. The next track 'As stranded declination tendrils' plays out differently. Kastning creates an ephemeral atmosphere for Peyghambari, who adds tentative, short flowing passages. Each of the tracks evolve with their own unique approaches, for example the closing track 'Perduring toward obsidian transferal' offers moments where the guitar provides a moving base-line low-end (I'd write bassline, but it would not be quite correct) under wisps of Bb clarinet, while the track 'Beside shadows calling forward' is grounded by harp-like arpeggios for the clarinetist to react to. The general mood is subdued and dreamlike, the dynamics are hushed and little changes make for big differences.

The First Realm by Kevin Kastning & Soheil Peyghambari

Aron Namenwirth & Eric Plaks - Shape Storm (Culture of Waste, 2020) ***½


Guitar and Piano. Aron Namenwirth is a Brooklyn based guitarist who seems to be getting more active lately - he's a part of the group Playfield with Daniel Carter, which has released two recordings on the label Orbit577 and he has released a few albums under his own aegis via Bandcamp. This duo recording from 2020 is a grower. Namenwirth uses a slightly effected sound, I am assuming a wah-wah peddle, to add a bit of texture to his otherwise clean tone. The approach adds extra propulsion to the interactions with the piano - it is slightly goopy sounding, and when applied to repetitive motifs, offers a contrast to the more precise melodic lines. The tightness between Namenwirth and pianist Eric Plaks reveal a long developed musical relationship, they are able to compliment, anticipate, and react to each other seemingly effortlessly. This is a nice duo setting, the two are on equal standing, and as Plaks at times takes the reigns and moves the improvisation into more frenetic territory, Namenwirth kicks in bit of crunch. The track 'Feedback Square' is a great example of this, while a track like 'Seven Sides' indeed shows a more textural and exploratory side of Namenwirth's playing. 
 
Namenwirth - Plaks - Shape Storm by Eric Plaks

Sat Jul 03 04:00:00 GMT 2021