We’ve updated our Terms of Use to reflect our new entity name and address. You can review the changes here.
We’ve updated our Terms of Use. You can review the changes here.

The New Sound

by Daimon Brunton

/
  • Streaming + Download

    Includes unlimited streaming via the free Bandcamp app, plus high-quality download in MP3, FLAC and more.
    Purchasable with gift card

      $7 AUD  or more

     

1.
2.
The New Funk 07:12
3.
4.
5.
Wah Sa 11:01

about

‘The New Sound’…

Over late 2019 and early 2020 the DBQ recorded their first album for 8 years!

We have listened to this album innumerable times and we can assure you that this is something stellar!

We have scoured Bandcamp, Spotify, Apple Music, You Tube and alike and we honestly can't find anything that sounds quite like this. This is visceral, high energy, complex, time-shifting music that really demands the very best.

The works on "The New Sound" are designed to expand the niche audience of jazz by using strong melodies and 'straight' rhythms but they simultaneously explore and develop sophisticated compositional techniques.

Three of the five works are through-composed and explore the concept that themes that are strongly linked can hold the attention and captivate the listener and take them on a 'journey' without the use of a recurring riff or chorus.

One work uses a 4 bar melodic motif played on the trumpet as the basis and foundation for a virtuosic solo 'conversation' between guitar and keyboard. This gives the trumpet a role for which it has traditionally never been used.

However the strongest elements that pervade "The New Sound" are those of counterpoint and metric modulation.

Daimon Brunton; the composer and trumpeter; spent 15 years playing pipe organ in church masses and studied Bach Preludes and Fugues and he has brought this highly contrapuntal compositional technique and employed it in a jazz/fusion setting.

Instead of slabs of chords and chord symbols four individual voices (bass, guitar, piano and trumpet) are often found playing four separate melodies simultaneously. This technique has certainly been employed in jazz and fusion before but never to the extent it is heard on the works in "The New Sound". Daimon introduces each voice gradually, allowing the audience to identify with each melody before the next one is layered on top. The addition of each melody draws the audience in and takes them further on the 'journey'. By the time four-fifths of the ensemble are playing separate melodies there is a crescendo and sophistication that then allows for countless possibilities whether that be a sudden 'strip-back' to just a groove or the possibility of transitioning to a whole new section of a through-composed work.

The use of metric modulation is also extensive in these works but Daimon feels strongly that such complexity should only be employed if the underlying 'groove' is strong. The ending of one work is a 7/4 section. Each 7/4 bar is actually the combination of two 7/8 bars whose pulse alternates between a 3-2-2 grouping and a 2-2-3 grouping. To the listener it feels like there is a medium paced loping or gait to the music but the shifting pulse that is the undercurrent for this passage brings a frenetic and contagious energy.

"The New Sound" is unique. It has incredibly strong 'whistle-able' melodies on top of funky fusion beats that attract a new audience to jazz whilst simultaneously employing sophisticated, new compositional techniques that add to the legacy of this wonderful art-music genre.

Daimon Brunton - trumpet
Adam Donaldson - drums
Adam Rudegeair - keyboard
Lawson Kennard - bass
David Gooey - guitar

credits

released March 22, 2020

Personnel:

Daimon Brunton - trumpet
Adam Rudegeair - keyboard
David Gooey - guitar
Lawson Kennard - bass
Adam Donaldson - drums

All tracks composed and arranged by Daimon Brunton.
Recorded at Rollingstock Recording Rooms on November 16th, 2019.
Additional recording on December 18th & 29th, 2019 & January8th & February 10th, 2020.
Album recorded, mixed & mastered by Myles Mumford.
Photography by George Sujak.

license

all rights reserved

tags

about

Daimon Brunton Melbourne, Australia

contact / help

Contact Daimon Brunton

Streaming and
Download help

Report this album or account

If you like Daimon Brunton, you may also like: