
Jon Rune Strøm
bass, acousticb.1985
Opening the album, Lea's "Furore," with its joyous

Albert Ayler
saxophone, tenor1936 - 1970
The embrace of more traditional forms contains an echo of the inclusive approach adopted by Lea's sometime collaborator " data-original-title="" title="">Andreas Roysum, on releases such as Mysterier (Motvind, 2023), on which she also appears. On "Eldars Pols" Lea lightly sketches Str?m's mournful melody as the emphasis tends more towards conversational interplay between Andersen's supportive clatter and the bassist's emphatic counterpoint.
Elsewhere that give and take between the instruments holds sway even more. On "Lagen," the blurts, murmurs, and tappy punctuations seem to be playing around an unstated theme, while on the title cut, where Lea toys with lyricism, the exchanges remain resolutely textural and abstract. It is not until the reverential closing rendition of

Charlie Haden
bass, acoustic1937 - 2014

Dewey Redman
saxophone, tenorb.1931

Ornette Coleman
saxophone, alto1930 - 2015
The trio achieves a wonderful sense of cohesion from a diverse range of inquiry, and in doing so recalls another Scandinavian unit in

Martin Kuchen
saxophoneTrack Listing
Furore; Namsen; Eldars Pols; Sulida; Toros; Lagen; For Pedro; Utos; Song For Che.
Personnel
Additional Instrumentation
Marthe Lea: flute, percussion
Album information
Title: Utos | Year Released: 2024 | Record Label: Clean Feed Records
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