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8

Article: Album Review

Jo Harrop & Paul Edis: When Winter Turns to Spring

Read "When Winter Turns to Spring" reviewed by John Eyles


Although Jo Harrop had previously released albums such as Songs for the Late Hours (Lateralize, 2019) and Weathering the Storm (Lateralize, 2020), the release of The Heart Waits (Lateralize, 2021) was a quantum leap forward for the Durham-born vocalist, not least because the album included fewer covers and far more original material than before. Harrop has ...

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Article: Multiple Reviews

Another Timbre passes its two hundredth release…

Read "Another Timbre passes its two hundredth release…" reviewed by John Eyles


As mentioned in a review of Jurg Frey's 2022 album Borderland Melodies, that was the two-hundredth release on Another Timbre, the Sheffield-based label set up by Simon Reynell in 2007. The label had released its hundredth album in 2016, so the second hundred were released over six years compared to the first one's nine years. In ...

4

Article: Album Review

Bertrand Denzler & Jason Kahn: Translations

Read "Translations" reviewed by John Eyles


It is a great pleasure to welcome this Potlatch album which was released at the tail end of 2022. From 1998 until 2017 the independent French label released a steady stream of albums, averaging between two and three a year. Then, nothing was released in 2018, one album in 2019, nothing in 2020, two in 2021 ...

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Article: Album Review

Jürg Frey: Borderland Melodies

Read "Borderland Melodies" reviewed by John Eyles


Borderland Melodies is welcome for several reasons. Firstly, it is numbered “at200," indicating it is the landmark two-hundredth album issued by Another Timbre since its debut in the autumn 2007. As the label's hundredth album was released in 2016, it seems its rate of releasing albums is increasing (maybe a side effect of Covid?) Secondly, like ...

7

Article: Album Review

Jürg Frey, Reinier van Houdt: Lieues d’Ombres

Read "Lieues d’Ombres" reviewed by John Eyles


Anyone familiar with the Elsewhere label (or Edition Wandelweiser or Another Timbre...) will have frequently encountered Swiss composer and clarinetist Jürg Frey. In addition, those who regularly listen to Elsewhere will have heard much of Dutch pianist Reinier van Houdt. Between them, Frey and van Houdt have now appeared on six of Elsewhere's twenty-three albums to ...

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Article: Album Review

James O'Sullivan: Lovely Error

Read "Lovely Error" reviewed by John Eyles


Having been an active member of Eddie Prévost's Friday night Workshop since the early years of the millennium, experimental guitarist James O'Sullivan has not learned to improvise by receiving lessons per se but, like many other Workshop participants, by playing with like-minded individuals, listening, searching for sounds, experimenting, making mistakes and learning from them. Along the ...

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Article: Multiple Reviews

Three contrasting Insub releases

Read "Three contrasting Insub releases" reviewed by John Eyles


Insub dates back to 2006 when it began in Geneva, Switzerland, as a netlabel called Insubordinations and a non-profit association, initially called Association Insubordinations, both soon shortened to Insub, for obvious reasons. The Insub Meta Orchestra was founded in 2010 by the duo of percussionist Cyril Bondi and electronicist Laurent Peter, aka 'd'incise.' Ever since, the ...

3

Article: Album Review

Eddie Prévost: Collider – or, ‘whose drum is it, anyway?’

Read "Collider – or, ‘whose drum is it, anyway?’" reviewed by John Eyles


The festivities that accompanied drummer Eddie Prévost's eightieth birthday in 2022 (including four Saturday night concerts at London's Café Oto, each celebrating a different facet of his career) served to highlight the breadth and depth of his activities and talents, and to open some audience members' eyes to previously undiscovered aspects of him. Prévost's highest profile ...

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Article: Album Review

Magnus Granberg: How Lonely Sits the City? (version for quartet)

Read "How Lonely Sits the City? (version for quartet)" reviewed by John Eyles


In 2020 the Japanese Meenna label took the unprecedented step of releasing two different versions of Magnus Granberg's composition Come Down to Earth Where Sorrow Dwelleth within months of one another, the first performed by the American quartet Ordinary Affects, the second by a Japanese quartet of sho, koto, prepared piano and no-input mixing board; both ...

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Article: Multiple Reviews

Two from Die Hochstapler

Read "Two from Die Hochstapler" reviewed by John Eyles


Formed in 2011, the French-Italian-German quartet Die Hochstapler (The Impostors) has comprised the same four players ever since, with the instrumentation of a classic jazz quartet--saxophone, trumpet, bass and drums. Prior to the pair of recordings below, they had released three albums on Umlaut, The Braxtornette Project (2013), The Music of Alvin P. Buckley (2015), and ...


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