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Raf Vertessen: LOI
ByHere, the drummer cites influences from the dynamic international contingent of 1960s free/progressive jazz performers who turned conventional jazz frameworks upside down. The drummer's works include budding layers of sound, by using building blocks amid blossoming cadences, fractured funk beats, free jazz lanes, and gushing outbreaks by trumpeter

Adam O'Farrill
trumpetb.1994

Anna Webber
saxophone, tenorb.1984
The semi-structural components equate to music with a message, absorbed by the ear of the beholder. Moreover, they flirt with minimalism, yet "#4" features Webber's hypersonic lines above frothy undercurrents, where bassist

Nick Dunston
bassThe final track, "#2," is introspective with an intimate and solemn undertow, launched by Dunston's weeping arco phrasings. It's an airy tune, although the ensemble opens the playing field during the coda. In sum, Vertessen's quartet turns back the hands of time with an ultra-modern purview on this unexpected 2020-issued gem. ">
Track Listing
LOI; #1; #4; Layers; #14; Fake 3:7; IRR (1) & #3; Cardinali 2+3; #2.
Personnel
Album information
Title: LOI | Year Released: 2020 | Record Label: El Negocito Records
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