Monday, January 6, 2025

Terrence McManus - Music for Chamber Trio (Rowhouse Music, 2024)

By Eyal Hareuveni

American, Brooklyn-based guitarist-luthier-sound artist Terrence McManus began to work with master-drummer composer Gerry Hemingway in 2007, recording a duo with Hemingway (Below The Surface Of, Auricle, 2010), a trio with Hemingway and double bass player Mark Helias (Transcendental Numbers, NoBusiness, 2011) and as a member of Hemingway American Quintet (Riptide, Clean Feed, 2011, with tenor sax player Ellery Eskelin), and performing with Hemingway's WHO trio + 2 ensemble. The trio of McManus with veteran Eskelin and Hemingway, who have been working together since the late nineties in Hemingway Quartet and Quintet, and as a duo, Inbetween Spaces, Auricle, 2010), reconvened for the recording of Music for Chamber Trio, released by McManus’ label, Rowhouse Music.

The reserved and intimate, minimalist spirit of Music for Chamber Trio is inspired by free jazz and contemporary music but does not subscribe to any genre or style conventions, but creates its own, nuanced and conversational sonic universe. McManus composed seven notated and semi-notated untitled pieces about fifteen years ago especially for Eskelin and Hemingway, the opening, a 26-minute one and the following, six shorter ones, more urgent and open for sonic experiments with folksy, ambient and drone textures, and plays a home-built, stereo nylon string guitar.

The unique kind of guitar allows McManus to suggest elusive, dream-like and almost abstract textures where he investigates the resonant timbres of the guitar while complementing the delicate and precise percussive touches of Hemingway. or solidifying the gentle, breathy melodic threads of Eskelin, and patiently daring more and pushes the spacious and understated interplay into a more dense and intense one. The album radiates an unhurried, calm and natural flow of introspective and thoughtful, chamber music, relying on rich musical chemistry and exceptional deep listening of these gifted improvisers. Here, less means much more.

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