



at12 dun
matt davis -
matt milton -
bechir saade -
1. 21:17
2. 13:57
3. 14:09
TT: 49:25
recorded at the church of st.james the great,
friern barnet, north london, november 2007
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“dun begins with a spectrum of Bechir Saade’s bass clarinet multiphonics spooning
against the muted hum of Matt Davis’s trumpet -
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“Finally comes dun, a very fine, expansive and at the same time bracingly spartan
set by Davis (trumpet. field recordings), Milton (violin) and Saade (bass clarinet
and flute). Three longish cuts, each carving out a wedge of space, sharply defined
as to overall shape even as the elements making up the volume are sparely distributed.
The latter half of the second track, all a-
“The Another Timbre label often puts an emphasis on restrained, almost minimalistic approaches to music, evoking a mood of reflectiveness, meditation or even natural mysticism or religiousness. This album is no exception. It is as though the three musicians create music from a kind of natural silence. The sounds used could be described as either spartan or precise, depending on how you view the whole, and how much you appreciate this sort of silence. For there are different kinds of silence, and here silence is always thoughtful and focused. The music was recorded in a church and the whisperings and scrapings of Matt Davis’ trumpet and Matt Milton’s violin exemplify a form of English free improvisation which arguably springs from a certain type of Protestantism, and which is of course very beautiful.
However for me it is the contribution of flautist and bass clarinettist Bechir Saade
that really raises the temperature. His musical schooling was in Lebanon, and his
playing combines brilliant traditional instrumentalism with extreme avant-
"dun provides the gist of what silence would sound like when surrounded by three
master musicians. Sure, Matt Davis plays the trumpet and provides a slew of field
recordings and Matt Milton plays the violin, while Bechir Saade plays bass clarinet
and flute, but the main preoccupation on this trio disc is the incorporation of silence.
The cracks and utter dead sound amidst the instrumentation is as important as the
music emanating from the musicians themselves. Sometimes the air is instilled with
the sound of Saade striking the sides of his flute, while Davis provides a light
hushing soundtrack. At other times, one hears the slow strains of Milton's violin,
which are accompanied by occasional hick-
“This is a recording from November last year. I have never heard of Matt Milton, whereas the other two already have a rising reputation in the world of improvised music. This is improvised music from the world of sound, rather than from the world of instruments. A world in which silence, or near silence, is as important as producing a sound. A sound is produced, left by itself and then the wait starts for another sound: the three players watch each other, in full concentration and then a new event happens. Certainly not music to put and leave on, and do something else, but to be listened to with full concentration. One that unfolds its beauty in a similar peaceful way to that in which it was produced.”
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“Dun is an album whose fecundity is inversely proportional to its lean constitution,
which at various times takes us back to the early days of EAI when "reductionism"
wasn't yet an over-