Home » Jazz Articles » Album Review » Karl Latham / Ryan Carniaux / Mark Egan: Constellations
Karl Latham / Ryan Carniaux / Mark Egan: Constellations
By
Miles Davis
trumpet1926 - 1991
Karl Latham suggests that fundamentally there is an air of Miles Davis' electric period in many of his own compositions, and there is the same play on tension and distortion in Constellations, which includes six original compositions by Latham's quartet, as well as six impressions of Bjork's work.
Bjork's artistry remains abundant in 2015, with art house flirtations at MOMA alongside her latest album, "Vulnicura." As befits an artist in turmoil, it never hurts to see yourself as others see you (a la Spiegel in Speigel), especially when all is full of love. From the onset Latham sets the scene for his interpretation of Bjork's work (all taken from her Volta: extra tracks album). His choice of personal compositions and their intriguing titles fit perfectly aside his Bjork interpretations, and the foursome present as proximal a Live Evil experience as is to be expected without the première force majeure of Davis.
"Hope," the first track starts strikingly with drums, as does the original, and progresses to a lyrical trumpet feature by
Ryan Carniaux
trumpet
Mark Egan
bassb.1951

Nick Rolfe
keyboards"Wanderlust" is full-on Japanese space music, with extra bells and whistles. Drawbar effects warm the proceedings, and Carniaux blends a sound that comes off half

Chris Botti
trumpetb.1962

Till Bronner
trumpetb.1971

Toshinori Kondo
trumpetb.1948
"My Juvenile," starts off a wall of heavy bass, twisting synths conjure a scene of austere adolescence. A lonely, lost sound dominates a haunting trumpet poem. "The Dull Flame Of Desire," Bjork's brassy, "eyes my dear, bracing glance" duet with Antony Hegarty is replaced with a searing duet of bass and trumpet which plays out with a "Demolition Man" style bass line (rummaging through your Sting albums yet? We see you). "Godhi" is foot to the floor bass pedal reverberations, a Tomita/Kondo-style "Tubular Bells" battle; hits the God particle for 21st Century pagans.
"I See Who You Are," a weighty piece, emerges with whale-like aplomb, cymbal crashes, space warriors roaming, dusty packets of noodles circa 3500 float past circular viewing windows. A Love Supreme hinting at Return to Forever. Fender Rhodes gets the groove furrowed and so it goes, cue trumpet spot, drum fills, space synth overdose, the final frontier arrived at by the slow walking bass line, who knew? The Cylons (Galactica circa 1980).
"Alugsukat" a feel so old it sounds like the 80s might to teenagers now, a mighty groove moogathon. Rolfe's keys throughout are reminiscent of a combination of

Chick Corea
piano1941 - 2021

Herbie Hancock
pianob.1940
"Ostara" presents the final platform of Constellations to pronounce the diverse drum skills of Latham, includes an array of ambient noise, interference, jingly jangly drum rap, doo-dap-spit-tap-ting. A 'proper' Egan solo, fine Hancockian keys from Rolfe and a brighter trumpet solo injects optimism and a ticket back to reality. If Mark Egan wanted to riff on Mona Lisa in the style of Jaco Pastorius, this is it, "Wow" bass slides and extra noodling to finish. "Ostara," Goddess of the Equinox, and where the word Easter comes from.
An album that rewards repeated listening. ">
Track Listing
Hope; Draco Rexus; Wanderlust; Desired Constellation; Frejya; My Juvenile; The Dull Flame Of Desire; Godhi; I See Who You Are; Alugsukat; Hulda Folk; Ostara.
Personnel
Karl Latham
drumsKarl Latham: drums, percussion; Mark Egan: electric bass: Nick Rolfe: keyboards; Ryan Carniaux: trumpet, flugelhorn.
Album information
Title: Constellations | Year Released: 2015 | Record Label: Double Moon Records
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