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John Schroder: Sir Lemuel's Dance
ByThe same could be said about the music. At first encounter the music seems chaotic, yet there's an attention to detail that makes it hard to navigate through Schroder's knotty compositions. The opening "Rieselfaktor" swirls back and forth, with the leader's piano crashing as waves against a beach, while alto saxophonist Christian Weidner honks and screeches.
The chaos prevails on the title track, where snippets of melody surface among dense chords, but then something happens and a more regular groove is established. Bassist Oliver Potratz and drummer Oliver Steidle heat things up and a melodic theme develops. All the while, Schroder returns to freeform playing, interspersing bell-like tones and hard chordal blocks. A perfect balance arises between form and chaos, groove and abstract time, melody and dissonance.
The balance between form and chaos is maintained on tunes like "Mood 1697" and "Rubato." Once again, the most impressive thing about the quartet is the way it shifts between tempi. Each musician is able to turn on a dime and make the introspective moments shift into carefully controlled explosions. Schroder seems capable of anticipating the changing of form as each of the seemingly abstract pieces reveals an organic mosaic of sound.
Sir Lemuel's Dance isn't easy listening, but reveals form transcendent of the tired cliche of blues formulae. It may take a while to learn the dance but once it's seeped under the skin, the rewards returned are many.
Track Listing
Rieselfaktor; Sir Lemuel's Dance; Halbzeit; Mood 1697; Rubato; 7/01/1; Herbstzeitlos; Enibas.
Personnel
John Schroder
pianoJohn Schroder: piano; Christian Weidner: alto saxophone; Oliver Potratz: bass; Oliver Steidle: drums.
Album information
Title: Sir Lemuel's Dance | Year Released: 2009 | Record Label: Pirouet Records
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