Double bassist and composer Henry Fraser announces the release of Pneuma, a new solo album out June 12 on Kou Records and recorded, mixed, and co-produced by Randall Dunn (Sunn O))), Jóhann Jóhannsson) and Ben Greenberg (Uniform, Marc Ribot). Across eight concise movements, Fraser explores breath, resonance, and the evolving relationship between composition and improvisation, shaping an intimate sonic landscape in which the double bass seems to inhale, bloom into overtones, and dissolve back into silence.
Since focusing intensively on solo bass work in recent years, Fraser has developed a distinctive approach that treats the instrument not simply as a vehicle for expression but as a collaborator in the compositional process. Working closely with the bass’s material properties—its resonance, overtones, and physical response—he allows structure and gesture to emerge through deep listening, balancing carefully prepared motifs with spontaneous invention.
In doing so, Fraser joins a lineage of musicians who have treated the double bass as a complete solo instrument. From the early solo explorations of Barre Phillips to the physical improvisational language of Peter Kowald and Joëlle Léandre, the instrument has gradually emerged as a site for extended acoustic inquiry. Fraser’s work continues this trajectory, emphasizing resonance, breath, and the unfolding relationship between form and improvisation.
Approaching the solo practice as a continuous unfolding form, Fraser prepared a range of materials for the sessions, from small melodic cells to broader improvisational frameworks. These ideas served as flexible scaffolding for the recording process, where pre-composed elements and newly improvised passages intermingle. The result is a sequence of tightly focused pieces that function both as individual studies and as parts of a larger evolving cycle.
Certain pieces incorporate multiple stacked bass performances, dramatically widening the music’s scale while preserving the instrument’s tactile presence. Captured with an emphasis on natural dynamics and spatial detail, the recording foregrounds the bass’s resonance, micro-gestures, and shifting harmonic fields.