Home » Jazz Articles » Album Review » Quin Kirchner: The Other Side of Time
Quin Kirchner: The Other Side of Time
By
Quin Kirchner
drumsb.1981
Things get rolling with the appropriately titled "Ritual." From the start, tenor saxophonist
Nate LePine
saxophone, tenorb.1973

John Coltrane
saxophone1926 - 1967
It's hard to believe that this opens his first album as a band leader. Kirchner earned his chops in Chicago as a sideman with a long list that includes

Jeb Bishop
trombone
Greg Ward
saxophone
Paul Giallorenzo
piano
Rob Clearfield
piano
Dave Miller
guitar
Nick Mazzarella
saxophone, altob.1984
Nate LePine
saxophone, tenorb.1973

Keefe Jackson
saxophone
Nomo
band / ensemble / orchestra"When I was young and starting out in New Orleans, I was just trying to make some semblance of a living as a musician," he says. "You want to do creative things and develop your artistic voice. But you also need to get gigs that pay, which means being flexible and versatile. I've always set out to be well-versed in all styles and it has really influenced my voice and informed how I play."
Certainly the album covers a lot of ground. "Together We Can Explore the Furthest Beyond" is a complex, thoughtful ballad. "Armageddon" is pure avant-garde. "Drums & Tines Pt 1" is hardly a jazz piece at all, lacking as it does a single brass instrument. Man, does it groove though. Part 2 is equally solid.
"The 'Drums & Tines' cuts come out of my time playing music with Elliot Bergman in NOMO, Wild Belle and Metal Tongues," says Kirchner. "The electric kalimba I play on those tracks is one from our kalimba building sessions in 2009 ... Those tracks are sort of an homage to that part of my style which developed a lot on the road with those bands."
Kirchner says

Jeb Bishop
tromboneThat format shines brightest on The Other Side of Time. Not since Kamasi Washington's Epic has a new bandleader come out of the gate in this kind of form.
Strong enough to take a stab at

Sun Ra
piano1914 - 1993
"Anyone playing adventurous improvisational music owes a lot to Sun Ra," says Kirchner. "His influence and worldview (or universe-view) continue to open up new possibilities in the music."
The band's take on two

Charles Mingus
bass, acoustic1922 - 1979
There is material on this album that dates back a decade. Other pieces are brand new. It is of course the luxury of a debut album that you have your whole life to prepare it. But given the depth of this work, a sophomore jinx seems unlikely. ">
Track Listing
Ritual; Brainville; Crossings; Drums & Tines Pt 1; Wondrous Eyes; Limbo / The Shoes of the Fisherman's Wife Are Some Jive Ass Slippers; Resounder; Together We Can Explore the Furthest Beyond; Mumbo Jumbo; Flutter; Karina; Drums & Tines Pt. 2; Armageddon; Ripple; Self-Portrait In Three Colors.
Personnel
Quin Kirchner
drumsQuin Kirchner: drums, percussion, kalimba, sampler, Wurlitzer; Nick Broste: trombone; Nate Lepine: tenor saxophone, flute; Jason Stein: bass clarinet; Matt Ulery: bass; Ben Boye: piano on "Together We Can Explore the Furthest Beyond."
Album information
Title: The Other Side of Time | Year Released: 2018 | Record Label: Astral Spirits
Tags
Comments
PREVIOUS / NEXT
Support All About Jazz
