new album by the trio comprised of Martin Küchen – tenor and soprano saxophones, Jon Rune Strøm - double bass, Tollef Østvang - drums, released in a edition of 300. Not Quite All Included or Some Included might be appropriate names for the trio of Swedish saxophonist Martin Küchen, and Norwegian bassist Jon Rune Strøm and drummer Tollef Østvang. Reason being that the repertoire on Melted Snow partially replicates that on Satan in Plain Clothes (Clean Feed, 2015) by All Included, which comprises the same threesome with the addition of trombonist Mats Alekint and trumpeter Thomas Johansson. Unsurprisingly the seven cuts on this limited edition LP boast the same mixture of boisterous free jazz and affecting minor key tunes, with if anything even looser arrangements.
Typically Küchen's raw, emotion drenched tenor saxophone rails against roiling bass and drums. That's the case in the rendition of the reedman's "Satan in Plain Clothes (breakdown)," which makes an arresting start with febrile bass sawing and churning drums, before incendiary tenor kicks in. The contrast between the slow paced horn and the faster rhythm promotes a general uneasiness and tension, a trick repeated in the mournfully desolate "I've Been Lied To." Küchen's broad vibrato and vocalized overtones add to the visceral charge. As he digs into the themes, he barely plays a pure-toned note, shading his lines with vulnerable squeals and breathy murmurs. On soprano he cultivates a curdled full tone, sounding almost like a duck call at points on the angular jointly credited "Stein."
In the engine room Strøm and Østvang act as a single propulsive entity. Strøm takes a wiry and haltingly melodic pizzicato solo on the impassioned title track, but otherwise their slow boiling rhythmic stew progresses in fits and starts. Although they avoid meter for almost the whole program, they nonetheless create a restless energy. They combine with a loping bass riff and lightly cantering drums as the Swede's soprano wails on the bassist's "Tune For Martin." But they give the closing "Satan In Plain Clothes (beat up)" a radically different treatment this time round, with martial cadences which turn downright funky by the end, and in doing so provide a sense of resolution to this outstanding disc.
John Sharpe