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Monday, April 7, 2025

Uplifting Music for the Current Turbulent Times

By Eyal Hareuveni

Just when you think that there is little hope as the world is being dominated by demented, authoritative rulers with reptilian tendencies, three European bands (with one American), equipped by decades-long experience of the Dutch The Ex, may convince you that resistance is the best defense, in music, in lyrics, in thought and action.

Paal Nilssen-Love Circus with The Ex Guitars - Turn Thy Loose (PNL, 2025)

This is a match made in heaven. Norwegian Paal Nilssen-Love Circus - vocalist-dancer Juliana Venter, trumpeter Thomas Johansson, alto sax player Signe Emmeluth, accordionist Kalle Moberg, bassist Christian Meaas Svendsen and Nilssen-Love on drums, cymbals and gongs - released its debut album Pairs of Three (PNL, 2022) and suggested an ecstatic mix of rhythms and melodies from the Northeast part of Brazil and Ethiopia juxtaposed jazz and free improvisation. But Nilssen-Love wanted to shake up its pre-arranged sets. And there is no better choice for such a mission than The Ex guitarists - Terrie Hessels (aka Terrie Ex, who recorded three duo albums with Nilssen-Love), Andy Moor (who with Terrie Ex, Ken Vandermark and Nilssen-Love are the Lean Left quartet) and Arnold de Boer.

Turn Thy Loose was recorded live at Amsterdam’s Bimhuis in February 2024. The ecstatic outcome affirms that Nilssen-Love instincts were right on spot. Nilssen-Love had only one rule: anyone can play - or fuck -any part of any song at any time, and play as free as possible. I was fortunate enough to experience this uplifting, manic clash of sounds at the Music Unlimited festival in Wels, Austria, last November, but unfortunately there will only be a few opportunities to experience this massive rhythmic beast in the near future.

Almost immediately, you feel that you are part of a wonderful treat. The music moves all over the place, and the musicians never have a grasp of what awaits around the next corner. The Ex Guitars introduce a raw, punkish edge to Nilssen-Love's irresistible rhythmic patterns and Circus’ eclectic, colorful celebration of sounds. One moment you may dream on the sensual melodies of Brazilian Nazaré da Mata, on the next one you will jump and scream the stupid lyrics of obscure Scottish punk band The Stretchheads’ “I should be so Lucky”; you may blush by Venter’s seductive lyrics of Circus live favorite, the cathartic “Pussy Pussy Cha Cha”, but will join her when she shouts “resistance is defence” (and most likely put thai piece on repeat as soon it is over); and make sure you crank up the volume on the band's new mosh pit dance piece, “Calls: Let They Free!”, calling for the freedom of Julian Assange, recommending Zulu’s Ubunto philosophy (sometimes translated as "I am because we are". Venter was born in South Africa), and remembering the late South African ant-apprtheid hero Steve Biko.

70 minutes of ecstatic, joyful noise by one of the greatest bands around.


Archer - Sudden Dusk (Aerophonic, 2025)

Sudden Dusk is the debut of the free improvising quartet Archer - guitarist Terrie Ex, Chicagoan sax hero Dave Rempis (on soprano, tenor and baritone saxes) and the Norwegian rhythm section of double bass player Jon Rune Strøm (who plays with Nilssen-Love in his Large Unit, and the Frode Gjerstad Trio) and drummer Tollef Østvan (who with Strøm also act as the rhythm section of Universal Indians with Joe McPhee, and Friends & Neighbors). Sudden Dusk was recorded during the second, American tour of Archer (following a tour in Norway in 2023) at Constellation in Chicago and The Sugar Maple in Milwaukee in April 2024.

Ex’ rhythmic urgency, his complete irreverence to form or narrative, coupled with a wild imagination and a Dadaist, provocative sense of humor, make him the wild card of any outfit, and especially of Archer, with his restless determination to deconstruct and dispose of improvisatory tropes. Rempis’ Brötzmann-like blasts of sound, his explorations of texture and timbre and broad sonic arsenal make him the perfect foil to match that of Ex. Strøm provides muscular bass lines while Østvang completes this powerful beast and pushes its interplay with great momentum.

The three pieces move seamlessly between unrestrained, manic energy where Ex and Rempis are busy in spiraling, tenacious dogfights, to surprisingly contemplative and soulful parts, where Archer investigates subtleties of tone and timbre. But as Rempis summarizes Sudden Dusk, it is “a carefully calibrated balance between the pent up energy of baited breath, and the slow release of a long exhale”.

The Ex - If Your Mirror Breaks (The Ex, 2025)

The Ex, like Nilssen-Love circus, is also a kind of dance band, and most likely you may find that it is almost impossible to keep your body or soul intact while listening to its new album If Your Mirror Breaks. The Ex just celebrated its 45th anniversary and matured beautifully from an angry punk band into an impossible-to-label, powerful quartet. The new album is released after seven long years since the last album, 27 Passports (Ex, 2018), but, fortunately, it finds the quartet - Hessels, Moor, de Boer and drummer-vocalist Katherina Bornefeld, recharged and in top form, ready for new adventures.

The album erupts like a collection of ten short-story songs that offer surrealist daydreams, calls to action, ominous warnings and bursts of vitality tapped into the pulse of time. The album is dedicated to the late Steve Albini (who recorded four albums of The Ex), and mastered by Bob Weston (who played with Albini in Shellac). The cover artwork is by Hessels’ partner, Emma Fischer.

Anyone who has experience The Ex, live or on record, will recognize immediately the buzzing, fierce and uncompromising riffs of Ex and Moor, the possessed vocal delivery of de Boer, and Bornefeld’s unique drumming with the distinct cowbell sound. If Your Mirror Breaks brings The Ex’ intoxicating, intense recipe to perfection. Guy Peters, The Ex’ biographer, is absolutely right when writing that this album is for the ages, as it “reflects the conflicting ideas and moods of its time, while pushing forward, convinced there’s always a more viable alternative around the corner”.

If Your Mirror Breaks begins with The Ex’ poetic take on Walt Whitman's “Beat! Beat! Drums!” poem from 1861, with the call: “Beat beat drums, before the judge / Beat beat drums, into the church”. It reflects the doubt and insecurity of the current distressful times (“Monday Song” and “Wheel”), but favors love (“The price of love is the price of life / And that's what people should realise” in “The Evidence”, inspired by the documentary film Meeting the Man: James Baldwin in Paris) and passionate compassion ( Bornefeld sings “New life force unfolds for those who flow / with the song of their souls. Always” in “Wheel”). It ends with the joyful thrust of “Great!”, and instantly becomes part of your daily musical diet.

See more here: https://youtu.be/dnF9WV5F8ns?si=2IwZZygUeClweldQ

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