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    Foxy 
        Digitalis (USA) - original 
        article   
       
        CD REVIEW 
        In 
        The Country: Losing Stones, Collecting Bones 
        By MAX SHAEFER 
         
                   
         
         
         The 
        Norwegian Jazz trio In The Country wields a sonic variety that is striking. 
        Whereas their previous effort, This Was The Pace Of My Heartbeat, spun 
        sonorities rich and complex and bursting with harmonics, their sophomore 
        work is a thick slice of tumultuous energy. The soundfield is sparse and 
        wintry at first, with the piano's quietly graded runs and repetitions 
        backed by wobbly slide guitar figures and a subdued rhythm section, but 
        like a weather system it gradually takes on a more bristling density. 
        Come "Ashes To Ashes", which is marked by somnambulant vocals 
        chanting "Everyone live their life/ Everyone's going to die", 
        muffled drum punches, detuned acoustic plucks and squeaky, clanky piano 
        lines mesh into something deeper and more episodic than their previous 
        jams.  
         
        Further tracks similarly move from rough tonalities to smooth glissandi, 
        building psychologically nuanced and stylistically eclectic structures 
        that bring about specific effects; sometimes leaning towards a limited 
        number of notes and tone colors to evoke a haunting minimalism, elsewhere 
        shifting into a bluesy, alt country form or plunging into dramatic improvised 
        exchanges. Everywhere details and textures arise, rarely obstructing the 
        music's primal power, but rather twisting and falling like so many colored 
        leaves.  
         
        The addition of certain parts to the sound, though, such as Marc Ribot's 
        swanky rock riffs on "Torch-Fishing" (a piece which reuses the 
        same basic harmony as "Ashes To Ashes"), serves to hinder the 
        groups chemistry. As the trio moves from the thoughtful and intently focussed 
        piano piece, "The Bear", to the irregular rhythms and sliding 
        bass groans of "Can I Come Home Now", one gets the sense that 
        the various elements are starting to get away from them. As a result, 
        the once intoxicating energy of the group is somewhat diffused. The anthemic, 
        marching piano's of "Kung Fu Boys" and the lazy folk ballad 
        "Don't Walk Another Mile" is another odd pairing, but the vaporous 
        energy of the one breathes into and informs the other. In these ways, 
        the trio plays with the dynamics of a basic jazz setup and churns out 
        some arrangements that, although occasionally a tad garish, are played 
        with a vigor and confidence that is oftentimes entrancing. 6/10 
         
         
        Published : 29.01.2007
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