He may call it "Zen Funk," but the real question is, what the hell is it? Swiss pianist and composer
Nik Bartsch's
Ronin have issued their
ECM debut,
Stoa, the label well-known for its icy sounding, spacious
jazz.
ECM has been pushing the envelope for nearly 40 years, but with
Ronin, they've pushed it beyond the pale into God knows what. This is not a bad thing, however.
Ronin was a group created with the idea of playing live. And over the course of three previous records issued only in Europe, the band -- birthed in 2001 when
Bartsch was 30 -- plays a highly disciplined style of music that relies on interlocking rhythm, groove, and groups of tight, short melodic statements all stacked on top of one another. There are those who will immediately think of
Steve Reich's
minimalist discipline, but there are no equations to be solved here. It's math music to be sure, but its also got the good foot, the deep bass, and the drum ostinatos of
James Brown & His Famous Flames or
the JB's, or even the
deep soul tight backbeat toughness of the best
Stax rhythm sections.
Bartsch has listened to everything from
Reich and
Terry Riley to
techno and
the Necks (there is a beautiful nod to them at the beginning of the opener
"Modul 36").
Bartsch's melodic ideas are trance-like and hypnotic. They come across more as rhythmic statements than actual melodic ideas. There are Eastern aesthetics at work here in the stripped-down elementalism in this music. It's full of discipline and is depersonalized so that the ensemble comes off as one voice. It's clear
Bartsch has spent time listening to some of the best
experimental electronic music by artists such as
Apparat,
Thomas Brinkmann,
Pole,
Basic Channel, and
Pan Sonic. And while there is
improvisation in
Ronin's attack, it's structured and tightly woven into
Bartsch's compositional structures. What makes the band tick is the rhythm section as
Bartsch works his modulated and shuffled lyrical fragments against the section, assisted ably and minimally by
Sha on contrabass and bass clarinets (who acts as another part of the rhythm section more than as a soloist or melodist). It's bassist
Bjorn Meyer, percussionist
Andi Pupato, and especially the brilliant drummer
Kaspar Rast making it all happen in real time.
Bartsch plays a standard concert grand, but he also uses a Fender Rhodes. There is a sleek chrome and matte black, post-postmodernist, Euro-funky attack in sections of
"Modul 33." It begins with a near dissonant
ambience -- created by small percussion instruments and bell-like gongs -- that
David Toop would cream over. But it's toward the center where the action is:
Bartsch puts the overdrive in his left-hand work in the middle register in a series of modulations that start from the middle of a melody and work both forward and back, always returning to a center that is really the only constant. The popping hi hat and hushed snare usher in
Sha, who shines here with his breath control and taut, stuttering, articulate blend of rhythm and harmonics that -- reminiscent of
Roland Kirk in the '70s -- create a locking groove for
Bartsch to play short, fleeting chords before beginning his knotty theme contrapuntally against the rhythm section. There is nothing extra in this music, no room for metaphor or metonymy or the self-expression
jazz has at its center for soloists. Time signatures shift methodically, and the reined in groove becomes the entire proceeding. The piano and stick work of
Rast create the loping, hard,
trance airlock that is
"Modul 38 _17," the set closer. Over 12 minutes in length, the listener is pulled into one sphere or the other, that of the piano or the percussion, though both come to the same middle to reach outward. What sounds like a loop is actually played live without overdubbing or editing.
Bartsch plays both Rhodes and acoustic piano, one in each hand, covering the ground as
Sha,
Meyer, and
Pupato create their own series of continuous hypno-grooves.
Bartsch shifts the melodic idea or stacks and cuts it as the piece evolves, becoming ever more pronounced and forceful, leaving the listener exhausted by its end. While it is an utter pleasure to listen to these five long pieces -- nothing is less than nine minutes here, which shows just how this music is played live and to experience the taut control and the tenacity it takes to play this music in a concert setting.
Stoa may not be
jazz, or "Zen Funk," it may not be anything at all, and yet, that is what makes
Ronin's
Stoa such a powerful and illuminating experience. It's one of those recordings that can be enjoyed by more open-minded
jazz fans, but the true audience for
Stoa lies in fans of
the Necks (nothing quite so blissful here though, folks) and
experimental techno fans if they can get past the notion that all this music is made live.
ECM has raised the bar once more by recording and releasing a truly compelling, curious, maddening, and provocative Edition of Creative Musicians with
Stoa.
Ronin is a band of the future, one that has nowhere to go but out into the sonic stratosphere. Judging by this set, it will be exciting to witness where they go from here. ~ Thom Jurek