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Fraud - Art of Deception

One of last year’s breakthrough groups Fraud shows what it can do on record this month as its debut album, also called Fraud, is released. Powered by drummer Tim Giles and saxophonist James Allsopp the group has made the journey from the London underground jazz clubs to become the more visible face of the new post free jazz British groups. Interview :: Mike Flynn

It was like “sitting in front of a train” according to one girl who left afterwards, the grey-haired gentleman sitting next to me had to leave 20 minutes before the end having taken all he could handle, even I felt somewhat unsettled, yet simultaneously thrilled, that I’d witnessed something new, raw and exciting. These were some of the reactions to Fraud’s live show; a strange organic stew of sounds that can explode Vesuvius-style to produce mutated Albert Ayler free jazz sounds that meet molten funk laced with acid metal textures. And all this on a Saturday lunchtime at the 2006 Cheltenham Jazz Festival.

There was a palpable sense that once again people walking out of the Pillar Room had caught something very special, much like when Polar Bear made a similar splash three years previously, the latter band now enjoying big stages and higher billing as well as countless rave reviews and even a Mercury Music Prize nomination. Yet Fraud present something that responds to the zeitgeist from another angle, one that disassembles conventional ideas of structure, genre and form to serve a less punk, more free jazz-meets-electronic-rock purpose.

Led by 25-year-old saxophonist James Allsopp and 26-year-old percussionist Tim Giles, they met at the Royal Academy and are now both members of the north London based Loop Collective. This is a band with a creative credo that takes much of its energy from the grime of kitchen sink realism (Tim laughingly describes the album’s opener ‘Clatter’ as sounding like “Albert Ayler falling over in the kitchen”), the jet black humour of Chris Morris and the mean streets of Hackney as it does from the rich canon of free jazz, modern electronica and Norwegian thrash metal.

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Fraud - Art of Deception
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Jack DeJohnette - Rhythm Symbol

Jack DeJohnette - Rhythm SymbolMaster drummer Jack DeJohnette is part of a continuum in jazz that stretches back to the 1960s when the Chicagoan was a member of Charles Lloyd’s seminal quartet and when he made his debut as a leader. The line continued the next decade via Miles Davis and the groundbreaking album Bitches Brew, and then into the 80s and on with his own influential group Special Edition. With the foundation of the Keith Jarrett Standards Trio, which recently celebrated its 25th anniversary, a new chapter in both DeJohnette and Jarrett’s career began, the birth of a group that would revitalise the trio format and then influence a myriad of jazz trios keen to break the mould just as DeJohnette and Jarrett had done themselves.

Christine Tobin and Phil Robson - Coming of age

Christine Tobin and Phil Robson - Coming of ageDaring to be different, singer Christine Tobin is set to delve still deeper into the consciousness of her fans and newcomers alike if the arrival of her brand new album Secret Life of a Girl is anything to go by. An emotional and personal stirring, one step beyond her previous album, the dark Romance and Revolution, Tobin on Secret Life inhabits the world of the young characters in the songs, representing different stages of an untold story, an incipient self awareness and maturity. The album is released at a time when her partner and regular musical colleague, guitarist Phil Robson, releases Six Strings and The Beat, a Bartók-infused strings album flavoured by post-modern jazz and African music alike. Stuart Nicholson talks to the pair about the story behind their albums and their quest to follow the road less travelled while long time fan, Lionel Shriver, author of We Need To Talk About Kevin, describes her reactions to that voice.

Jason Moran - Sphere of influence

Jason Moran - Sphere of influenceMisunderstood in his own lifetime, but in time elevated to the pantheon of composers that make him as relevant today as he was in the heyday of bebop, the totemic presence and music of Thelonious Monk forms the bedrock of a new monumental work by Jason Moran. The pianist, who tours the UK this month, with an Anglo-US band, has taken Monk’s At Town Hall and reimagined it for the jazz of today. Kevin Le Gendre talks to Moran about how he got inside the mind of the one and only Monk.
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