Advertisement
Advertisement

Thomas Delor: Silence The 13th

In brief:
"This release puts me in mind of Ginger Baker’s two severely underrated trio albums featuring Bill Frisell and Charlie Haden, respectively, Going Back Home and Falling Off The Roof"

This release puts me in mind of Ginger Baker’s two severely underrated trio albums featuring Bill Frisell and Charlie Haden, respectively, Going Back Home (Atlantic, 1994) and Falling Off The Roof (Atlantic, 1996). Here was the star drummer with Frisell automatically taking the limelight but Baker’s often idiosyncratically metered drumming still managed to captivate the listener.

So it is with Thomas Delor’s new album, which follows-on from his debut recording The Swaggerer (Fresh Sound New Talent, 2018), his trio once more competed by guitarist Simon Martineau and the ever-reliable double bassist Georges Correia.

Advertisement

Whilst Delor’s sparse yet meticulous drumming is restrained there’s always a thrill in hearing his sporadic percussive adornments flit from channel to channel. But it’s undoubtedly Martineau who maintains the attention; his tone is not unlike Frisell’s, albeit without the latter’s characteristic use of glissandi.

Two thirds of the album consists of Delor originals including the lengthy opener Syllogism which affords plenty of opportunity for the drummer to demonstrate his often highly impressive virtuosity. The equally lengthy title track is also worth a mention, and showcases once more Delor’s compositional prowess.

Of the three non-originals, Charlie Parker’s My Little Suede Shoes, which first appeared on the album South Of The Border (Mercury, 1952) is an upbeat Latin number, more like a Sonny Rollins tune and Martineau even manages a brief quote from Doxy as if to re-emphasise Bird’s late-stage change of direction. There’s also a charming version of Charles Trenet’s Que Reste-t-il De Nos Amours? The outlier however has to be Frédéric Chopin’s funereal Prelude Op. 28, No. 20, which gradually gains traction over its seven minutes course; Martineau here is double-tracked to add polyphonic piquancy and it culminates with some arresting distorted guitar work.

Considering this is supposed to be that “difficult” second album, this surely ranks as Delor’s best record to date.

Sample/buy Thomas Delor: Silence The 13th direct from Fresh Sound

Discography
Syllogism; Silence The 13th; Peaux Pourries; My Little Suede Shoes; Providence Incitation; Minefield; Que Reste-t-il De Nos Amours?; Prelude Op. 28, No. 20; Une Soupe, Et Au Lit (57.20)
Delor (d); Simon Martineau (elg); Georges Correia (b). Udine, 4-5 September 2019.
Fresh Sound New Talent FSNT-592

Latest audio reviews

Advertisement

More from this author

Advertisement

Jazz Journal articles by month

Advertisement

Jocelyn Gould: Golden Hour

Juno-winning Canadian guitarist lines up with fellow profs to play a pleasing set of standards and originals
Advertisement

On the Other Hand 06/20

Dave Gelly discovers the silver lining of epidemical house-arrest - rummaging among old records. For Art Themen, it's front doorstep serenades for the neighbours
Advertisement

Stacey Kent – a novel approach

“I find it exhilarating that it’s so bare and so stark,” enthuses Stacey Kent of Songs From Other Places, her duo album with pianist...
Advertisement

Magic City: How The Birmingham Jazz Tradition Shaped The Sound Of America

Avery Parrish, Erskine Hawkins, Sun Ra and Jo Jones are among the well-known jazz personages who hailed from the 'Magic City'
Advertisement

Syncopation

In the late 1940s the first wave of World War II novels began to appear. The positives were that the authors had actually served...
Advertisement

JJ 01/69: Wayne Shorter – Adam’s Apple

Wayne Shorter is a bitch. A beautiful, complete player who since joining Miles has passed beyond his Coltrane phase, to a wholly personal sound...
"This release puts me in mind of Ginger Baker’s two severely underrated trio albums featuring Bill Frisell and Charlie Haden, respectively, Going Back Home and Falling Off The Roof"Thomas Delor: Silence The 13th