Home » Jazz Articles » Album Review » Dave Kain: Raising Kain
Dave Kain: Raising Kain
ByAfter releasing a few albums with different incarnations of the Dave Kain Group, he decided to trim things down. Kain started writing specifically for trio, focusing in on this format as the gigging commenced. Once he felt like all the pieces fell into place, Kain took to the studio and, with some help from long time bandstand pal-cum-producer Matt Garrison and Andrew Swift, he captured the intricacies of his music for all to hear.
Kain is a clean-toned player with a penchant for semi-angular melodicism and a preference for dialed-down intensity. He's not the type to favor histrionics and electronics. He is willing to shred and dirty up his sound on occasion ("Logic"), but that's the exception, not the norm. The majority of this music finds him in a more controlled sonic space. His trio matesbassist Thomson Kneeland and drummer Joe Abbaare equally sensitive players, both in support roles and as soloists. Kain is generous in sharing space, as Kneeland gets plenty of opportunities to take center stage as soloist, scene-setter ("Chloe"), or near-equal partner-in-play ("Paco"). Abba keeps things interesting with a steady flow of ideas. He's comfortable and confident in any setting, be it a lightly waltzing scenario ("Lie And Deny"), a bop-derived run with space for traded solos ("On The Scene"), an odd-metered outing ("Hall Pass"), or a gentle journey ("Chloe").
Raising Kain isn't a hit-you-over-the-head kind of record, but it does get inside the head. Dave Kain's trio doesn't necessarily raise Cain, yet it's impactful in its own way.
Track Listing
Eleven; Miley Cyrus Is The Devil; On The Scene; Lie And Deny; On My Way Home; Hall Pass; Logic; Paco; Chloe; Opportunity; Some Other Time.
Personnel
Dave Kain
guitarDave Kain: guitar; Thomson Kneeland: bass; Joe Abba: drums.
Album information
Title: Raising Kain | Year Released: 2014 | Record Label: Stop Time Records
< Previous
Max Johnson: Big Eyed Rabbit
Next >
Wire Quartet