Jazz is a music form that is constantly reinventing itself, abetted by the fact that it has always been at once both anti-conventional and a sort of sponge that soaks up and incorporates whatever musical and cultural idioms are fashionable (or not, for that matter) at any given time. Ragtime, bebop, the self-conscious Modernism of the cool movement, Sun Ra-style free jazz and the stylistic near-implosion of the whole damn thing during the 80's, all a function of when and where.
It makes perfect sense then to find Moscow trio Fogh Depot taking their turn in the spotlight with their debut record, S/t, on the Denovali imprint. S/t is a truly postmodern jazz record, aligned to a musical compass ever on the fritz, oscillating wildly between the do-whateverness of Ornette Coleman, the mashed-up noise of On The Corner-era Miles Davis, the gloss of The Cinematic Orchestra, and something something Skinny Puppy. S/t drops you in a weird hybrid digital/analog world, a bit dark and strange and unsure of what it actually is, what it's doing or where it's going, but strangely recognizable as our own.
S/t leads off with shudderingly dark electronic bass drone of "Anticyclone," steadfastly refusing to anchor you into anything that resembles jazz until past the four-minute mark. "Mining (BTC)" -yes, as in Bitcoin- tosses (briefly) a melodic bone amidst a bed of synthesizer pebbles and an understated but insistent beat.
And so it goes through the melancholic beauty of "Nevalyashka," the tightly-clustered flurry of saxophone vamps of "Sagittarius," and the birth of an insane electronic machine in "Orphan Drug" whose unceremonious demise portends a moody Jeff Parker-esque guitar reflection. It's jazz and it's not, it's seeing a sliver of sunlight while trapped in a dark cave, both thoroughly fucked-up and surprisingly beautiful all at once. Sort of like all of us; maybe that's why S/t sits so well on the ears.
Host, Sounds In The Dark · he/him
In addition to hosting 'Sounds, Eric has released solo and collaborative ambient and experimental music projects on labels such as Treetrunk, Aural Films, and Petroglyph. Eric has also played synthesizers with bands including Gosta Berling, Roa and Brother Sean.
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