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Ritual Groove Music
Barnes and Noble
Ritual Groove Music
Current price: $18.99
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Barnes and Noble
Ritual Groove Music
Current price: $18.99
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Swiss pianist
Nik Baertsch
's group effort with
Mobile
establishes his concept of ritual groove music (or perhaps Zen funk) with this CD. The sounds they convey are lean but not mean, spare beyond compare, very European, and unlike any of his contemporary groups,
the Esbjoern Svensson Trio
, or
ECM
groups in particular. The inventive drumming of
Kaspar Rast
provides supple support for
Baertsch
,
Mats Eser
's marimba, and the bass clarinet or alto sax work of
Don Li
. There's an airy, spacious, and cool Scandinavian feel to all of the pieces, dubbed
"Moduls."
The development of
"Modul 5"
is lugubriously slow, almost ritualistic, and based on a one-note bass piano key vamp, while a mere three notes in a pseudo waltz with juxtaposed drum rhythms from
Rast
cement the most palpable distinct groove during
"Modul 11."
Their most labyrinth and bottomless underground voicing is
"Modul 4,"
and while staying in that mode,
"Modul 2"
is extremely quiet and low-key, with a nominal understated advance that is hard even to discern. There's a short free minimalist piece quite similar to
Steve Reich
and a concluding solo piano offering from
that further emphasizes space between notes being much more important and prevalent than the notes themselves. A tip-of-the-iceberg recording, in the figurative and literal sense, one can speculate this is a mere beginning, almost child's play, for what
and his crew have in store for the future of his compelling and singularly original music. ~ Michael G. Nastos
Nik Baertsch
's group effort with
Mobile
establishes his concept of ritual groove music (or perhaps Zen funk) with this CD. The sounds they convey are lean but not mean, spare beyond compare, very European, and unlike any of his contemporary groups,
the Esbjoern Svensson Trio
, or
ECM
groups in particular. The inventive drumming of
Kaspar Rast
provides supple support for
Baertsch
,
Mats Eser
's marimba, and the bass clarinet or alto sax work of
Don Li
. There's an airy, spacious, and cool Scandinavian feel to all of the pieces, dubbed
"Moduls."
The development of
"Modul 5"
is lugubriously slow, almost ritualistic, and based on a one-note bass piano key vamp, while a mere three notes in a pseudo waltz with juxtaposed drum rhythms from
Rast
cement the most palpable distinct groove during
"Modul 11."
Their most labyrinth and bottomless underground voicing is
"Modul 4,"
and while staying in that mode,
"Modul 2"
is extremely quiet and low-key, with a nominal understated advance that is hard even to discern. There's a short free minimalist piece quite similar to
Steve Reich
and a concluding solo piano offering from
that further emphasizes space between notes being much more important and prevalent than the notes themselves. A tip-of-the-iceberg recording, in the figurative and literal sense, one can speculate this is a mere beginning, almost child's play, for what
and his crew have in store for the future of his compelling and singularly original music. ~ Michael G. Nastos