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View With a Room
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View With a Room
Current price: $14.99
Barnes and Noble
View With a Room
Current price: $14.99
Size: CD
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Guitarist and composer
realizes an ambition on
, 15 months after 2021's
, his
debut. Re-engaging his trio with bassist
and drummer
, the guitarist sets out to answer a long-held musical question: "Can you have lush orchestration combined with an organic sense of improvisation and the agility of a small ensemble?" He discovered clues in studying the electric guitar's history on recordings by
,
, and
, all of whom were masters of dynamic, texture, tone, and harmony.
wasn't interested in increasing his ensemble's size, but he did feel a need for an additional voice as balance. He recruited friend and occasional collaborator, guitar icon
. He appears on seven of these ten originals. They developed a musical vocabulary rich in influential references from other sources too: the
's
's now-storied American and European quartets. The album was produced by
's singer/songwriter and spouse
.
The first track, "Tributary," opens with lush chords and subtle, electronically backmasked guitar. Paced by
's upright bass (he co-composed it), the two guitarists entwine, creating a striking, yet gentle lyricism amid airy textures and an Americana-tinged atmosphere that offers delicate detail; its controlled articulations resist any temptation to overplay. It's followed by the trio's "Word for Word," that weds melodic post-bop to canny Western swing. "Auditorium," with
, is a set highlight that readily reflects the influence of
's fleet, percussive arpeggios in an expansive harmonic palette that reaches across country-pop, roots rock, and crunchy, contemporary rhythms with resonant harmony. "Echo" -- co-written with
-- emerges from a prominent bass figure and mid-range guitar drones to meld lush, crystalline tones in a languid tempo that recalls cinema cues inside a poignant melody. "Chavez" is uptempo. The quartet references hard bop, swing, surf, and exotica with
-esque octave interplay.
's double-time snare is positively joyous pacing the other instruments. The trio's "Castle Park" melds fingerpopping post-bop in a fingerpicked melody that touches on flamenco, blues, and modal jazz. "Temple Steps" showcases
playing baritone guitar as it melds reggae and a country-blues shuffle. The quartet's "Lift Every Voice and Sing" is the longest cut at just over five minutes, and the most exploratory. The guitarists' interplay is at once instinctive and inquisitive as it moves through traces of classical, folk,
, and vintage '50s pop. Closer "Fairbanks" -- also performed by the quartet -- is uptempo and breezy, fueled by
's insistent shuffling backbeats. The guitarists go at each other entwining rockabilly, Chicago blues, psychedelia, country boogie, improvisation, dubby reggae, and swinging hard bop. Whether or not
answers his own questions on
isn't one listeners can readily answer. Instead, we can evaluate the quality of the canny musicianship and tunes on offer while absorbing the abundant pleasure this exercise in collaborative spark provides. ~ Thom Jurek