Everything surrounding Brace looks simple and clear. The name, Brace, five letters, one syllable. The title of their debut album, âQuaternityâ, refers to the four pieces in it. Even the straightforwardness of the song-titles leaves no room for doubt. The Bristol duo featuring Ollie Moore (reeds/keyboards) and Aidan Searle (drums/percussion) know what it is doing: plain free jazz born of instant composition.
Moore has been around for a while, an active player of the Bristol post-punk scene as a founding member of Pigbag and has collaborated with Au Pairs, Head, Red Snapper and Craig Davies, among others. Searleâs interest in performing has resurfaced in the last decade, playing drums in bands such as Hi Fiction Science, HEXIT (with Ollie Moore), Dominions of Glue and Omega Institute. The two have started to collaborate a few years ago and have made a name for themselves in the Bristol/London improvisation scene with sessions at Sounds On The Corner, Domestic Sound Cupboard, Skronk and Flim Flam.
âReaction-Formationâ opens as it should: an introduction to the Brace domain. The phrases are open, Searleâs drums feel fresh and are relaxed in a very particular groovy way. It creates room for Ollieâs saxophone to breathe and to flow in the direction it desires. Both know where theyâre going with no one in command. It is symbiotic and it sounds like that.
Thatâs the beauty of âQuaternityâ. Even when Brace approaches something explosive, like in âSerene Intentâ, the duo avoids the obvious and prefer a more self-contained language. That creates room to perfect this sensation of music as a constant stream and not a series of ups and downs. It is both rational and natural and by the end of âNod To Donâ, these 71 minutes will feel like a breeze.
Holuzam