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Related Reviews

www.pennyblackmusic.com
"Innovative and skilful - ‘The Gentle War’ will impress an audience far wider than jazz diehards."
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Record Collector
4 Stars
'The key to the band's allure is not only the adroit way they fuse delicate filigrees of melody with taut, muscular grooves, but also how they create absorbing soundscapes contrasting moods and emotions.'
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The Guardian
'dramatic, absorbingly meditative, and a distinctive take on jazz fusion.'
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The Times
'a forward-thinking piano trio that beefs up its subtle rhythmic and melodic interplay with some rock energy'
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Guardian
3 Stars
“Trichotomy is an accomplished and contemporarily harmonious outfit.”
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Yorkshire Post
“It's fresh and sometimes furious jazz that never slips into the predictable.”
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The Jazz Mann
4 Stars
“If ‘Variations’ established Trichotomy as one of the world’s leading contemporary jazz piano trios then ‘The Gentle War’ consolidates that position…beautiful”
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Jazzwise
4 Stars
“this one again hits the mark”
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BBC.co.uk
“a wonderfully unpredictable album…dramatic and effective”
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Financial Times
3 Stars
“catchy loops, misty ballads and rocky beats tread grittily on a well-signposted path”
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LondonJazz
“Dynamic control and textural subtlety may be the trio's most obvious strengths, but the jazz-piano trio's other core values, lyricism, tunefulness and rhythmic vitality, are by no means neglected on this fine follow-up”
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Allgigs.co.uk
'The opening track and the lighter moments suggest that their upcoming UK tour may see them playing to full appreciative rooms, packed with newcomers and fans of their earlier work alike'
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Jazz Breakfast
“highly attractive piano trio jazz with all the right modern flavours, from funky, chunky timing, to pop-friendly melodic hooks… The Gentle War will definitely hit the spot”
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MOJO Magazine
4 Stars
“delightfully detailed ensembles, full of wit and vigour…they bamboozle with tricky time-signatures and intricate themes”
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redhotvelvet.co.uk
4 Stars
'This is serious music, made by series musicians, but it is accessible, tuneful, mature and brilliantly balanced'
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AAA Music
'unexpectedly playful ...there is a definite rock sound here too'
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Indielondon.co.uk
'an aural reflection of the band’s music that brings a rockier edge to the mix without compromising the beauty of their piano sound'
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Vanguard Online
'By turns playful and melodic, The Gentle War is involving. The simplicity of a trio means that, in jazz, as here, the listener can follow the interplay of the different parts as distinct ideas without it merging into one sound. There’s a mind-enhancing pleasure in following the players as they interact and a clarity of sound.'
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Blues And Soul
“These are an Australian piano-led trio and quite remarkable. A trio playing as one, shifting through various time signatures and textures.”
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Irish Times
4 Stars
“Startling contrasts in dynamics, unusual time signatures and great rhythmic flexibility are swept along in the flow of invention of exciting performances…a stunningly together group”
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BBC Music Magazine
5 Stars
"this is a genuine trio, with three equally important parts, and they never put a foot or finger wrong" 5 stars!
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Independent on Sunday
"a bright, rock-influenced sound that emphasises the equal interplay of bass and drums with Sean Foran's piano."
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Trichotomy in All About Jazz


26 January 2011
All About Jazz
Bruce Lindsay

FULL REVIEW HERE

 

The Gentle War, Trichotomy's fourth album, further establishes the Australian three-piece at the forefront of the newer generation of intelligent, thoughtful and inventive piano trios. The band brought in Brent Sigmeth-an engineer who has worked with jazzers like The Bad Plus, as well as folkies such as Ramblin' Jack Elliott-to mix the album, and the result is exceptional sound quality on all three instruments.
The Gentle War does signify a development in Trichotomy's music from its previous album, Variations (NAIM, 2010), but it's a subtle one: a little more oriented towards immediate accessibility; a little more consistently danceable. But, then, Variations was a fine album, so why mess up a good thing?
Trichotomy operates as a genuine trio, rather than a piano-plus-rhythm-section, even though most of the writing credits go to pianist Sean Foran. All three players get plenty of moments in the spotlight, and grab them, literally, with both hands. This is made clear from the album's first solo: a tough, funky one from bassist Pat Marchisella on the upbeat "Chase." The angular "Sync" showcases John Parker's snappy and assertive stick work, as well as Foran's rhythmic piano, while Parker's "Shut Up" finds the trio in a more aggressive and fragmented mood. "Cute" is just that: a fun, riffy tune, written by Parker for his young son, that resembles fellow NAIM Label band, the Neil Cowley Trio, in its cheery good humor.
It's not all upbeat danceability, though. Trichotomy has a gentler and more reflective side, as evidenced by Foran's lovely "Blues for the Space" and "Not According To Plan." "Blues" is a restrained and atmospheric number that does, indeed, feature plenty of space and shows each player's talent for controlled yet emotive musicianship. "Not According To Plan" is dominated by Foran's low-key piano and Parker's metallic percussion.
Trichotomy formed in 1999 as Misinterpretato-a name it retained in its Australian homeland until 2010. Thankfully, that tongue-twister is gone, with the neater and more descriptive Trichotomy now the band's name worldwide. It's a name worth remembering, for The Gentle War is the sound of a trio that's still in the ascendant.


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