Songlines
- June 2008 ****
"At
last - an East-meets-West to be proud of"
Any
initial apprehension you might feel at sitting through yet another
attempt at an Indo-European fusion album after so many have cack-handedly
tried and failed should be dismissed. This is an eminently listenable
disc. Given the pedigree of the musicians - Jonahtan Mayer and
Justin Quinn are both sons of famous Indo-jazz musicians - you
might expect a heavy jazz bias, yet although there is undoubtedly
a jazz flavour to some of the playing it is by no means dominant.
That the tracks here aren't clearly jazz ot Hindustani recital,
or a conscious fusion of the two, is to their credit. My impression
is that the musicians are not hung up on labels but just set out
to make music, and what results is a strangely satisfying but
unclassifiable melange of tala, modal harmonies, gamaka,
dreamy ostinatos and virtuosic melismas. There is also
much more variety here than first appears - a gentle feel but
with skilful rhythmic playing. And track four starts off with
an eminently classical alap. If you are looking for something
a little different, but with a sound world that hints at just
the right amount of Indian and European influence then this CD
is definitely worth a listen.
Reviewed
by: Maria Lord
MOJO
- June 2008 ****
A
mesmerising modern-day incarnation of the Indo-Jazz fusion pioneered
in the 60's by John Mayer. Son Jonathan Mayer, a virtuoso sitar
player, joins Jusin Quinn (guitar) and Neil Craig (tabla) in a
series of lovely, intricate dialogues featuring hypnotic ostinatos
and expressive improvisations. Britush folk, Indian classical
and jazz create a rich brew.
The
Daily Telegraph (UK) - March 2008
If
there is a certain awkwardness in the way the Eastern and Western
elements come together, this quality is entirely absent from the
efforts of Mayer's sitar-playing son, Jonathan. While his Teak
Project with guitarist Justin Quinn and tabla player Neil Craig
doesn't break any new ground, they have created an understated
and highly listenable blend of Indian classical, folk and jazz
elements which shows how far the fusion phenomenon has come in
40 years.
Reviewed
by: Mark Hudson
The
Guardian (UK) - March 2008 ****
When
Calcutta-raised violinist John Mayer (a player schooled in western
and Indian classical music) formed his Indo-Jazz Fusions group
with Caribbean sax star Joe Harriott in the 1960s, world music
collaborations involving cross-cultural improvisers were almost
unknown. The Teak Project involves Mayer's sitarist son Jonathan,
who grew up in the musical world his father predicted, when players
from different traditions wouldn't respectfully play in parallel
with each other, but genuinely converse. Jonathan Mayer, F-ire
Collective guitarist Justin Quinn and tabla player Neil Craig
collaborate on seven originals by the band members here; and though
fans of John McLaughlin's east-west Shakti group - or even of
Ralph Towner or Egberto Gismonti - will sense familiar ground,
the music is fresh, avoiding Shakti's high-speed badinage or familiar
licks from either culture. Craig's Deliver Me has Balkan and Iberian
as much as Indian undertones, and the brooding then bouncy Leaky
echoes both jazzier McLaughlin and road-band Metheny. Some passages
are mainly textural (exploring slow-bending low notes, metallic
chords and gurgling percussion), Mayer blending a ballad-guitar
sound with the sitar's quivering tones on the rhapsodic Emily,
and Quinn putting his flamenco and McLaughlin enthusiasms to creative
use. The lineup narrows the possible tone-colours, but they make
very inventive use of what they have.
Reviewed
by: John Fordham
The
Independent (UK) - March 2008
Second-generation
Indo-jazz fusions with Jonathan Mayer (son of Sixties pioneer
John Mayer) on sitar, Justin Quinn on acoustic guitar and Neil
Craig on tabla. What's so attractive about the seven original
compositions is the relaxed approach of the players and the easy
interplay of sitar and guitar. There's no genre-bending emphasis
on raga-form or other geography-teacher stuff, and if the result
is sweetly serene and melodic (closer to "Norwegian Wood"
than Shakti) this only emphasises its appeal as superior ambient
music, although the total absence of McLaughlin-style angstiness
means we miss out on drama.
Reviewed
by: Phil Johnson
Manchester
Evening News (UK) - March 2008 ****
SECOND
generation indo-jazz - sitar player Jonathan Mayer is the son
of indo-jazz pioneer John Mayer - which maintains the tradition
nicely.The devilish complexity of the music does nothing to detract
from its sweetness and serenity. Justin Quinn is a fleet-fingered
guitarist worthy to fill John McLaughlin's sandals. Tabla-player
Neil Craig provides the impetus, and transforms the gentle acoustic
music with the serpentine-like beats of the raga. In short, The
Teak Project offers a near-perfect realisation of indo-jazz yet
hints at further expansion: the floating impressionism of Outnumbered
By One recalls the work of Belgian guitarist Philip Catherine.
Lovely stuff.
Reviewed
by: Alan Brownlee
Jazzwise
Magazine - March 2008 ****
As
the instrumentation will suggest, The Teak Project is an Indo-jazz
project. The trio comes with credentials and pedigree. Mayer is
the son of composer-violinist John Mayer and violinist Gillian
Mayer and he played sitar in the reborn Indo-Jazz Fusions in the
1990’s. Quinn’s name is linked to Bakehouse and the
F-ire collective, Craig’s to the Christian Garrick Quartet
and Deva. The compositional load is spread evenly across the trio
and they are compositions with plenty of strong ideas and filigree
touches. Positioning a guitar and tabla lehara in Quinn’s
‘Without a Doubt’ is a good example of the latter
- “lehara” being an accompaniment inversion in Hindustani
music in which the melody instrument plays melodic figures supporting
the rhythmist. ‘Leaky’ jointly credited to Quinn and
Mayer, Mayer’s ‘Slow Down’ and Craig’s
cutely titled ‘Yamanish’ are my favourite performances
and springboard compositions. An outstanding debut.
Reviewed by: Ken Hunt