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Peter Erskine New Trio: In Praise of Shadows
By
Peter Erskine
drumsb.1954
Interesting also is the album's simultaneous release alongside Erskine's latest effort with his co-operative jazz-funk fusion unit, the Dr. Um Band. In Praise of Shadows provides an interesting set of parallels and contrasts to its sister release. The music on both albums is a type of 21st Century jazz-everything fusion: tight but loose, replete with subtle "world-music" flavors, complex yet easy to grasp, executed at the virtuoso level, looking back fondly as often as it hints at the musical future, balancing moments of deadly seriousness with quirky wit.
Though most of the original material here was written by pianist

Vardan Ovsepian
pianob.1975
On electric bass is the drummer's nephew,

Damian Erskine
bass, electricb.1973

Myra Melford
pianob.1957
Ovsepian's writing is similarly active and resourceful. Though there's no evidence of song authorship anywhere on the album's packaging (and precious little on Erskine's website, for that matter), one may conclude that the pianist penned most of the pieces here. My personal favorites are "What If" and "Labyrinth," the album's two hyperactive, up-tempo pieces. Besides being super-fascinating, both serve an auxiliary purpose as percussion showcases. Brooding ECM-like moods carry the day on several tracks, particularly "All That Remains." However, Damian Erskine's supple electric bass imparts a particular sort of punch to the proceedings that keeps the music from getting too impressionistic. The music also gets an extra boost from Uncle Pete's habit of reinforcing the basic drum tracks with shakers, brushes and other subtle percussive maneuvers. Erskine's sole original, "Each Breath" is an earworm with a tropical feel that benefits from a guest shot by cellist
Artyom Manukyan
celloIf there's anything Uncle Pete enjoys, it's an oddball cover tune, and I am guessing there are three of them on In Praise of Shadows. Besides the aforementioned "Sukiyaki," "Smile" gets and exceptionally odd treatment with tightrope-walking cello and plunky-sounding marimbas framing Varsepian's head-spinning, acrobatic solo. A sweet, somewhat resigned ballad with some truly dark harmonies moving around within, "Marcheta" sounds curiously non-Mexican. Uncle Pete's brief solo on brushes provides a perfect stinger as the tune closes.
This is one piano trio that effortlessly establishes a signature sound by virtue of the very strong musical personalities involved. ">
Track Listing
Sukiyaki; What If; Each Breath; Labryinth; Marcheta ('A Love Song of Old Mexico'); Silhouette Shadows; Begin Within; Distant Blue; Smile; All That Remains.
Personnel
Peter Erskine
drumsPeter Erskine: drums, marimba, percussion; Vardan Ovsepian: piano, keyboards; Damian Erskine: electric bass; Judd Miller: EVI (1); Artyom Manukyan: cello (3, 9).
Album information
Title: In Praise of Shadows | Year Released: 2017 | Record Label: Fuzzy Music
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