RSS

CityLife

Home Music Releases Album Review: Empirical:Out ‘n’ In (Naim Jazz)

Music by section

Album Review: – Empirical:Out ‘n’ In (Naim Jazz)

CityLife Rating: 4.0000 out of 5

THE Ensemble of the Year (2008 Parliamentary Jazz Awards) have a new line-up, but the ethos is the same - premier jazz with no discernible ego.

So little ego indeed, that Out ‘n’ In - a tribute to multi-reeds modernist Eric Dolphy - resembles spiritualist jazz, and could be a posthumous contribution by Dolphy channeled by the London quartet.

Nine originals (two are covers) credibly inhabit the same sound world, and Nathaniel Facey has Dolphy’s crabby tone on alto sax off to a tee, just as guest Julian Siegel convincingly mimics the distinctive timbre of Dolphy’s bass clarinet.

The music is jittery, lop-sided bop, on its way to full abstraction.

Vibes-player Lewis Wright is more low-key and intimate than Bobby Hutcherson on Out To Lunch (the obvious role model).

Shaney Forbes’ elastic sense of time is a marvel: his fragmented skittering micro-beats really gell with the nimble, lucid lines of bassist Tom Farmer. Yet the dominant mood is eerie and introspective, as if it really was dictated from the other side.

The group’s own identity remains elusive on what sounds like a great, lost album by Eric Dolphy.

By Mike Butler

Released: 28/09/2009

Reader Rating: out of 5

No one has currently reviewed 'Empirical:Out ‘n’ In (Naim Jazz)', be the first.

Add your review


GET LISTED

Are you holding an event and want to list it on CityLife?
Add Your Event

Do you know of a venue that isn't already listed?
Add Your Venue