Bruno Råberg’s third album as leader is firmly concerned with form. The bassist has played in
bands of different stylistic pursuits, like Orange Then Blue, which threw everything from free form to
mainstream jazz into the stewing pot; and with Eje Thelin, whose band swiped the caboodle from
dixieland to free jazz. Here Råberg is contained. He prefers structure to intuitive freedom. While he
does not completely tighten the leash, this would have been a more interesting recording had the
musicians been given more room. From the latitude granted them, they prove their mettle in
creatively extending logic.
Råberg sets up many moods on this recording using motifs from Carnatic (South Indian) music
and a smidgen of African rhythm. Not all of the tunes succeed in communicating--but when they do,
it is a credit not only to the composition, but also to the links the players forge between themselves.
Grenadier sets up the theme for “Estaron,” a stop-shift movement that jabs at a perky edge and then
unfolds a series of changes opening an uneven field that is fertile ground for Chase on the alto, his
a quieter, lyrical voice. “Caffe Nero” has a light swinging feel, Grenadier and Chase breaking up the
rhythm in unity, and then clasping the linear devolution. Another perky outing comes on “Maya.”
Råberg is wonderfully inventive here, his lines creating a becoming timbral palette. “Triptych”
resonates in the soft splashes of color, impressionism that oozes in the seamless unravelling of the
form.
~ Jerry D'Souza