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Disassembler: What Is

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Disassembler: What Is
It's a broad church, but British guitarist Trevor Warren's Disassembler comes out of the same genre mashing movement as bands like Acoustic Ladyland, Polar Bear, Led Bib and trioVD. Each has crafted an individual spin on jazz/rock/dance collision, from Acoustic Ladyland's seminal three-minute punk thrashes, extended by Led Bib and trioVD to include more collective and individual improvisation, through Polar Bear's more nuanced excursions.



Though its sound is entirely its own, Disassembler shares certain qualities with Polar Bear. Eschewing the head charge of Acoustic Ladyland, Disassembler has Polar Bear's taste for the trippy and the understated. There has been some overlap of personnel. Polar Bear's leader, drummer Seb Rochford, was featured on the first Disassembler album, Disassembler (33 Jazz, 2005), and saxophonist Mark Lockheart has been a member of both Disassembler and Polar Bear since 2003.



There the similarities end. Warren founded Disassembler to take the rhythms of modern dance music and present them within the context of jazz improvisation. Some of the dancing takes place on the floor, some of it in the head, and the band—also including trombonist Annie Whitehead, bassist Dudley Phillips and drummer Winston Clifford—is composed of A-list "pure" jazz players frequently heard in straight-ahead contexts.



The seductive What Is is Disassembler's third album, following Fear Is The Mother Of Violence (33 Jazz, 2008). The title is taken from the late American comedian Lenny Bruce's saying, "there is only what is," and Warren has credited the mix, ironically, to "Lady Margaret Thatcher." What Is, however, is less edgy than its predecessor, with its sound bites from speeches made by George W. Bush and his neocon allies; it's a mélange of lyrical improvisations and sinewy, ostinato driven grooves which have at least some of their roots in the early 1970s work of saxophonists Pharoah Sanders and Gato Barbieri.



All but one of the tunes is by Warren, but, as is Disassembler's practice, the arrangements are collective and the solos shared equally between horns and guitar. Warren's fluid single note lines, sometimes subtly effects-treated, are luminous on "Flicker" and "Abe" (whose chugging bass and drums vamp, intentionally or otherwise, is winningly reminiscent of the Pat Metheny Group's "Are You Going With Me?"). Lockheart moves between broken note strewn tenor and ethereal soprano, the latter wonderfully expressive on the big, lurching "Pop 2." Whitehead is showcased on "Reggaetton" and soars on the West African/Latin American-infused "Great Leap Forward."



For the past few years, Warren has divided his time between London and Granada, Spain, where Disassembler won the Asociacion Granada Jazz International Jazz Competition in 2008. What Is was recorded in London in July 2009 and international distribution is planned for 2010. Meanwhile, it's been released in a limited edition by Granada Jazz (distributed by jazzcds.co.uk). It's a jewel of an album by a band that deserves a much higher profile.

Track Listing

Flicker; Abe; Reggaetton; Sweet Torture; Pop 2; Interlude; There's No Sound In Space; Great Leap Forward.

Personnel

Trevor Warren: guitars; Mark Lockheart: tenor and soprano saxophone; Annie Whitehead: trombone; Dudley Phillips: bass; Winston Clifford: drums.

Album information

Title: What Is | Year Released: 2009 | Record Label: Asociacion Granada Jazz

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