Jean-Luc Lehr's electric bass is generally charged with providing a regular pulse (though Lehr has appealing guitar-like solo passages, as during "Chant Amerindien Alternate"). Maxime Zampieri's drums, meanwhile, sounds something like a typewriter: resolute, purposive (and also slightly flat), but not rhythmic. Over this disorienting bedrock, Malik's flute and Sanne van Hek's trumpet enter arrhythmically, atonally, in no way obviously linked to the regular bass pulse. Gradually, a swirling melodic figure—often bolstered by Jozef Dumoulin's panoply of electric keyboards—emerges from the flute/trumpet duo.
These swirling figures alternate with solo features for the players, where Malik and van Hek in particular display an almost classical-sounding virtuosity that substantially enriches the somewhat austere color scheme of the compositions.
Dumoulin merits a special mention for the impishly anarchic value his electric keyboard playing adds to the album; jangly on "Junon 6," explosive on "Junon 4." The keyboardist confirms his credentials for enlivening an ensemble on the heels of Plugged In (Bee Jazz, 2012), his excellent record with saxophonist Jerome Sabbagh.
Given enough time, and with some good fortune, these elements coalesce into a small-group sound that is quite novel and pleasing in its way. "Junon 4," clocking in at over thirteen minutes, is perhaps the most successful track precisely because its length allows the components of the performance to take shape and cohere.
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