Reviews for Trio AAB

Caber 021 - 'Wherever I Lay My Home That's My Hat'



John Fordham - The GUARDIAN JAZZ ALBUMS OF THE YEAR 2001

Wherever I Lay My Home, That's My Hat  Trio AAB
Terrific Scottish jazz-and-improv trio - Coltrane and Ornette Coleman meet Celtic pipe laments and even the occasional didgeridoo. The founders are the Bancroft brothers, Tom on drums and Phil on saxophones, plus the highly creative guitarist Kevin MacKenzie. The pieces move through agile Ornette Coleman uptempo dances, to clattery funk and pre-bop tenor-sax romanticising. There's even a fusion headbanger called Pay Some Fucking Attention.


Yorkshire Post: December 2001

Trio AAB : Wherever I Lay My Hat That's My Home Caber 021

"Intriguing title for an album and some intriguing jazz too. If it's eclecticism and invention you're after, this is the group for you. The trio is twin brothers Phil and Tom Bancroft, on saxophones and guitar (sic), and drummer Kevin MacKenzie. Their music embraces straight ahead jazz, funk, and rock amongst its many influences, and is characterised by constant rhythmic interplay.


That makes for a wide ranging programme that refuses to be categorised but holds interest because of it's sheer invention. The opening Happy Repetition song is wonderfully open and springy, Some of the Things I'm Not is a marvel of three players finding perfect intuitive understanding.


There are some fine young British groups around at present and Trio AAB are up there with the best of them." Andrew Vine, Yorkshire Post

Trio AAB : Wherever I Lay My Hat That's My Home Caber 021 ****
"If this is the best Scottish modern jazz has to offer, then let's have lots more please. Trio AAB comprises Phil Bancroft ( saxophones), Tom Bancroft (drums) and Kevin MacKenzie (guitar). The album's title, the opening track and it's inspiration - Happy Repetition: "This was written while I was failing to give up smoking..." hints at the often playful nature of the music. While the opener reflects the rippling rhythms of Jimmy Giuffre's 'The Train and The River', the trio also delve into into darker waters, but the themes never fail to to resolve and the ideas never stagnate. Great stuff" David Banks


CD Review in JAZZ RAG Issue 70
TRIO AAB Wherever I Lay My Home That's My Hat Caber 021 (61:44)
"If you haven't already spotted it, there is something exciting happening in Scotland. Largely as a result of Caber Music, bands such as John Raeís Celtic Feet and the Brian Kellock Trio are creating a buzz about Scottish jazz. Trio AAB are central to that, easily carrying the burden of being labelled "the most creative group in Scotland". Their debut album "Cold Fusion" was one of the best of 1999, and this is a worthy successor.

The trio consists of identical twins Tom and Phil Bancroft (drums and saxophones, respectively. Tom is the founder of Caber Music. Phil wrote most of the material here.) and Kevin MacKenzie on guitar. The three sound comfortable with each other, having played together in various ensembles in recent years. Their music has a refreshing openness and sense of space. There is not much soloing here, but plenty of simultaneous improvisation by all three players. Compositions are used as starting points for creative explorations, but this never sounds like free improvisation; the trio retain an underlying sense of swing and melody throughout. And, maybe most importantly, they have a sense of humour and fun that shines through. They name-check musicians as diverse as Ornette Coleman, Jeff Buckley, Paul Motian and Bill Evans, but none gives much clue to the freshness and joy of the music here. This album will be on my end-of-year list of favourites (even though AAB offer no word of apology to Marvin Gaye for the album title)."


Inverness Courier Trio AAB : December 2001
Wherever I Lay My Hat That's My Home Caber 021

"They may take their music seriously but this explosive and innovative Scottish group know how to have fun too, as those who heard them recently in Inverness will be aware. Guitarist Kevin MacKenzie - who fulfils the band's piano and bass role in the band - registers more strongly in the recording balance than he did "live", drummer Tom Bancroft is a powerhouse of polyrhythms, and although twin brother Phil's equally muscular tenor sounds wooly on the opening 'Happy Repetition Song', a title which sums the tune up pretty well, the sax gains clarity as the recording progresses.
Owing much to Kern & Hammerstein, "Some of the things I'm Not" is as close as the trio come to a standard in this collection of funk, free-ish originals and atmospheric ballads."

John Bungey, The Times December 2001

" There are some grooves too, and a good deal else, in the subtle and free-flowing music of the Scottish Trio AAB. Their first album was a Radio 3 Jazz album of the year and Wherever I Lay My Hat That's My Home ( Caber 021, distributed by Proper) is a sparky follow up. The trio of sax, guitar and drums move through noisy funk to be-bop and moments of quiet lyricism. What's most remarkable is their ability to create beautifully judged collective improvisations. Absence of a bass player works to their free-wheeling advantage. Mind you , one of the titles may hint at the occasional frustrations of life at jazz's cutting edge 'Pay Some F***ing Attention'"


Express Star ( West Midlands Evening Paper)
Wherever I Lay My Home That's My Hat Trio AAB

" A quirky title and a witty approach to music. Twins Phil and Tom Bancroft, on saxes and drums respectively, and guitarist Kevin MacKenzie offer original themes with unexpected twists"

Trio AAB Album Review in Jazz Review Magazine: Dec2001
"This one grows on you rather than demanding and holding your attention at once, which is fine. I've always been a fan of instrumental groupings which have, in conventional terms, one or more empty seats , such as piano-free horn/bass/drums trios, or has here, a trio with a chordal instrument but no bassist ( and no one doing a Ganelin or a Stu Martin by faking a bass line with gadgetry, either). While a quick flick through your free improvisation shelf will of course reveal any number of recordings which would seem to qualify, it's a different kind of fun when the musicians are working within more-jazz-than-not structures. Here the trio makes a series of hit-and-run sorties into the resulting space, of which the most telling has to be the lovely , melodic dadoomphs of Bancroft-the-Drums' kick pedal on the cod-systemic opening track. He's a busy but perfectly controlled player, which is just as well given that his contribution to this disc often amounts to structural framework, background wash and rhythmic punctuation, often all at once.....just when the listener starts to fidget something like the rampaging "Pay Some F**king Attention comes up endearing you to the music all over again.

A strong versatile set from a trio with a penchant for the slightly oblique, then, and highly commendable as such" Roger Thomas

Cabe

press play to hear mp3 of title track

press play to hear mp3 of  Happy Repetition Song

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