By
Burnt Belief
Written by
Steve Sheppard
I have long been a fan of progressive rock, jazz and
contemporary instrumental music, so this album is like being a kid in a candy
shop for me, as today I get to explore all of those musical sojourns in one
album and more, through the medium of Mutual
Isolation by Burnt Belief.
So who is Burnt Belief?
We have the magical cloud guitar of Jon
Durant, on double bass Colin Edwin,
the band also feature musicians supreme in drummer Vinny Sabatino, percussionist Andi
Pupato, and Aleksei Saks a master
of the trumpet from Estonia.
We have all had to endure Mutual Isolation at some point in the last two years, and it has
brought some amazing results with it, here on this album the artists manifest a
freedom to form unlikely to have been heard before, but one of the most
listenable albums you will have allowed to grace your presence for a long, long
while.
The opening piece Where
it all Began (for TR) is a wonderful pastiche of free form Jazz meets prog
rock, it’s one of those addictive arrangements that you will just keep
listening to over and again, and each time you do so you will be amazed at the
sublime work of Sabatino, and all the little nuances that you will constantly
find within the composition as you go.
The rhythm on this next piece was wonderfully palpable and
called Month of Moonlight. A smooth
offering indeed, funky in a light hearted way, with the guitar of Durant
offering a side to the arrangement that brought a great colour to the song, in
the same way that the great Carlos
Santana did back in the day.
Rosso Portofino as they say is a horse of a
different colour completely, the trumpet of Saks partners a clever performance
by Sabatino to manifest something that has to be listened to with serious
intent, this moody offering highlights also the genius double bass of Edwin,
whose performance with Saks sublime brass creates something so very fluent and
almost sensual to bathe within.
Resistential signifies that we are now well into
the core of the album, it also gifts us a sublime track that has a wealth of
percussive brilliance within it too. Once more that delicious rhythm is there,
as the band manifests something so fascinating and even mysterious within this
crafted arrangement.
Whilst we step into the second half of the album, we do so by
coming across a new offering entitled Perilous
Terrain, Durant’s guitar and the light but very relevant percussion bring
us a global vibe, which reverberates partially into a progressive rock
structure, and then floats around in a dark realm of seriously in-depth
melodies and structures, ones that build upon a mood of apprehension and
tension. This is one of the most intriguing pieces off the release, a track
that highlights the genius of one Jon
Durant.
The hovering intensity within this next composition is
amazing and simply idyllic, the track itself is called The Evolution of Disintegration, a gentle keyboard is further
enhanced by one of the great performances on the album, as both Edwin and
Durant created, what for me, was a magical moment of guitar and bass, and in
doing so birthed one of the best tracks from this collection of superior arrangements;
this is a song that could be easily tagged as legendary, it is that good.
Edwin’s opening bass line is as good as you will have heard,
since the one that ushered in the single by Elvis
Presley called Fever, his
performance dominated this new offering called Precipitation. Joined by Durant’s sublime fluency, the band goes
onto create a song that is dark with its onward movement, but one that has an
underpinned addictiveness to its overall construction.
I did mention from the off that this album crosses a multitude
of genres, add world music to that list now as we arrive at the penultimate
piece off the album entitled Divine
Rascal. This combination of rhythms, percussive genius and sublime bass,
gift us something that holds a global ethic musically as well as retaining all
that has been created thus far within its boundaries.
The last port of call for us on this musical voyage of plenty
is entitled Expanse, and as you may
guess from the title of the composition it is indeed the longest track off the
album at nearly eleven and a half minutes long, and trust me on this, don’t
skip, put your feet up and listen to this arrangement in its entirety, you will
be more musically fulfilled because of it. Our final piece is a moment of long
form brilliance, a hovering floating start with a keyboard setting the early
narrative, then a wonderful combination of all that is good creative and
artistic follows, in one of the classiest end of album tracks I have heard for
absolutely years.
Mutual Isolation by Burnt Belief is indeed a ground breaking album; here is an
opportunity to enrich yourself musically as the album is a land of inventive
and masterfully performed offerings that are so very artistically created, ones
that have such a depth to their constructions, thus it is an album that
deserves to be given multiple listens.
Mutual Isolation by Burnt Belief is a next level album, it is more than just dancing
with other genres, this is a release that manifests new ones, whilst creating a
musical sanctuary of the soul for the ever eager listener.