Anyone who remembers trumpeter
Toshinori Kondo's work with such thorny avant-gardists as
John Zorn,
Derek Bailey,
Fred Frith, and
Peter Brotzmann's
Die Like a Dog Quartet may be a bit taken aback by the extreme accessibility of his collaboration with pioneering turntablist
DJ Krush. Much of the music on
Ki-Oku flirts with smooth-groove jazz --
Kondo's muted trumpet line on
"Mu-Getsu" sounds an awful lot like something
Chris Botti would play, while the duo's instrumental take on the
Bob Marley classic
"Sun Is Shining" comes off just a little bit muzak-y. On the other hand,
"Ki-Gen" and
"Ko-Ku" both find
Kondo using synthesized treatments in a way that evokes
Jon Hassell's work with
Brian Eno, while on the latter
DJ Krush layers slightly menacing keyboard washes beneath
Kondo's unassuming trumpet lines. This is one of those albums that reveals more with repeated listens; if it sounds too easy at first, listen again -- there's lots of interesting stuff going on beneath what sometimes sounds like a merely pleasant surface. ~ Rick Anderson