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NICK
RAMM'S CLOWN REVISITED | PRESS
http://www.vortexjazz.co.uk/reviews/cd_archive/flashes_of_a_normal_world.html
April 2006
Nick Ramm, pianist/keyboards player, is the composer/leader of Clown Revisited,
and the ten pieces on this album were inspired by two trips he took to
Denmark and Holland to play in a circus house band, accompanying acrobats,
jugglers and clowns. These last clearly had the most profound effect on
the music here, which is played by one of the most unusual and original
combinations of instruments you're likely to encounter: flute (Finn Peters),
cello (Ben Davis), tuba (Oren Marshall), piano (Nick Ramm) and drums (Dave
Price). There are Afro-Peruvian rhythms (Samba Mal Au Dos), the odd cha-cha-cha
(The Beat Root), a scurrying humorous piece that instantly brings clowns
to mind (The Notestand) and numerous pieces with tricksy rhythms and tempos
that manage to balance compositional and improvised elements to perfection.
Texture, however (given the instrumentation), is at least as important
to this extraordinary music as straightforward propulsiveness, and in
both ensemble passages and occasional solos, the combination of Marshall's
consistently dignified, poised whump, Davis's sonorous cello contributions
and Peters's agile, surprisingly gutsy flute is a beguiling one. Overall,
though, this is very much Ramm's baby: his compositions are pleasingly
varied but cohere intelligently as album elements; his piano playing is
percussive and forceful, fluent and imaginative as required; his control
of the various musical elements at his disposal exemplary. All in all,
a highly entertaining album that reveals fresh subtleties every time it's
played.
Chris Parker
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