Jazz-disruptors Ebi Soda return with their latest album 'frank dean and andrew'.
Harnessing the chaos born from endless jams in a remote, rented
farmhouse, the album dives deeper into their punk approach to jazz,
while opening up space for long-nurtured fascinations with electronic
textures and cinematic oddities. Their third album, it features previous
singles feely, and bamboo.
The title was pulled from a bank of favourite names after the band saw
Ez’s artwork; a quirky world of three cell-like flats housing absurd
creatures. 'frank dean and andrew' nods to the anonymous, everyday
passersby whose lives quietly unfold in the background of a nondescript
town.
Pulling back the curtain on its creation further, the band reveals, “The
album was recorded at the end of a year of extreme highs and lows. The
tensions play out in the music in weird ways... the feeling of the music
is very particular, and peculiar. Most UK Jazz music can end up too
arranged and neat, or generally optimistic in mood, whereas this album
goes the other way in all aspects.”
At the album's core, the glitchy, late-night focus track red in tokyo features Chinese-Vietnamese-British rapper Jianbo,
whose grimey, distorted flows cut through growling guitar riffs and a
dragging, drill-like drum line. “It’s a weird, grimey anger with a touch
of no-wave and post-punk,” the band explains, “Hari’s bass ended up
sounding like a Japanese Koto”. The intensity is fitting, as Jianbo
recounts a tense moment in Tokyo that left him “seeing red.”
Shifting through moods, the second track oscillates to life with a dubby
bassline and bursts of distant, animalistic commotion, like a flock
scattering after a disturbance. With unsettling keys and guitar, the
instrumental upends the familiar contours of jazz and leaves a lingering
unease as part of what the band calls the album’s “weird, off-key”
side. Equally unexpected, the title, horticulturalists nightmare
(birds), taps into the surreal fear lurking in the pulsing soundscape.
That freeform, borderless creativity carries into grilly, where the keys
lay out the pace and mood. “The tempo and the ambience frame the track
to be like a dance tune, but with a darkness from Burial-type ambiences
and pulsing drill-style delays,” the band notes. As horn layers clear
the haze, the jam’s raw energy and feeling come together as a
transportive piece.
Taking a dip into the melancholic, toucan opens with a whir and solemn,
ceremonial horns, underpinned by a mellow harmony that moves into
far-off, choral-like overlays. Opening with a similarly dystopian
eeriness is location, the band’s favourite. From the heavy slump of the
drums to the three-piece horns of Dan, Akers, and Jonny, which
counterpoint each other in a sea of reverb. The tune is named after a
Playboi Carti song of the same name, inspired by the opening synth
movement.
The title track, frank dean and andrew, flickers with a bittersweet
nostalgia, capturing for Ebi Soda, a modern sense of indifference, a
stay-at-home, it-is-what-it-is kind of resignation. It mirrors the mood
of the figures on the album artwork: sitting alone in flats, suspended
in quiet isolation. Lou’s chords, Hari’s chordal bass, and Sam’s
laid-back tempo lay down a "loose, Midwest, emo undercurrent, a tone
that runs deep in much of the hyperpop" the band had been absorbing.
Will vocalises through the trombone, making it sound as though someone
is singing down a crackling phone line. A flugelhorn overdub adds more
warmth to the track’s slow-burning atmosphere, with trombone and sax
joining the mix in the second half.
Closing the album is insectoid creatures are infesting the land,
beginning as a dissonant, scattered hellscape of wailing improvisations,
freewheeling robotic noise, and buckling delays that eventually rupture
into a cinematic scape, giving way to an ascending sequence of hopeful,
mood-settling melodies.
As a whole, the album’s character arises from stylising with production
and mixing. The approach fluctuates between focusing on ambience and
reverb, drawing from UK dubstep influences like Zomby, Burial, and Joe
Armon-Jones’ collaborations with Maxwell Owin, and embracing the raw,
grainy DIY ‘mixtape’ sound, inspired by artists like Athletic
Progression, Yameii Online, and Playboi Carti.
Tracklist:
1. bamboo
2. horticulturalists nightmare (birds)
3. grilly
4. toucan
5. milk in my console
6. location
7. feely
8. red in tokyo (feat. Jianbo)
9. when pluto was a planet and everything was cool
10. frank dean and andrew
11. insectoid creatures are infesting the land