Search - Chicago Underground Trio :: Slon

Slon
Chicago Underground Trio
Slon
Genres: Alternative Rock, Jazz, Pop
 
  •  Track Listings (9) - Disc #1

Originally known as the Chicago Underground Duo, their half dozen releases since 1997 have found them growing and contracting. Founding members Rob Mazurek (cornet and computer) and Chad Taylor (drums), along with Noel Kup...  more »

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Chicago Underground Trio
Title: Slon
Members Wishing: 0
Total Copies: 0
Label: Thrill Jockey
Original Release Date: 1/1/2004
Re-Release Date: 1/20/2004
Genres: Alternative Rock, Jazz, Pop
Styles: Modern Postbebop, Bebop
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPC: 790377013627

Synopsis

Amazon.com
Originally known as the Chicago Underground Duo, their half dozen releases since 1997 have found them growing and contracting. Founding members Rob Mazurek (cornet and computer) and Chad Taylor (drums), along with Noel Kupersmith (bass and computer) are by turns funky and propulsive ("Shoe Lace"), mysterious and ethereal ("Kite"), and everything in between. On a piece like "Palermo" they sound like descendants of Eno, given extra heft with a foundation of solid drumming. They draw equally from sixties free jazz models as well as electronics. The latter element evokes both contemporary sonics as well as such earlier experimenters as Morton Subotnick. With Slon, C.U.T. are to be commended for shaping a true album experience. It's varied, flowing, and full of surprises. In addition, their acoustic and electric instruments blend with seamless organic logic, as bursts of a human lung-fueled horn springs out of the undulating rhythms and textures beneath. --David Greenberger

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CD Reviews

Music for rebellion
R. Hutchinson | a world ruled by fossil fuels and fossil minds | 09/11/2004
(5 out of 5 stars)

"The only liner note for SLON is this statement:



THIS MUSIC WAS DEVELOPED DURING OUR "NO WAR TOUR" IN EUROPE, APRIL 2003. THIS IS DEDICATED TO ALL THE PEOPLE WHO HAVE LOST THEIR LIVES AT THE HANDS OF U.S. IMPERIALISM.



SLON certainly kicks off appropriately, then, with a number called "Protest," which has a militant, funky beat. Rob Mazurek on cornet, Noel Kupersmith on bass, and Chad Taylor on drums are tight, and the riff sounds like township music from South Africa, as anti-apartheid protesters faced off against the regime. Half-way through, though, electronics enter, as Mazurek and Kupersmith employ computers, and the piece morphs as a live trio now interacts with an electronic trio.



The second track, "Slon," is mainly electronic, with Mazurek and Kupersmith soloing over what sounds like Autechre from TRI REPETAE. "Zagreb" is a beautiful ballad, "Sevens" takes its name from the tricky time signature, and "Campbell Town" is an incredibly funky, upbeat number. These three are all acoustic -- electronics reappears on "Kite" and "Palermo." "Kite" is a slow, spacy number, floating up in the breeze, I suppose, with improvisation over a computer track, while "Palermo" features electronics burbling over an insistent computer-drum rhythm, a haunting melody, and "found sounds from the fish market in Sicily" according to the Thrill Jockey website. The last two tracks, "Shoe lace" and "Pear" are all acoustic. The powerful "Shoe lace" sounds more like Don Cherry, Ed Blackwell, and Charlie Haden than anything else on the album, with a melodic head as a launchpad for improvisation. "Pear" is an elegy, mourning for "all the people who have lost their lives at the hands of U.S. imperialism."



This is a great album, one of the year's finest. It isn't mainstream, but it's definitely accessible. The rhythm section is strong, there are memorable melodies -- this is music with appeal to more than the avant few. Don't miss it!"
Electric jazz with soul
Troy Collins | Lancaster, PA United States | 05/16/2004
(4 out of 5 stars)

"The Chicago Underground Trio's previous releases have found trumpeter Rob Mazurek and company flirting with electronics, but never so heavily as on the recent Slon. While electronically augmented jazz ensembles are nothing new, finding that delicate balance between free improvisation and constrained electronic composition can be bewilderingly difficult. But Slon is a fine example of a successful endeavor.Drums, bass and trumpet are often accompanied by electronic washes, drones and overdubbing that expand the group's sound. None of these effects are superfluous however; they are integral to the groups' arrangements. Naturally, the shadow of electric period Miles Davis pervades this music, but just as important to the trio's dynamic is the classic free-jazz of Ornette Coleman and Don Cherry. While earlier releases by the group have strayed further into more exploratory territory, Slon finds the trio with its most concise and streamlined statement to date."
Very good
Anthony Cooper | Louisville, KY United States | 12/23/2005
(4 out of 5 stars)

"Slon manages to balance jazz improvisation with electronics very nicely. Some of the improvisation is done with electronics, and sometimes the electronics is used to enhance the song. There are a few songs where there is too much synthesizer (Zagreb, Kite, Palermo), and not enough cornet, bass & drums. Some songs instead of acoustic drums have (obviously played, not programmed) bleeps and squaks driving the beat. Theres a free-ness to Rob Mazurak's playing, but there are no lack of themes and written-out parts. On the whole, it's a fresh-sounding, excellent jazz album."