Although many jazz ensembles mostly speak of equivalence there is customarily a leader-sideman hierarchy in operation, generally between the crowd of today’s piano trios. Part of the interest of Puma is the really genuine play on words of the ‘frontline’ instrument. Gard Nilssen’s drums, Stian Westerhus’ guitar and Øystein Moen’s keys have an enviably egalitarian purpose in their murky, at times, deliciously murky entertainment of sound.

Then again, one of the reasons since no singular part of of the organisation is expel in the ‘star’ purpose is since obviously identified themes and solos on chord-based frameworks is not the sequence of the day. Puma is a Norwegian organisation whose members have already cut their teeth with the likes of Jaga Jazzist, Humvee and Nils Petter Molvær and, as is the box to varying degrees with the aforesaid, the responsibility is some-more on the needlework and layering of sounds and how the composites can be serve embroidered.

The success of such an proceed depends on both the brilliance of the tonalities and the ability with that the players emanate incremental change, as they have been not relying on the transparent tragedy and recover that comes with innumerable shifts of key. If there is something of a signature Puma receptive to advice here afterwards it is a sinister, scraped legato note on the guitar, postulated to be not so many a whirling worker as a gravelly bemoan that wraps vine-like around the keys and drums. It’s an impediment vocabulary. Its power is affecting.

There have been flaws though. Westerhus’ guitar infrequently overdoes the mandolin-like prolonged tones, that is a good contrition since he has an engaging hold on the instrument. Nilssen’s drums have been kept divided from the tall register a bit as good much, to the border that there have been many no carillon shots entrance by in the mix, that often gives the audio colour a little critical charcoal. There is yet good romantic abyss as good as reasoning sonic play in Puma, and their moments of impulse indicate a vocal-less, extemporised chronicle of fast goth heroes Bauhaus and their many machiavellian inventive satellites TV on the Radio.   

- – -

Follow the BBC’s manuscript reviews use on Twitter

Share and Enjoy:
  • Print this article!
  • Digg
  • Sphinn
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Mixx
  • Google Bookmarks
  • BarraPunto
  • Bitacoras.com
  • BlinkList