"Hallmark of each track is close listening, with each player complementing the other’s thrusts but without setting up a soloist/accompaniment paradigm. Throughout the improvisations take in a variety of pitches, a spectrum of colors from very black to inky dark...." - Jazzword
"Exciting music, which you certainly can't use as background music..........Avant-garde for advanced musicians, I would almost say" - Moors Magazine
"Nothing happens here for no reason!" - Spontaneous Music Tribune
"t'other est une véritable merveille" - orynx-improvandsounds
"Benedict Taylor and Daniel have been releasing music together since 2012. Over these eight years, they have played with the likes of Alex Ward and Tom Jackson, as well as releasing solo albums and performing with legends like Evan Parker. In January 2019 they decamped to Café Oto and over two days recorded the improvisations that makeup ‘t’other’. The album features Benedict Taylor on viola and Daniel Thompson on acoustic guitar. This, of course, is business as usual for the pair. What isn’t usual is the glorious, cacophonous music they made. Somehow on ‘t’other’ they managed to surpass their previous recordings and delivered something chafe, tormented, and affecting.
The music has a wonderful scratchy quality to it. Thompson’s guitar work sounds distressed and, at times, eviscerated. There is a wonderful section around the halfway mark in ‘Third Improvisation’ that seems to sum up the whole album. Both Taylor and Thompson sound like they're trying to crawl out of their instruments from the inside in suits of armour, but the strings are hampering their bulky frames. As they manoeuvre themselves against the strings wonderfully harrowing sounds are created. At times it feels like an avant-garde score to a horror film if your thinking of ‘Under the Skin’ then you’re on the right tracks, but this is far more harrowing than anything Mica Levi came up with.
The album is the first release on Thompson’s Empty Birdcage Records. This is important for two reasons. Firstly, when launching a new musical venture like this, the inaugural released should be a statement of intent, after which everything should follow. This appears to be done achieved here. The music is uncompromising and visceral, and so should everything else Empty Birdcage release. I look forward to hearing from them in the future. Secondly, parts of the album do sound like an empty birdcage is being played.
Taylor and Thompson’s playing throughout is both subtle, elegant, agitated, and combative. Both know each other very well and they just go at it. The album works best when they are playing with each other, trying to anticipate each other’s next move. ‘Fifth Improvisation’ feels like this and benefits from it greatly. What is remarkable about ‘t’other’ is just how playable it is. After a few cursory plays that let you know what everything is all about, the album starts to take on a new light. ‘Fourth Improvisation’ is incredibly delicate in places. The playing is kind with a grace to it that initially takes you away. Gone are the maelstroms of lacerated sound, and in their place, we have something soothing and, dare I say, tranquil. These moments are of course fleeting, as the duo starts to wind the screw again, but it does show that you don’t have to make a racket to get your point across. Ultimately ‘t’other’ is a brave and enjoyable album. It showcases two musicians at the top of their game having a blast. And what’s better than that?" - Nick Roseblade - Vital Weekly
credits
released November 22, 2020
Benedict Taylor - viola
Daniel Thompson - acoustic guitar
Double CD and Download
EBR001
Day One and Day Two
Recorded at Cafe Oto Project Space
Day One recorded on 15th January 2019
Day Two recorded on 28th January 2019
Recorded and mixed by Benedict Taylor
Mastered by Martin Clarke
All music by Benedict Taylor and Daniel Thompson
Artwork 'Pink Landscape' by Beverley Waller
Design and Production by Daniel Thompson for Empty Birdcage Records
Smooth, sophisticated pop with neoclassical flourishes from the Berlin-based duo of Fabian Till and Birk Buttcherey. Bandcamp New & Notable May 2, 2024
A complete and satisfying musical experience which, though very accessible will take an age to sink in..It's one of those pieces you can get lost in and keep coming back for more.
Recorded in Huddersfield, a mill town I lived in back in the 60's.The days of the legend Frank Worthington,the high rise of the Lonsbrough and Ibbotson flats,Harold Wilson! Yet so much more to the place than that as this terrific album gives testimony to.There will always be something fresh in the air of that valley ! MIKE ANDERSON