Those who find avant-garde jazz and free improvisation to be too abrasive are advised to check out this album, on which guitarist
Nels Cline is joined by bass wizard
Mark Dresser, drummer
Billy Mintz, and downtown legend
Zeena Parkins on electric and acoustic harp. Make no mistake about it, this music (some of which is composed and some improvised) is definitely challenging: tonal centers, when they exist, shift unpredictably, and
Dresser and
Parkins in particular make almost constant use of extended techniques that allow them to pull otherworldly sounds from their instruments. But the musical textures are generally quite delicate, and even when the music is atonal it's often very beautiful, even by conventional measures. "Alstromeria," in particular, features some lovely passages on which interlocked harp and guitar arpeggios march gently beneath
Dresser's quietly wailing line of artificial harmonics, and the startlingly tortured sounds that
Parkins elicits from her electric harp on "Spider Wisdom" (one of the more difficult pieces on this album) are lots of fun. Melodically,
Cline is clearly influenced by
Derek Bailey, but his tone and execution are all his, and his compositions reward the effort it sometimes takes to follow them. Recommended. ~ Rick Anderson