The music from the quartet’s first album, 858 Richter, written to accompany a 2005 museum show of new works by the German painter Gerhard Richter, tried to capture his steely abstraction and his pastoral calm, but never quite fused the two. Sign of Life, recorded six years later, settled for the calm; it was almost all gorgeous chamber music. Big Sur is a true synthesis, with a decided tilt toward the graceful and the melodic: the unnerving strands insinuate themselves only slightly, through the color notes and the jagged rhythms (for which Royston supplies the accents).
This is not “difficult” music. Most of it sways, saunters and swings. Frisell has managed to pack layers of sound into his concoctions, and you can bask in the top waves or delve deep into the undercurrents, as you choose. There are pleasures at all levels.
The album’s title shouldn’t be taken too literally. Frisell wrote the music at Glen Daven Ranch in Big Sur, California, and the band performed it for the first time just last year at the nearby Monterey Jazz Festival.
As with Sign of Life, the recording was produced by Lee Townsend, engineered by Adam Munoz, and mastered by Greg Calbi. The sound is both lush and dynamic: a bit pop-electrified, but the effect is apt for this music, and immersive.
Comments[ 0 ]
Post a Comment