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Related Reviews

Jazz Times
"Radio Silence...music that only increases in appeal upon repeated listens."
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DOWNBEAT Magazine
"wonderfully percussive and powerful...a great, creative piano trio that makes you bob your head and smile."
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All About Jazz
"Neil Cowley Trio works within a mode that harmoniously turns the tide on convention."
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Jazz Junkie
4½ Stars
"Neil Cowley Trio creates beautiful themes using their own vision"
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All About Jazz
"in the safe nostalgia of the twentieth century...Neil Cowley Trio continue to forge ahead into more challenging territory"
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Mainly Piano
"Radio Silence is a fascinating listening experience...music for the heart and feet"
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Audiophile Audition
4 Stars
"This is music with a hipster sophistication and new millennium accessibility"
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Downbeat Magazine
"a great, creative piano trio that makes you bob your head and smile"
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Critical Jazz
"Lush all most cinematic melodies that suddenly transform into bursts of controlled sonic fury"
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HiFi News
“precision and breath-catching dynamic contrasts, all of which are captured stunningly on this recording”
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Commercial Break
3½ Stars
"this is Cowley's reply to his critics. Perhaps Radio Silence will finally silence them"
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Limelight, Australia
"Cowleys intense, rythmic and richly decorated music is matched by the aggressive immediacy of his cohorts"
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Time Out
"Cowley gives the modern piano trio a distinctly English spin with danceable and daring results."
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Altsounds.com
"a talent which without effort links both the accessibility of "Stereoface" to more improvised tones of "Gerald".
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thesilentballet.com
3½ Stars
"Elegant and poetic..just damn beautiful."
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Elsewhere NZ
"real skills and exciting angularity"
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Bluesanssoul.com
"So summing up this talented threesome, I urge you to forget Viagra just get some NCT in your veins you'll soon be running around like a spring lamb. They are an inspirational spark that just continues to fly upwards bravo!"
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Les Inrockuptibles
"L'equation est simple: formation a la musique classique + jazz + culture pop anglaise = Neil Cowley Trio!"
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juslikemusic.com
"The Neil Cowley Trio continue to expand on the sub-genre of contemporary piano-trio jazz, with their high energy performances and beautifully crafted songs. The new album, Radio Silence, is a brilliant collection of nine songs, so give it a listen"
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Timesonline.co.uk
3 Stars
"nothing short of inspired...wonderfully refreshing...irresistible"
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Jazzwise
3 Stars
"Beautiful... elegiac, meditive even.. a band that seems to have found its voice... the sound of a band maturing fast, and in the process taking more chances. .. This is Cowley's best yet"
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The Word
"these tracks function like mad silent - movie accompaniments that lie just on the right side of chaos."
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Shout4Music.com
4 Stars
"Cowley produces genuinely exciting music compactly arranged into tight song structures."
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subba-cultcha.com
"The album is full of these harmonic diversions that are, great...trail-blazing"
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Manchester Evening News
4 Stars
"by turns explosive, exploratory and eccentric - and sounds much more modern than mouldy old modern jazz"
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heraldscotland.com
"like the late Esbjorn Svensson, he has a talent for tender, deceptively simple melodies"
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thelineofbestfit.com
"wonderfully fluid....emblematic of the best quality of Neil Cowley Trio"
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basic-Soul.co.uk
"sit back and enjoy listening to a trio that is clearly having fun here stretching songs in areas they haven't been before"
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The Scotsman
'Cowley has staked his own claim to a slot in contemporary jazz'
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The Sunday Post
"a great mix of meandering, gentle, lyrical phrases with the occasional virtuoso sprint"
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Inthenews.co.uk
"energetic, tuneful piano pieces that put a smile on your face"
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Sunday Mercury
'Packs a punch'
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BBC Music
"it’s the playfulness bursting from the piano ace’s fingers that should capture the imagination here – and prove he’s not scared of getting fresh".
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The Times
3 Stars
"Little wonder that he got invited to both Glastonbury and Ronnie Scott's...typically mesmerising"
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Entertainment-focus.com
'This album is full of jazz piano offerings that showcase Cowley's talents on the piano. Whether its jazz meanderings like A French Lesson, or the sprawling Vice Skating with Cowley showing his flair traversing up and down the piano....'
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The Independant
'lyrical,angular and seismic'
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The Guardian
"...a complex and subtle album...Cowley is refining his skills as a composer of striking motifs"
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Cigna Sight And Sound
"Enthralling, heart-warming and gripping as the very best in contemporary music...this restless drive pushes the Neil Cowley Trio towards greatness"
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The Jazz Mann
4 Stars
"An important step in the development of the trio. It's a more nuanced record with greater emotional depth than either of its predecessors and heralds a greater maturity in Cowley's writing style"
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Blues & Soul
4 Stars
"These boys are the masters of dynamics and the trio gel as one...breathtaking!"
more >>
The Independent
"Pianism in the grand manner, catchy hooks and floaty ballads"
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Leeds Music Scene
"The production is floorless, and the performance as tight as your landlord's wallet...a continuation of the type of fusion that is driving jazz forwards"
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Contact Music
“The minimal, delicate percussion treatments and swirling piano laden tracks are accomplished”
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BBC Music Magazine
4 Stars
"The elegance of Brad Mehldau and the intensity of Nirvana"
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Bearded
"Their most complete and eloquent statement yet"
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Vanguard
"Whatever your prejudices about jazz, this is a bit special."
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Jazz UK
"Cowley’s Radio Silence increases the dynamic contrasts, classical delicacies and tone-poetic moods of his work without sacrificing the grooving that has bought him many fans outside jazz."
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The Telegraph
4 Stars
"Cowley is a true heir to the English romantic strain of musicians...wonderful"
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Tasty Fanzine
"They are very technically good, all three instruments have very clever parts to play, and all played with flare...it's a good mix"
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Mojo
3 Stars
"Bittersweet...intricate...a big step forward"
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Red Hot Velvet
5 Stars
"Neil and the gang combine crashing crescendos with romantic melodies that even the biggest Jazz novice can sink their teeth into"
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Die Shell Suit Die
3 Stars
"Talented"
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Properganda Blog
"If an album is simply a snapshot of a work in progress, then this is a perfect portrait"
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All Gigs
5 Stars
"Jazz may well be the genre, but this is music that lolls about in your head and gives you a different aural taste every time"
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Shakenstir
5 Stars
"An album that would fit comfortably in anyone's record collection...an emotional but exciting rollercoaster of a journey"
more >>
The Record Collector
4 Stars
"EST on steroids with the attitude of Motorhead"
more >>

