While on a tour of Japan in 2019, Japanese pianist Satoko Fujii and Spanish drummer Ramon Lopez asked trumpeter Natsuki Tamura to join them, and to join in a challenge to write a new piece of music for the trio each day while on tour; this studio album selects the finest of those compositions, performed with nearly telepathic control in a mix of fire and lyrical beauty.
Label: Not Two Catalog ID: MW 1003-2 Squidco Product Code: 29805
Format: CD Condition: New Released: 2020 Country: Poland Packaging: Cardboard Gatefold Recorded at Yawatahama Yumemikan, in Ehime, Japan, on September 22nd, 2019 by Mitsuru Itani, Naofumi Sato and Toshihiro Toyoshima.
"Japanese pianist Satoko Fujii rarely stands still. When she and Spanish drummer Ramon Lopez toured Japan in 2019 on the back of their duo album Confluence (Libra, 2019), they took the opportunity to add Fujii's partner trumpeter Natsuki Tamura to the line up. To make things fresher still, they set themselves a challenge: to each write a new piece for the trio every day. Mantle, recorded in the studio the day after the tour concluded, collects their favorite numbers, three from each principal.
Consequently, while the program has been road-tested to a degree, it retains an appealing rawness, shunning tight arrangements or complex lines. And as a result, while the outcome is similarly enthralling, it is very different to other entries in Fujii's discography made with the same instrumentation, such as the superb 1538 (Libra, 2018).
As each selection is purpose-built for the threesome, it is no surprise that they make ingenious use of the resources to hand, encompassing solo, duo and trio formations within an ensemble conception. Some are quite dark, tinged with melancholy such as "Your Shadow," others are more playful, taking an irreverent approach to the written material, with the kernels of tunes treated very freely. Like all the best stories, it is never possible to second guess where the twists and turns within each cut will lead.
Many of the themes come hidden within group interplay, cloaked by discursive asides and suspenseful pauses. As such, any authorial differences are masked. Whether on the percussive "From Spring To Summer," the conversational "Straw Coat," or "Came, Left," with its allusions to drum and bugle corps, the three master improvisers hint at rhythm and melody while revelling in dynamic switchbacks and expressive textures.
And those textures go beyond the now expected delights of the weird and wonderful sounds Tamura extracts from his trumpet or Fujii's edgy excursions under the bonnet of her instrument. Lopez' study of tablas manifests in certain patterns and tempered sonorities that he draws from his drum heads, notably in his unaccompanied introduction to "Encounter."
The final "The Temple Bell" toggles between adventurous piano and trumpet exchanges, and drum interludes which touch on moods from martial to bombastic, eventually ramping up to an intense climax and an ultimately enigmatic and unresolved finish. It is an ending which sums up the entire date: loosely handled scripts, embellished by breathtaking improvisation, which still leave plenty for the imagination to ponder."-John Sharpe, All About Jazz