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Evan Parker, Mat Maneri, Lucian Ban

Evan Parker invites Lucian Ban and Mat Maneri to join him for his monthly series. This gig celebrates the launch of a new album, under Mat’s name, Sounding Tears (Clean Feed).

“It’s like Lester Young mixed with something insane; rooted in the past of an alternate universe which may have never existed.” (Mat Maneri)

 

“A very serious and sombre record, it floats in space and lingers, notions of beat and static rhythm largely absent at least overtly given that there is no bass or drums. Only a distant tracing of each is inferred. Mat Maneri’s viola mines tiny details and his approach is such that he does not take the obvious potential of the instrument in that he does not have to plumb the rich sonorities the putatively swollen violin can provide instead choosing to dig out routes towards a new dissonance that you never thought were navigable. A mood of elegy is woven by the three in an elaborately abstract tapestry so fine that you can hardly see the needlepoint. Evan Parker is as reflective as he is customarily exploratory and more relevant than ever, sounding different here, and at just under an hour it is an album that does not outstay its welcome, its intensity level ringing peak after peak the more introverted it becomes, the three masterfully controlling stark silence and space to blaze and quietly burn. Amid the 10 pieces of the studio set recorded in 2014 in Paramus, New Jersey, pianist Lucian Ban’s role is probably the most intriguing: he manages to paint a very full canvas without the need for a massive sense of attack, sometimes numbing the heightened mood with his jaggedly crawling harmonic trajectory that on ‘This!’ for instance taps what sounds like a new way to rewrite Monk. A very different sound to when Maneri performs in trio with Craig Taborn and Ches Smith that trio works better together because there is a firmer architecture. And yet there is plenty to savour and admire in terms of individual moments on Sounding Tears even in its sober and considerable relentlessness.” (Stephen Graham, Marlbank)

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