Over 34 years, Australian trio
the Necks -- pianist/keyboardist
Chris Abrahams, drummer/electric guitarist
Tony Buck, and bassist
Lloyd Swanton -- have forged a compelling, exploratory, and singular musical language. Often categorized as a "jazz piano trio," they've essentially reinvented that configuration in their own image with captivating, difficult-to-categorize instrumental music.
Travel follows 2017's
Unfolded in offering four side-long cuts spread across a double LP. This music -- impeccably recorded and mixed by longtime collaborator
Tim Whitten -- documents the trio's recent rehearsal habit: They start each studio encounter by playing an extended improvisation for roughly 20 minutes. These recordings are some of those improvs played live to tape, then appended with minimal post-production edits and overdubs.
"Signal" is initially straightforward but wanders wide.
Swanton's incessantly repetitive double bass vamp is the anchor.
Buck hovers behind, pairing ride cymbal and rim shots while syncopating the rhythm.
Abrahams explores Middle Eastern and North African modalism on piano, and on organ layers nebulous chord voicings onto mysterious note clusters. He and
Buck continually circle back to ground themselves in
Swanton's vamp. The flow becomes intense as
Swanton pulls out a bow, and
Buck adds snare breaks. "Forming" is a slow brooding burn. Its single-piano-chord foundation is broken up by
Abrahams into individual notes before he reconstructs it in alternating resonant tones and timbral combinations.
Buck whispers, cajoles, and encourages with fluttering tom-toms and cymbal washes.
Swanton abstractly combines harmonic drones with dark, taut chords. At nine minutes,
Abrahams' right hand pointillistically vamps directly from them. He cascades around
Buck's beats, creating an alternate dynamic. "Imprinting" finds the players disguising the organic sounds of their instruments, initially. As
Buck builds a circular ceremonial pattern with low-tuned toms,
Swanton's arco bass sounds akin to a muted cornet.
Abrahams almost indecipherable electric piano notes slide in, then commingle in a counter vamp of fat, shimmering chords, layered inside a noir-ish sounding Hammond B-3, producing a wealth of tonalities for the trio to investigate. Strangely, it resembles
Jon Hassell's
Aka/Darbari/Java: Magic Realism and the latter half of
Miles Davis's "Shh/Peaceful" simultaneously. Closer "Bloodstream" commences with an organ fugue over a seemingly breathing arco bass drone.
Abrahams begins comping on piano, running through blues and modal post-bop, then threads in a bounty of spooky, almost otherworldly organ.
Buck enters at six minutes with thunderous, rolling snares. Then he drops out, allowing
Abrahams to assert harmony before the drum kit returns with thudding tom-toms and crisp, reverbed cymbals.
Swanton adds electronic treatments to his droning bass.
Buck's addition of a warmly distorted electric guitar adds ballast, texture, and poignancy.
Despite the change in m.o.,
Travel is very much a
Necks album and lines up seamlessly with the trio's vast catalog. It blossoms with new ideas, fluid spontaneity, and fresh ideas. For newcomers curious about the long-standing trio's music,
Travel is a truly excellent place to begin. ~ Thom Jurek