Home » Jazz Articles » Album Review » Ill Considered: Precipice
Ill Considered: Precipice
ByJohn Tilbury
pianoTell this to London's improvising trio

Ill Considered
band / ensemble / orchestra
Idris Rahman
saxophone
Liran Donin
bass
Emre Ramazanoglu
drumsBut it works. The reason it works is partly the nature of the musicconsonant, with key centers and motor rhythmsand partly because the players do listen to each other, intently and all the time. The result? Music that is a pleasure to listen to rather than a threat to mental health.
Frontman Idris Rahman is typical of his colleagues in being at home in structured as well as wholly improvised situations. Occasionally, though not often enough, he performs on clarinet with his supremely talented sister, the pianist

Zoe Rahman
pianoRobin Hopcraft
trumpetPrecipice was recorded live, with great sound, in Ill Considered's 3x3m Tardis-like home studio (it is bigger on the inside), with no overdubs. Coming in just shy of 45 minutes, the ten tracks are fiery without being abrasive, and sometimes soft and yielding. Check the YouTube below. Ever lyrical, Rahman's rough-hewn sound, often vocalized in its middle and lower registers, is pure joy to listen to, as is the way all three musicians bounce off each other. This is the sort of album that gives free improv a good name. ">
Track Listing
Jellyfish; Don't Be Sad (It's Too Late); Vespa Crabro; Linus With The Sick Burn; And Then There Were Three; Katabatic; Black Lacquer; Kintsugi; Solenopsis; Alpenglow.
Personnel
Album information
Title: Precipice | Year Released: 2024 | Record Label: New Soil
Tags
Comments
PREVIOUS / NEXT
Support All About Jazz
