Laurence Pike Possible Utopias For Jazz Quintet
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Laurence Pike Possible Utopias For Jazz Quintet

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Sometimes the title of an album tells you everything you need to know. Laurence Pikes “Possible Utopias for Jazz Quintet” is like that: The music within represents a search for freedom, potentialityliberatory strategies that transcend the ego and the solitary, atomized figure.
But in this case, the album title is also a red herring, because there is no jazz quintet herejust Pike, his drums, and his machines, not so much an ersatz ensemble as a purely notional one, a thought experiment equipped with drumsticks, circuitry, and the desire to go beyond hardwired limits.
And the results, strictly speaking, arent really jazz, though they incorporate the vocabulary of jazz, along with that of ambient, electronica, and post-rock. They are some other thing, cognizant of genre but never beholden to it. Again, were talking about a search for freedom here.
The Sydney-based musician has a long history of colouring outside the lines, not just in his solo recordingsincluding four albums for the Leaf label between 2018 and 2024but also in the trio Pivot (later PVT); Szun Waves (alongside saxophonist Jack Wyllie and Border Communitys Luke Abbott); Triosk, which recorded an album with Jan Jelinek in 2003; and even post-punk titans Liars, whom he joined in late 2018.
Of his first album for Balmat, Pike says, My loose concept was: What does music sound like when the expectations of late capitalism are removed from it? How might a jazz musician from an idealised culture of the future, or even another world, utilise musical language when the conventions of style and marketing are no longer a factor in music making?
That inquiry, he says, connects to his guiding principle: that the purpose of music is to access something bigger than the individual, and reveal a sense of possibility and freedom in the world to the listener. To create an understanding that the future can be something other than what we imagined or expect, even unconsciously.
Heady ideas, but plug into his stream-of-metaconsciousness flow and you may start to intuit what motivates him. There is a deeply lyrical expression in these piecesin the ruminative piano of opener Guardians of Memory, for examplebut also a sense of exploded perspective, of ideas approached from more angles than any one mind could dream up. Of a collectivized consciousness, of mycelial networks branching across tone and rhythm and timbre, of ideas articulated in distributed fashion, nodal points dancing across drum heads.
Pikes imaginary quintet is hardly without precedent; its a continuation of concepts floated across Jan Jelineks “Loop-Finding-Jazz-Records”, Burnt Friedmans many guises, and much of the recombinant improv of the International Anthem roster, not to mention the far corners of ECMs catalog in the late 1970s and 1980s, which Pike says have been integral to his development since he was a teenager. Possible “Utopias for Jazz Quintet” is a point in a continuum, a voice in a conversation, a question with no obvious answer: How can the search for otherness in music manifest something true about ourselves?

TRACK LISTING

A1. Guardians of Memory
A2. The Shame of Jazz to Come
A3. 502 Bad Gateway
B1. Night Bird
B2. Possible Utopias
B3. Mid Journey
B4. Ever Given

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