Quantcast
NEWS |
Return to home page





Simpatico
Claudio Roditi
Where Is Love?
Kelley Suttenfield
Here In the Moment
Gail Pettis
Freefall
The Chuck Anderson Trio
Another Night in London
Gene Harris
Room 13
Yair Loewenson Trio



Trio Reenactment
Info | Enter
Dave King
Info | Enter
Frank Macchia
Info | Enter
Kurt Rosenwinkel
Info | Enter




CD/LP Review | Published: November 21, 2007

Double Talk
Theo Travis | 33 Jazz (2007)


By John Kelman
Discuss    

The British jazz scene is filled with treasures often hidden from North American audiences. Woodwind multi-instrumentalist Theo Travis—who replaced Elton Dean in Soft Machine Legacy following the legendary saxophonist's unexpected passing in 2006—has his fingers in so many pies, however, that it's surprising he's not better known on the west side of the Atlantic. Along with a string of solo recordings including Earth to Ether (33 Records, 2004) and ambient explorations with his collaborative group Cipher, Travis can be found working with everyone from space-rock jamband Gong to Canterbury keyboardist David Sinclair and Norwegian popster Anya Garbarek.

The sum total of many diverse parts, Double Talk remains a focused work that largely features Travis' quartet with the increasingly ubiquitous (and impressive) guitarist Mike Outram, Hammond organist Pete Whittaker and drummer Roy Dodds. Travis plays a variety of woodwinds, concentrating on saxophones, clarinets and flutes this time around. Using his Travis System of Ambitronics, he's able to increase the sonic potential of his instruments, owing a significant debt to King Crimson guitarist Robert Fripp, whose own Frippertronics and more recent guitar soundscapes have expanded one instrument into an entire orchestra. It's fitting, then, that Fripp himself should guest on three tracks—the extended and episodic "Oblivionville," the ambient-textured "The Endless Search" and "Pallendream," where abstract ambience and pulse, at times, intersect.

While earlier albums have alluded to Travis' broad musical concerns, Double Talk is his most integrated to date. The sixteen-minute "Oblivionville" opens with ethereal layers of flute loops and Fripp's soundscapes, leading into a definitively swinging and undeniably jazzy section for Travis' quartet, where his warm tenor navigates its deeper changes with ease. Outram's spare, clean-toned but heavily-reverbed guitar solo adds a blues tinge, with Travis joining him for an in-tandem head that dissolves back into ambient territory, this time with Travis' clarinets creating a slightly more grounded atmospheric. Leading into an urgent section reminiscent of early-1970s Crimson (though not as harsh), "Oblivionville" finally returns to its swinging theme to close.

"The Relegation of Pluto" also references early Crimson with its riff-based head, but opens up to greater freedom for a solo from Whittaker that's egged on by Outram's jaggedly dissonant swells, moving ever- forward with Dodds' persistent but elastic pulse. Travis' solo combines outside phrases with his ambitronics before dissolving into even more abstruse free play.

Travis also combines his improvisational mindset with pre-prog psychedelia on a clever version of Pink Floyd's early hit, "See Emily Play," his ambitronics and wah wah sax adding the necessary space rock vibe. The album ends with the blues-based "Portobello 67," which manages to evoke 1960s pop while, at the same time, injecting a tinge of the jazz vernacular.

It may not be an album for purists, but for those whose tastes run the gamut from pop and rock to prog, ambient and, of course, jazz, Double Talk is an album that pays big dividends for an artist (and group) that deserves to emerge from hidden treasure status.

Track listing: Ascending; Oblivionville (incorporating "The Last Day," "Open Earth" and "A Return"; The Relegation of Pluto; The Endless Search; Pallendream; See Emily Play; And So It Seemed; Portobello 67.

Personnel: Theo Travis: soprano saxophone (1, 5, 6), tenor saxophone (2, 3, 7, 8), flute loops (2), clarinets (2), alto flutes (4), wah wah saxophone (5, 6); Pete Whittaker: Hammond organ (1-3, 5-8); Mike Outram: electric guitar (1-3, 6-8); Roy Dodds: drums(1-3, 5-8); Robert Fripp: electric guitar (4, 5), guitar soundscapes (2, 4).

Style: Modern Jazz

Theo Travis at All About Jazz



More Theo Travis Links


Be the first to post a comment on:
Theo Travis' Double Talk

Signup & post a comment!





More articles by John Kelman

Kenny Davis
Fabula Suite Lugano
Two Sides of Peter Banks
Heartluggage
No Such Thing




Recent CD Reviews
Kenny Davis - Kenny Davis Kenny Davis
Kenny Davis
Marbin - Marbin Marbin
Marbin
Paquito Hechavarria - Frankly Paquito Hechavarria
Frankly
Soren Moller / Dick Oatts - The Clouds Above Soren Moller / Dick Oatts
The Clouds Above
Hadley Caliman - Straight Ahead Hadley Caliman
Straight Ahead
The Red Earth Collective featuring Soothsayers Horns - Red Earth Dub The Red Earth Collective featuring Soothsayers Horns
Red Earth Dub

CD Review Search
Artist Name  
Album Title  
Record Label  
Author  
 




 
(116)




Gene Harris

Sweet Georgia Brown
From Another Night in London

More | Recent | Top









Advertise | Contact Us | Site Map |


All material copyright © 2010 All About Jazz and/or contributing writer/visual artist. All rights reserved. | Privacy Policy