"When it comes to improvised music if the more traditional, itchy scratchy variety I do have a bit of a weakness for straight-up guitar/percussion releases. Some of my earliest Derek Bailey albums, which remain some of my favourites featured the guitarist with assorted sticksmen. Bailey's disc with John Stevens always remaining very special to me. Just the other night after writing about Roger Turner I took his Oche album with Christian Munthe down from the shelf for an airing as well, and another fine disc that one is. The names on tonight's disc, called Nervure on the Creative Sources label are less known to me, in fact (I think) brand new to me. Olivier Dumont is the guitarist and Rodolphe Loubatiere the percussionist, and while they are not quite in the same league as the names previously mentioned they make the kind of music that its good to listen to on warm evenings under a window with a cold ginger beer... There are three tracks on Nervure, with each made up mostly of small sounds scratching and scurrying around one another. The guitar often sounds as much like a further percussive element as Loubatiere's instrumentation, usually amplified but played with little scurrying explorations and various items tapping and rubbing over the instrument as much as the strings are ever directly addressed by themselves. There are no rhythms as such, no pulse and no real extended passages in which the drums are struck, with extended techniques very much the name of the game from both musicians throughout, but exactly what each of those techniques may look like I haven't a clue. Like so many improv records, and so many reviews I have written about them, this disc is all about that interplay, that struggle/tussle/squabble/chatter that two musicians in full flight, responding in a flash bring to the music. This isn't music that will change the world, or even make me reach for the sleeve notes to see if there is anything on them I may have missed. Its clearly a nice clear recording of tinkling children's musical boxes, tinging metals struck and decaying slowly, prickly tapping and crackling, bowed metal, rubbed strings, hammered hollow wood. Its a lot of nice sounds wrapped together with energy and with a sense of design and balance. It is music for nights like this, when I don't want to have to think too much, but I want to enjoy the experience of engaging with music to pull it all apart, fathom out how it all works. It shard for me to sit here and recommend this CD particularly highly above a host of other improv discs. There is little to truly set it apart from other acoustic improv duos but its certainly not a bad recording at all, and its exactly what I needed tonight."-Richard Pinnell, The Watchful Ear
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 At The Squid's Ear!
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Improvised Music European Improv, Free Jazz & Related lowercase, micro-improv, sound improv Creative Sources Free Improvisation
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Track Listing:
1. petiole 18:07
2. nervure 13:39
3. limbe 21:28
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