Album information

RED trio + John Butcher “Empire”

BEST NEW RELEASES - ALBUM OF THE YEAR - New York City Jazz Record

RED trio + John Butcher Empire

RED trio made a stunning debut in 2010. In this second album they play with British music veteran John Butcher pushing musical boundaries to the new realms of gripping and exciting kingdom of free improvisation.

  • Rodrigo Pinheiro - piano
  • Hernani Faustino - double bass
  • Gabriel Ferrandini - drums and percussion
  • + John Butcher - tenor and soprano saxophone

RED trio + John Butcher “Empire”
LP - € 18,00
(shipping worldwide € 6,00)

Side A

  1. SUSTAINED
  2. PACHYDERM

Side B

  1. EMPIRE

NoBusiness Records NBLP37, 2011, limited edition of 400 records

  • Recorded April 6, 2010 at Namouche Studio Lisbon by Joaquim Monte
  • Mixed by John Butcher
  • Mastered by Arыnas Zujus at MAMAstudios
  • Design by Oskaras Anosovas
  • Produced by RED trio and John Butcher
  • Executive production by Danas Mikailionis and Valerij Anosov

The Reviews & Articles

Review by Stuart Broomer for New York Jazz Record

Empire (a limited-edition LP) has Butcher appearing as a guest with a working and, the Lisbonbased RED Trio whose eponymous debut appeared in 2010. RED Trio works at developing long, continuous sounds. Its fundamental style is a dense weave of interactive ostinatos provided by pianist Rodrigo Pinheiro, the dark-toned, pulsing lines of bassist Hernani Faustino and the expansive polyrhythms of the brilliant young drummer Gabriel Ferrandini. It’s a potent energy field with strong links to New York free jazz and when the auditory smoke clears, the group is capable of sudden light, with Pinheiro especially luminous in the piano’s upper register. Butcher and the trio have toured together in Portugal and Spain and there’s a striking musical camaraderie here, bridging free jazz and free improvisation in an original way. The track “Pachyderm” opens into a striking soundscape, with bowed bass, scraped cymbals and piano innards intersecting with the air-click stream of Butcher’s soprano, an eerie dialogue that seems to expand the very space in which the music is made, stretching toward a new territory. The extended title track, the second side of the LP, continues the adventure, beginning in a very concentrated space of isolated taps and whirrs, then gradually assembling momentum and a sense of dread as Butcher’s tenor multiphonics and the trio’s fomenting energies come together.

by Stuart Broomer for New York Jazz Record