Torben Snekkestad / Barry Guy, Slip Slide and Collide, Maya Recordings

From 2014. Double bass icon Barry Guy here with Norwegian saxophonist Torben Snekkestad, the title of the album gives a pretty hefty clue to the textural forces and fluid plasticity of the free improvising at work here spread across 13 highly …

Published: 4 Dec 2019. Updated: 4 years.

From 2014. Double bass icon Barry Guy here with Norwegian saxophonist Torben Snekkestad, the title of the album gives a pretty hefty clue to the textural forces and fluid plasticity of the free improvising at work here spread across 13 highly abstract sometimes fraught pieces named after Norwegian and Irish islands: ‘Cruit’ at just six and a half minutes the longest piece.

The label, run by Guy’s violinist wife Maya Homburger who has also written a sleeve note, uses the metaphor of tectonic plates colliding with each other as one way of ‘seeing’ the music, and it’s an apt description whether or not the earth moves for you matters not a jot.

Recorded over a couple of days in Copenhagen during July 2011 there are quite a few moments of great clarity, for instance when Snekkestad breaks out for a blissful conversational episode on ‘Silda’ Guy’s rumblings and slitherings providing a kind of mysterious undergrowth that is quite absorbing. But there are also long passages that don’t seem to go anywhere but, still, there’s no small amount of pleasure to be had even in that inert holding sensation. SG

Tags:

Janne Mark, with Arve Henriksen, Pilgrim, ACT

From April 2018. A numinous lilt to the singer’s voice establishes itself and in tandem with trumpeter Arve Henriksen, who has one of the most unique playing timbres in contemporary music Pilgrim is a welcome turn of the wheel for ACT a label …

Published: 4 Dec 2019. Updated: 3 years.

Next post

From April 2018. A numinous lilt to the singer’s voice establishes itself and in tandem with trumpeter Arve Henriksen, who has one of the most unique playing timbres in contemporary music Pilgrim is a welcome turn of the wheel for ACT a label synonymous since the 1990s with the enduring musical contribution of EST.

Patchy in recent years in terms of output since the departure of Vijay Iyer for ECM and reliant more on family acts that the Siggi Loch-directed label is famously supportive and nurturing of notwithstanding the runaway international success of Youn Sun Nah, Janne Mark may not have very wide appeal beyond Europe and many jazz fans will be puzzled by her hymning style, a syncretism of folk-like carefully emergent melodies and Americana among her secret ingredients.

The impact is convincing and above all humane much more significantly. Word of mouth, one may hope if not take for granted at all, will in the end carry the day. Covet, and cherish regardless of whether this sinks without trace or not.