Joining Sorey are bassist Thomas Morgan and guitarist Todd Neufeld. A question raised throughout the album is where are the drums? Soreys playing often adds up to a subtle effect, and it seems as though he is exploring the margins of the just noticeable difference between audibility and inaudibility. In some cases, as in the track Two Guitars, the effect is achieved by simply not playing at all. On that piece, Morgan switches to guitar. He and Neufeld use nylon strings to improvise a dialogue that seems to take its cue from some arrangement of naturally occurring sounds.
The last track on the album, Embed, is one that seems the most like a song. That is, the pulse is constantly decipherable, and there are traces of conventional linear melodies. In keeping with the theme of the suite, however, it is glacial in tempo, and colored with delicate dissonances.
The lentor of the material on Koan is its central characteristic, allowing the beauty of the compositions to be absorbed. It may also present the biggest challenge to listeners who arent accustomed to the type of performance that is meant to shed light on places where music occurs but where we dont typically look. Sorey is grasping for the exposure of music that finds itself in the penumbra of slowness, in the way that composer Morton Feldman tended to explore music veiled in quietness. Thats not the only link between Sorey and Feldmans music. Both stir up similar pensive moods, and a similar sense of pristine disorientation.
Release Date:
September 29th on 482 Music
Personnel:
- Tyshawn Sorey Drums
- Todd Neufeld Guitars
- Thomas Morgan Bass and Guitar
Track List:
- Awakening
- Only One Sky
- Correct Truth
- Nocturnal
- Two Guitars
- Embed




