Tuesday, January 16, 2018

I Hold the Lion's Paw - Abstract Playgrounds (EARSHIFT MUSIC February 2, 2018)



Melbourne psychedelic jazz collective I Hold the Lion's Paw present their debut studio album, Abstract Playgrounds. 

Led by trumpeter-composer Reuben Lewis, I Hold the Lion’s Paw (IHTLP) is an eight-piece collective that features some of Melbourne’s most exciting musicians. The music is born out of an organic cross-over of afro-beat, jazz and outré electronics. Expect to hear as much as electro-acoustic noise, slowly evolving soundtracks, afro-beat inspired grooves and psychedelic free jazz.  

The album was produced by Reuben Lewis and edited by sound-artist Mark Shepherd, who assembled a day of live jamming in the studio to prepare material that would later be dissected, abstracted and re-composed into a single-take long-form improvisation and an electro-acoustic remix. Originally conceived as an LP in two chapters, side A is an unedited studio take performed without any pre-planned structure or set-list. Side B reimagines the IHTLP concept through an interconnected series of electro-acoustic pieces. 

Lewis says of the music; “I have always wanted to develop a band that could traverse any of the sound worlds I inhabit, and to go one further, bring these worlds together in a way that enables a constantly evolving dialogue through improvisation. Abstract Playgrounds is a voyeuristic glimpse into the development of the IHTLP concept and the first of many musical chapters to come.” 

“Abstract Playgrounds conjures its own unique rhythmic universe, spurred on by an unfettered belief in improvisation and group dynamics. It’s a high-wire act, made possible by the fact that IHTLP is awash with first-rank improvisers.” - Des Cowley


ABOUT THE MUSIC 

(SIDE A) 

(outtakes from the) sets the tone for what’s (possibly) to come. A muddy, gloriously chaotic mass of sound evocative of the blues with a “Live Evil” twist. 

Snake Charmers' Convention was initially inspired by the Jogi Snake Charmers of Pakistan's Sindh province. Having been converted to wax, transported to Preston and played through an old turntable, it’s safe to assume that a few fundamental principles of the folk tradition were lost in translation. 

Shithead is dedicated to the loved ones past and present who we rely on to keep ourselves healthily unstable. You know, the ones who first introduced you to albums like “On the Corner” or “Zombie”. 

(SIDE B) 

(intakes from the) Snake Charmers reprises and reinvents the opening themes from Side A in a manner that is best described by imagining Ry Cooder in a thunderstorm. 

Deleuzian Lawn Bowls “Here we have made use of everything that came within range, what was closest as well as farthest away. We have assigned clever pseudonyms to prevent recognition. Why have we kept our own names? Out of habit, purely out of habit. To make ourselves unrecognizable in turn. To render imperceptible, not ourselves, but what makes us act, feel, and think.” (Gilles Deleuze & Félix Guattari) 

Forest Song takes inspiration from the Yelli songs of the Baka women in the south-eastern rain forests of Cameroon. However, this particular sonic representation of a lengthy obsession with their music more closely resembles a “Deep Forest” compact disc after 3 minutes in a microwave. 

Afro 1 “This ferment came to the forefront and made itself heard in its own right; and, through the molecular material thus wrought, it made audible the nonsonorous forces of the cosmos that have always agitated music – a bit of Time in the pure state, a grain of absolute intensity . . .” (Deleuze/Guattari) 

Afro 2 is a tribute to the music of Fela Kuti & The Africa ‘70 that is about as cooked as Prince’s guest appearance at James Brown’s Beverly Theatre gig in 1983. 

Time with Black Water “. . . the black nothingness, the indeterminate animal in which everything is dissolved – but also the white nothingness, the once more calm surface upon which float unconnected determinations like scattered members: a head without a neck, an arm without a shoulder, eyes without brows.” (Deleuze) 

Remember what we Said “As Deligny says, it should be borne in mind that these lines mean nothing. It is an affair of cartography. They compose us, as they compose our map. They transform themselves and may even cross over into one another. Rhizome.” (Deleuze/Guattari)

I hold the Lion’s Paw 
Whenever I dance. 

I know the ecstasy of the falcon’s wings 
When they make love against the sky, 

And the sun and moon 
Sometimes argue over 
Who will tuck me in at night. 

If you think I am having more fun  
than anyone on this planet 
You are absolutely correct.

- Hafez

1. (outtakes from the)
2. Snake Charmers' Convention
3. Shithead
4. (intakes from the) Snake Charmers
5. Deleuzian Lawn Bowls
6. Forest Song
7. Afro 1
8. Afro 2
9. Time with Black Water
10. Remember what we Said


Jordan Murray – trombone
Geoff Hughes – guitar
David Brown – electric bass
Tom Lee – double bass
Mark Shepherd – double bass
Christian Windfeld – drums
Ronny Ferella – drums

Recorded on February 4th, 2017 by Myles Mumford at Rolling Stock Recording Rooms 

Mixed & mastered by Myles Mumford 
SIDE B remixed by Mark Shepherd 
Produced by Reuben Lewis 
artwork by Dianne Fogwell 

In loving memory of Mavis June Fogwell 

Selected recordings produced with support from the 2017 Ivan Oliver Listening Musician Award, VCA/MCM Faculty Graduate Student Assistance Grant & VCA/MCM Faculty Small Grants Scheme


I Hold the Lion’s Paw from Reuben Lewis on Vimeo.