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1.
Drop 19:16
2.
Out 12:43

about

"Webster and Birchall hook up with Dutch drummer Rogier Smal on Drop Out, the latest tape from Austin's Astral Spirits. The nervy skronk of the first side has Webster spitting out staccato phrases, while Birchall switches between high-end slide squall reminiscent of Borbetomagus's Donald Miller, and lunging stoner riffage. Smal ramps it all up by hammering at his snare like a speed-addled carpenter, before dialling things back for a twitchy and atmospheric passage that ultimately takes off like peppercorns on a hot skillet. Side two sees the trio in a more contemplative mood, with Webster laying sustained tones over Smal's pygmy percussion. The underlying tension explodes in the second half, with Birchall scrabbling around the fretboard as Webster's sax stutters and jabs."
The Quietus

"I’ve heard Birchall and Smal, and Webster and Birchall, but until now I’ve not experienced the explosive synergies resulting from this whole trio of top-notch improvisers assemble. This is communal music making to blow the roof off, the trio letting rip with a rackety drive that’s as infectious as it is abrasive, the open-endedness of free improvisation driven forward by a rocket fuel bootlegged from free jazz’s volcanic wellspring. It is, of course, relatively easy to make a big noise with this palette, and most people who do that waste their opportunity in directionless burst-vein bluster. This lot, however, achieve something different. Drop Out’s locked-on blasts have an elasticity and intuition that enables constant invention and reinvention, with each member’s playing focused tightly both on itself and the overall progress of the group. The result is something resembling a shoal of fish making their way through an ocean’s deep zones: intuitive shifts and collective action combining with individual decision-making without hierarchy or leadership.

There’s good craic to be had early on. Drop sees David Birchall unleashing doomy bass string runs from his guitar about three minutes in, his whang bar bending his notes into squidgy baritone moans, his intervals reminiscent of some bedroom black metal shredder. Rogier Smal, having given his toms a preternatural battering, brings maracas into play while still clattering cymbals, snare and kick drum in splattered polyrhythms. Colin Webster, meanwhile, isn’t going to go quietly, spitting out high clusters of notes and lower, brassier parps from his horn like a snake trying to find its way through a concrete jungle. He comes into his own 10 or so minutes later, blowing out long, abrasive licks that seem to split and buckle into squealing overtones, Smal urging him on with jolting paradiddles and Birchall wrenching gluey webs of fuzz from his instrument.

Out starts off quieter. Smal’s metallic tinkering ushers in abstract, scrunchy mutters from Birchall and a cloud of querulous toots from Webster. It morphs into a kind of planar cosmic drift after that, with wistful gust of saxophone, carefully-modulate feedback and washes of mellow cymbal coalescing into soft waves. Webster almost drops into some Coltrane-y modal shifts here, his high keening intervals haunted by ghosts of flamenco jams past. It’s great, but it can’t last, and before you can say Olé, the trio cuts loose in a freeform freakout that brings us back to delirium that started all of this. No need for a rewind. We’re right here."
We need no Swords

credits

released April 26, 2017

released March 17, 2017

David Birchall - Guitar
Rogier Smal - Drums
Colin Webster - Saxophone

Recorded and Mixed at Drop Out Studio,
London on 13th March 2016 by Tim Cedar.
Mastered by Rogier Smal.

released by Astral Spirits

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tags

about

David Birchall Manchester, UK

I am a musician living in Manchester.

I improvise, compose recordings in the studio and perform recordings outside.

I work with electronics, light, sound and making internet structures accessible with Noise Orchestra.

I'm an MA Researcher at the University of Huddersfield.

I organise performances with Curious Ear and Daylight Edition.
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