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3x3: Piano Trios: March 2022
ByFergus McCreadie
pianob.1997
If Cairn (Edition Records, 2021) was this trio's introductory field guide to the Scottish countryside, Forest Floor is the updated edition showing a few more of the out-of-the-way trails. The pieces are again themed around parts of the natural landscape, evoking natural features or perhaps memories associated with certain spots -pieces like "Morning Moon" are all calm and stillness, while the likes of "Landslide" and "White Water" ebb and roil just short of actual chaos.
McCreadie's writing style feels organic as much as composed. The pieces here meander smoothly between quiet simmer and wild stomp sometimes they make turns as naturally as a hiker deciding to suddenly change course on a whim; at other times they flow from one mode to another at whatever pace feels right. McCreadie doesn't play the keys so much as dance across them, with his bandmates happily romping in step at each turn. As with their debut, we can hardly ask for a more delightful jaunt.

Our Roots
Self produced
2022

VEIN
band / ensemble / orchestraEach track here has a classical composer listed as prime influence, and while it may be impossible for anyone to quote the opening of Beethoven's fifth symphony without sounding gimmicky, most of the source material here is "inspired by" rather than "variation on." Even Ludwig's iconic quote is mutated into a series of moments of groove and grit. When they go calm and classy, there's still enough pushing and pulling (often with unpredictable rubato timing) to show that anything can mutate at any moment. VEIN's roots may be showing, but you'd be hard-pressed to even recognize them for long before everything becomes their own.

Don't Take It So Personally
Losen Records
2022
There's a certain humanistic angle to
HÜM
pianoWithout much concern for forms, H?M unconcernedly wanders anywhere their fancy takes them. The structures loosen and stretch until they barely sound like forms. They groove sometimes in odd time signatures, sometimes in even ones that somehow feel odd. While the patterns continually mutate, the trio knows they can trust each other to stretch things as much as the mood takes them and bring each other in to shore together. It's a subtle alluring experience where that steady flowing turns out to be the main constant; the song patterns and the group's interplay are always in flux, easy to follow yet impossible to pin down.
Tracks and Personnel
Forest FloorTracks: Law Hill; The Unforrowed Field; Morning Moon; Landslide; Forest Floor; The Ridge; White Water; Glade.
Personnel: Fergus McCreadie: piano; David Bowden: double bass; Stephen Henderson: drums.
Our Roots
Tracks: Luce; Restless; Dal; This Is Beat-O-VEIN; The Lovely Image; Betting Angel; On the Underground Road
.
Personnel: Michael Arbenz: piano; Thomas L?hns: bass; Florian Arbenz: drums.
Don't Take It So Personally
Tracks: Dream Beliefs; Kringsj? bl?; Don't Take It So Personally; After Hours; Sedmaya; Day Dreamer; Peculiar Being; Arctic Ice; Cvekje Cafnalo.
Personnel: Bojan Marjanovi?: piano; Bj?rnar Kaldefoss Tveite: double bass; Magnus Sefaniassen Eide: drums.
Tags
Multiple Reviews
Geno Thackara
Edition Records
Fergus McCreadie
Self Produced
VEIN
Losen Records
HUM
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