Eric Revis: Slipknots Through a Looking Glass
Author: Selwyn Harris
View record and artist detailsRecord and Artist Details
Musicians: |
Justin Faulkner |
Label: |
Pyroclastic Records |
Magazine Review Date: |
November/2020 |
Media Format: |
CD |
Catalogue Number: |
PR09 |
RecordDate: |
July 2019 |
While developing an illustrious profile since 1997 as the bassist in the Branford Marsalis quartet, Eric Revis' achievements as an ensemble leader have tended to fall a little under the radar. It might also be that although deeply grounded in tradition especially its rhythm element, as a composer he's straight out of the contemporary avant-garde.
Over the best part of the last decade or so, he's released a handful of albums, alongside a diverse array of left-field luminaries such as Ken Vandermark, Jason Moran and Andrew Cyrille on the discerningly-curated, Lisbon-based avant-jazz label Clean Feed.
On Slipknots Through a Looking Glass his regular acoustic piano trio of pianist Kris Davis, who owns the release label Pyroclastic, and drummer Chad Taylor plus a double-barrelled horn configuration.
Original material has been collected from the same source – a 2017 commission residence at the Kykuit estate in Pocantino Hills, New York – as Revis' two contributions to Marsalis' 2019 Grammy-nominated album The Secret Between the Shadow and the Soul. Revis is interested here in the tension between lateral-thinking compositional processes and the instinctive musicianship of his ensemble.
On opener ‘Baby Renfro’, Revis sets up a sonically-intriguing percussive groove with his lyrical, woody-toned bass synched with prepared piano and pungent sax harmonies, while ‘SpÆ’ is even more percussive in texture, Davis' spaced-out keys and Chad Taylor's mbira's African mantra combine in a mesmerizing, dreamy effect. On ‘Earl and the three-fifths Compromise’ a loping bass, snaky horn lines and ghostly piano sound like a soundtrack to a feline prowling for prey at night.
The honking metal-jazz of ‘Shutter’ comes as a bolt from the blue and features the underappreciated Bill McHenry in feral Brotzman-like mode, whereas ‘House of Leaves’ has Revis hypnotically weaving his bass around an empathetic organic group dialogue of abstract gestures and pointillist motifs. The free jazz blowout of ‘Vimen’ might contrast violently with next-door track ‘When I Become Nothing’ and its deliciously languid Mingus-like horn theme, but the album works very naturally as a whole.

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