Wolfgang Muthspiel Chamber Trio
Atlas
By Frank Alkyer
Wolfgang Muthspiel has been plying his creativity at the guitar for a dedicated, long time in nearly a dozen configurations as a leader — everything from solo works to big band extravaganzas to trio settings, especially trio settings. There’s his work with the MGT trio (with Slava Grigoryan and Ralph Towner), another with Larry Grenadier and Brian Blade, then the work he did with Brad Mehldau and Ambrose Akinmusire and the Autria String Trio (with Benjamin Schmid and Florian Eggner. All of them satisfying. But just as satisfying is the new Wolfgang Muthspiel Chamber Trio recording, Atlas. In describing the group on his website, Muthspiel says the goal of the group “is to create an interactive, polyphonic musical network that embraces the intimacy and transparency of chamber music formations without sacrificing rhythmic power or a sense of playful improvisation.” It’s fascinating what this combination of Muthspiel on guitars, Mario Rom on trumpet and Colin Vallon on piano can do. This isn’t what one might think of as a chamber group. They dispense with the pomp and politeness of classical music to focus on sound, improvisation and creativity. Take, for instance, the album’s fourth cut, “Lionel,” an obvious ode to Lionel Loueke, another trio collaborator (with Linda May Han Oh on the album Confluence.) The tune opens with Muthspiel rhythmically scraping the strings and using the guitar’s body as a percussion instrument to introduce a heartbeat before Rom and Vallon come in with the melody. There’s one foot in etude-land and another in modern jazz improvisation and just a touch of the flavor of mother Africa. Vocals, sweet and simple, come into the sound palette, and then at about the 6 minute mark the beauty is interrupted by a furious lash of electric guitar theatrics in a way that catches the listener off guard, but makes perfect sense. The playing on this album is beautiful. Muthspiel’s acoustic guitar work on songs like “Gaucho Shubert,” the opening track,” just glisten. With overdubs, pure flights of technical precision and in-the-moment soloing, there’s so much to like on this recording. And massive thanks to the team that recorded, mixed and mastered this work. The sound is as impeccable as the musicianship.