Home » Jazz Articles » Album Review » Pete Robbins Transatlantic Quartet: Live In Basel
Pete Robbins Transatlantic Quartet: Live In Basel
ByThankfully, we have shed those differentiations, and Robbins can dabble successfully in multiple jazz genres. His Transatlantic Quartet is a harmonic and rhythms-centric crowd- pleasing performance band. After his first three studio recordings, he released the totally free-improvised Live In Brooklyn (Not Two, 2011) with his Unnamed Quartet, and the rocking and raucous siLENT Z Live (Hate Laugh Music, 2010).
Continuing with the live (read: "alive") nature of his music, Live In Basel invokes the new Brooklyn sound but with an international cast including Irish bassist Simon Jermyn, Canadian drummer

Kevin Brow
drums
Mikkel Ploug
guitarb.1978
This band revives the idea that jazz is folk music, just as hip-hop and rock are now part of popular folklore. Without dipping their toes into jazz/rock fusion, the quartet fires an electric vibe, Jermyn employing a six-string electric bass (and some deft effects) and Brow fusing his jazz drumming with hints of hip-hop and club beats. Robbins is satisfied to deal with concise melodies and harmonies here. "Eliotsong" is a slick break-beat shimmy of groove acceleration, "Inkhead" meshes disparate parts into another satisfying groove, and "Hoi Polloi" rewinds the Brooklyn sound back to early

Steve Coleman
saxophone, altob.1956
Live In Basel is rich, passionate, abraded jazz that wears very well. ">
Track Listing
Eliotsong; There There; Inkhead; The Quiet Space Left Behind; Hoi Polloi; Introductions; Hope Tober.
Personnel
Pete Robbins
saxophone, altoPete Robbins: alto saxophone; Mikkel Ploug: guitar; Simon Jermyn: electric bass; Kevin Brow: drums.
Album information
Title: Live In Basel | Year Released: 2012 | Record Label: Hate Laugh Music
Tags
Comments
PREVIOUS / NEXT
Support All About Jazz
