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QUINTET MUSIC

Guitarist And Composer Travis Reuter Offers Music Of Unsurpassed Rhythmic Intricacy And Improvisational Fire On Long-Awaited Sophomore Release Quintet Music


Released April 19, 2024 on all digital and streaming platforms

Travis Reuter - Guitar
Mark Shim - Tenor Sax
Peter Schlamb - Vibraphone
Harish Raghavan - Upright bass
Tyshawn Sorey - Drums

TravisReuter_QuintetMusic_Group2_By_LukeMarantz-.jpg

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Compositionally, conceptually, and guitaristically, Travis Reuter is embarking on some uncharted territory with this remarkable release. Of all the many students I’ve had over the years, Travis has taken his uncompromising, personal vision the farthest.” – Ben Monder

 

“Travis Reuter is an alarmingly original voice both as a composer and a guitarist. This new recording should establish him as a must for any serious new music listener.” – Arturo O’Farrill

Currently residing in Zurich, Switzerland, guitarist Travis Reuter spent many fruitful years as a leader and top-tier sideman in New York, playing with the Arturo O’Farrill Sextet, David Weiss & Point of Departure, Rajna Swaminathan, Jeremy Viner, Anna Webber, Rudy Royston, International Contemporary Ensemble (ICE) and a host of others. His 2012 debut Rotational Templates revealed a searching, advanced musical mind, a player with tremendous technique and imagination, dissecting original compositions in a quintet with guitar, tenor sax, electric piano, bass and drums.

 

Quintet Music, Reuter’s extraordinary follow-up, features a similar instrumentation, though with the vibraphone of Peter Schlamb in place of Rhodes. On tenor is the unheralded and always jaw-dropping Mark Shim, with sought-after bassist and leader Harish Raghavan and drummer (not to mention MacArthur-winning new music composer) Tyshawn Sorey constituting a dream rhythm section. The music breaks free of conventional forms and gestures, sending Reuter and the quintet on a journey through the densest of metrical and harmonic sequences. Present through all the complexity is the unvarnished sound of live interplay, an animating spirit drawn from modern jazz even when Reuter and the quintet starkly depart from it.

 

“We did one rehearsal, without Tyshawn,” Reuter recalls. “And then we did three days in the studio. I knew what Tyshawn was capable of, so I sent him the music in advance, and when he showed up to record, it was not a problem at all.” Far from it. Sorey doesn’t simply make it through this incredibly difficult music, he breathes it, inhabits it, as does Raghavan on bass. The guitar, tenor and vibes form an inviting sonic triad, each instrument getting its own “Interlude” somewhere in the program.

 

Years ago, as an audience member at one of Tyshawn Sorey’s gigs, Reuter became fascinated with the idea of complex, changing written material being played under a soloist, so that composition and improvisation are happening at once. “Around the same time, I was listening to the Bartók and Carter string quartets and becoming influenced by those as well,” Reuter adds. “But while I’m writing I’m always thinking about what will be available for the improvisers to play over.”

 

Reuter also had the opportunity to perform Louis Andriessen’s opera meisterwerk De Materie, in the U.S. stage premiere with ICE, conducted by Peter Rundel at the Park Avenue Armoury with Andriessen in attendance. “Fast Louis” draws direct inspiration from Andriessen’s work. (“Fast” in German translates to “almost,” Reuter notes.) Since moving to Europe, learning German and becoming a father, the guitarist finds echoes of his life in this piece, which fosters new understandings, multiple meanings and constant reinvention as the players grapple with each of the four unique solo sections.

 

“#8 D@z,” the one track with no bass, is a set piece for vibraphone and tenor saxophone, oscillating between the two instruments as they weave an improvisational tapestry over varying repeated ostinatos. Reuter sees “#15” and “#8 D@z” as “opposing side of a thematic coin,” both of them featuring a pair of instrumentalists: in “#15” it is Shim and Reuter. The improvisers are pitted against each other, while drums, bass and vibraphone serve as tandem support. In much of this work, tempo is obfuscated via broken rhythms, meter changes and polyrhythmic melody so that a constant state of flux is created, and material isn’t revisited. Theme is maintained via rhythmic and tonal structures, and often complex rhythmic counterpoint, a constant subject in Reuter’s work. There are also moments of space which give the impression of interrupted tempo, of time stopping and starting, even though time flows continually. This is the kind of “temporal deception,” in Reuter’s words, that occurs in “#9 Low/High 1.”

 

“I’d always wanted to work with these people on my music, so this was a really special opportunity,” says the leader in conclusion. The resulting Quintet Music brims with a sense of excitement, as Reuter and his high-level colleagues expand the parameters of what is musically possible.

TRACK LISTING:

1. Same Song

2. #13 F34

3. Interlude 1 (Reuter)

4. #8 D@z

5. Fast Louis

6. Interlude 1 (Shim)

7. #9 Low/High 1

8. Interlude 1 (Schlamb)

9. #15

10. Carrico Real

CREDITS:

Composed by Travis Reuter
 

PERSONNEL:
Travis Reuter - Guitar
Mark Shim - Tenor Sax
Peter Schlamb - Vibraphone
Harish Raghavan - Upright bass
Tyshawn Sorey - Drums

PRODUCTION CREDITS:

Produced by Travis Reuter
Recorded on April 21st, 22nd, and 23rd, 2024 at Big Orange Sheep in Brooklyn, NY.

Engineered by Chris Benham
Additional Recording done on October 10th, 2022 at The Zoo in Bern, Switzerland.
Engineered by Wolfgang Zwiauer

Mixed and Mastered by Liberty Ellman

ADDITIONAL CREDITS:
Post-production, editing by Alan Bjorklund
Album Artwork by Matej Kosir

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