Catalogue
Music a la Coque 04 - Bass Tone Trap - Trapping
Reviews

These reviews relate to the original 1983 vinyl release and to contemporary concerts:

"BTT are the most original band to come out of Sheffield, and if you don't believe me, listen to Trapping." - Proper Gander

"BTT play with passion and humanity - for human beings who might get some use out of those qualities" - Source unidentified

"BTT spat it out for us all to see how it should be done" - Sheffield Telegraph

"A high level of invention, atmosphere and execution by six very talented musicians.....a fine ensemble achievement." - Michael Holloway, Jazz Beat

"This Sheffield six piece brim with courageous ambition, two guitarists and two reed players locked in a clinch somewhere between Soft Machine and Archie Shepp. The swirl of circular improvisations suggests this is one collective who could actually play a jazz-rock that moves and involves." - Richard Cook, NME

"A fine debut album.....rough and raw." - Sounds

"BTT are imaginative and adventurous - they spread the word" - The Bishop and the forty-nine articles

"BTT are Sheffield's answer to the Art Ensemble of Chicago, and they know how to entertain" - Unidentified review

"This band has done what no other is doing - playing in a rock context to a rock audience and in a jazz context to a jazz audience without changing a single note, and succeeding" - Unidentified review

"A mish-mash of freeform jazz, jagged funk and empty spaces...great to tangle to." - This is entertainment

" A truly progressive and accessible group" - Unidentified review

And these are reviews of the CD reissue:

"La musique en réaction, confiant à qui veut l’entendre que le domaine n’a rien à faire des leçons. Qui évolua avec Bass Tone Trap 4 années durant au gré d’une énergie impertinente, pour viser aujourd’hui le statut de document démesuré, attestant de l’existence d’un Lower East Side transposé jadis en Angleterre. Forcément moins sourcilleux." - Chroniques de Grisli

"A re-release from 1983, Bass Tone Trap was the launching pad for several Discus Records regulars who’ve gone on to some of - okay, the most - experimental jazz/noise dada found today. Kickoff song “Sanctified” could be thought of as Madness trying to magpie Prince while keeping in the good graces of the patrons of a smoky jazz club, but from there it’s a no-wave opus of unfollowable drums, spur-of-the-moment bursts of grand mal vitriol, and chaotic progressions of all types and combinations, much of which had to be improvised and non-verbally cued (unless these guys are ten-fingered ants from Alpha Centauri, which could very well be for all the seriousness that’s gone into their stuff for all these years). “Safe in the Inner Core” finds guitarist John Jasnoch gently tickling the strings for a few bars before drums and sax rudely interrupt with a hyperspeed gun battle; “Afraid of Paper” dabbles in megaweirdo soundtracking, with all hands contributing to an unnerving motif that moves through Asian and pure noise analyses" - Eric Saeger, Spikemag

"Often hailed as a minor underground classic shortly after its 1983 release on LP, this rather zany jazz-rock outing seldom fails to entertain, even thirty years after the fact. On this effort, billed as a jazz-punk release, the British sextet’s uncanny methodology is supplanted by Frank Zappa-like quirkiness, free-form jazz workouts and tuneful themes. Bassist Paul Shaft doubles as a vocalist. He spoofs rock 'n' roll with tongue-in-cheek choruses atop odd-metered backbeats, wily horn passages, and John Jasnoch’s psycho wah-wah electric guitar licks. At times optimistic and at others drenched in angst and/or torment, the band equalizes many of the harsher moments with blossoming harmonic content. On “Intruder In The Dust,” the unit explores a psychedelic muse, complete with phased out guitars and budding ostinato grooves. In other spots, they poke fun at rockabilly, with avant garde overtones and goofy tirades. Then on “Sleep Lights,” the musicians touch upon the British free jazz movement, and their fractured dialogues strangely evolve into conventional swing vamps and late-‘60s rock. But the overriding distinction pertains to the ensemble’s ability to adopt a unified and irrefutably focused approach. In sum, these artists' oddball nooks, crannies and excitable penchant for experimentation is firmed up by their playfully maniacal outlook." - Glenn Astarita All about Jazz

UK customers: use this button to buy for £10 including p&p
Already spent £20? Use this button to buy one additional CD for £1
Non UK coustomers please click here to buy this title direct from Music a la Coque