Radio Silence in Music OMH


19 April 2010
Music OMH
Darren Lee
3½ Stars

CLICK HERE FOR FULL REVIEW

As the saying goes, many a good thing comes in threes and Neil Cowley's trio is a prime example. Their previous album Loud, Louder, Stop earned many a mighty star rating from the music press and their approach of "music for the heart and feet" goes a long way to challenge those who think that British Jazz is stuck somewhere between the likes of Jamie Cullum and the cheesiness of The Fast Show's recurring visits to their Jazz Club.

Pianist Cowley, together with bassist Richard Sadler and Evan Jenkins on drums, return on a new label for this follow-up, and the trio's wealth of experience has resulted in an intriguing jazz session. They work splendidly together and Cowley's talent as a pianist is beyond question; his deft use of juxtaposing chords and musical phrases should not work on paper, but grabs you immediately. There is also a willingness to incorporate shades of different musical styles that will make them an easier proposition to those with an aversion to stereotypical jazz noodling.

The opening track Monoface is a tightly written piece built around a piano riff that wouldn't be out of place on any rock album. It's full of vibrant discord and forms a bold mission statement. It's a tough act to follow for the rest of the disc; thereafter, things step down a gear with the title track, a slow-burning piece with a more sedate and moody tone. It's still superbly played and recalls classic Blue Note sessions, but it sets the album on too even a keel; you might start to yearn for more of the perky anarchy of its beginnings. Despite this, you can still relax, lean back and wallow while the trio work their magic.

Some tracks show a sense of humour and fun, but with mixed effects; Gerald is amusingly bouncy but the tone of the album as a whole receives a blow with Hug The Greyhound, a track whose boogie-woogie riff sticks out like a Jools Holland-shaped thumb. It's a strange mis-step that throws the action off kilter, but everything manages to recover before the end.

The trio play in a more traditional vein than the recent jazz avant-gardism of Led Bib and Portico Quartet, so this might not be the place to look if you're after such examples of wild invention. However, if your tastes are for something professionally made but with a jagged edge, then this disc should do the trick.


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