By Gregg Daniel Miller
The title
Spots on Stripes could refer to notations on sheet music. It might also refer to this record's mood: a cross between a tiger and a zebra, meat-eater and herbivore, hunter and grazer, noble beast and gentle creature of the wild.
Spots on Stripes records a meeting of very accomplished, self-assured players who listen, who don't try to dazzle, but rather find tasteful and always lively ways to compliment and engage each other. The tunes assembled each explore odd, sometimes impenetrable time signatures, and the band plays effortlessly, beautifully, searchingly in unexpected ways, feeling loose despite the rigor.
The leader, Benoît Delbecq (piano) plays with gentle precision. John Hébert (double bass) is indefatigable, placing each note, not too many, just so, with integrity. Gerald Cleaver (percussion) is a subtle master, doing everything and nothing at all in just the way his partners need, neither time-keeper nor mere accessorizer-in-chief, he supplies energetics, off-rhythm fills, and respite from same. These 3 have recorded together earlier
Spiritual Lover (2009) and
Floodstage (2014).
Spiritual Lover is thoughtful, a little spooky, patient leaning to reticent, and lovely.
Floodstage, too, with some electronic synth thrown in as color. This new one still has Delbecq playing a subtle role, but the arrangements are somehow more mature, with Mark Turner's tenor saxophone playing the role of outlier. It's not a sax record, though. Turner plays simple lines, and is never really featured except maybe where the tonality of a horn over a rhythm section grabs the ear (e.g. on
Dripping Stones) but, if you focus on the intersection of the piano/bass/drums, then the sax in its correct place simply ornaments their interaction. This is a rhythm section record, exploring time and mood.
The first, eponymous track (
Spots on Stripes) is lively and spacious, the bass provides the energy. When Hébert gets assertive, the whole thing really swings. For having no discernable time signature, all the players are on the same page at all times. On the second track (
Broken World) (as with the first), the bassist wins the day with his expressive solo. The third track (
Rosemary K) is like a deformed lullaby. The musical line communicates a beseeching, cloying want, repeated until it dissolves, and then at it again. The song deploys a time signature I can't quite manage, and the players in unison trace the lilting expression. A strange little nothing.