Slowly Rolling Camera
@ the Love Supreme Jazz Festival 6 July 2014
& the PizzaExpress Jazz Club 21 November 2013
Click an image to enlarge.
Biography
Slowly Rolling Camera, a new project that teams pianist-composer
Dave Stapleton, producer Deri Roberts, vocalist-lyricist Dionne
Bennett and drummer Elliot Bennett, is proof positive that some
of the most interesting work often arises from a meeting of many
minds. The result is music that has distinct echoes of the ‘invisible
soundtracks’ of UK progressives Cinematic Orchestra and Portishead
as well as the polychrome textures of maverick Scandinavian artists
like Sigor Ros and Oddarrang.
The intricate deployment of glowing keyboard colours and shifting
rhythmic patterns imbues tracks such as Temptation and Eight Days
In with the kind of stark atmospheres that often define the best
scores for both big and small screen. Stapleton’s keyboards
and Elliot Bennett’s drums create a wide range of sharp, often
crunching timbres that are augmented by Roberts’ artful electronic
washes, but it is the presence of guest players, double bassist
Jasper Hoiby, guitarist Chris Montague and saxophonist Mark Lockheart
that significantly enriches the sound palette. These greatly respected
figures in British jazz contribute a heavy, bulky low end, eerie,
crackling chords and crystalline solos that make for much more than
a cut ‘n’ paste studio session. Their attention to detail
is great.
Furthermore, the orchestral scope of the project is epitomized
by the lush, plaintive string charts that embellish tracks such
as Coin. There is also Dionne Bennett’s measured, highly soulful
vocal performance on 21 Nov and Rain That Falls, two gorgeously
wistful songs that skillfully weave together understated but nonetheless
resonant chord sequences and soaring crescendos.
Slowly Rolling Camera is not a name without meaning. The whole
aesthetic of the music vividly suggests a series of frames or images
that unfold at a leisurely pace, thus settling strongly into the
sub-conscious to reveal layer upon layer of detail. The combination
of lean but incisive production and tightly focused live playing
has yielded music that has the dot-matrix finesse of the digital
age without being bloodless or clinical. Slowly Rolling Camera are
purveyors of mysterious audio vignettes that are moulded by a structural
sophistication that is plugged straight into the vibrant emotional
current of pop culture.
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