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Ken Thomson and Slow/Fast: Settle
By
Ken Thomson
saxophoneb.1976
Thomson has heavy credentials in both the classical and jazz / improvised music worlds. He co-leads the punk-jazz band

Gutbucket
band / ensemble / orchestra
Asphalt Orchestra
band / ensemble / orchestraThe title track is not what you'd expect. It's all elbows and knees; urgent tempo, angrily fuzzed guitar chords and darting horn lines. Things settle down into a surging 6/8 for Thomson's alto solo-his sound is light, fast and articulate-before the piece takes on a proggy math-rock feel.

Fred Kennedy
drums
Russ Johnson
trumpetb.1965

Nir Felder
guitar
Adam Armstrong
bass, acousticKennedy crushes it again on "Welding for Freedom." Here, the young drummer plays two opposing lines, each with one hand: one matches Johnson's trumpet and the other parallels Thomson's alto. He continues playing the line, accompanied only by minimal guitar and bass chords until Thomson's fetching theme kicks in, followed by Johnson's fierce solo. Spring is no less engaging. Armstrong's meditative solo is followed by a rippling horn figure which, itself, is dramatically interrupted by Felder's metallic chords and Kennedy's crashing drums. A neo-classical feel pervades "Bend Towards Light," which is almost through-composed with the exception of Thomson's virtuosic bass clarinet solo. Yet, this piece is anything but cold or stiff. Kennedy's funky drums snake around a call-and-response figure that pits bass and bass clarinet against guitar and trumpet. "Coda" is, well, a brief coda. Like the rest of the album, it has a mysterious beauty to it.
Ken Thomson's music is unbelievably subtle, devilishly complicated, and it must be difficult to play. Yet, it's not difficult to listen to. There are several reasons for this. One is obvious: Thomson's band is populated with total badasses. The other is that playing music is a process. If you engage in that process over time with the same people-and they're the right people-the music gets more soulful, more heartfelt, more personal. On Settle, an album whose title itself implies a certain happy stability, Thomson's kaleidoscopic, multi-stylistic compositions are imbued with warmth and soul by an amazing ensemble. Settle is an album for the ages: truly fearless music made by people with a strong sense of commitment to their art. ">
Track Listing
Settle; We Are Not All In This Together; Welding for Freedom; Spring; Bend Towards Light; Coda.
Personnel
Ken Thomson
saxophoneKen Thomson: bass clarinet, alto saxophone, compositions; Russ Johnson: trumpet; Nir Felder: guitar; Adam Armstrong: bass; Fred Kennedy: drums.
Album information
Title: Settle | Year Released: 2014 | Record Label: NCM East
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