Andy Milne and Unison - Time Will Tell

Label: Sunnyside Records, 2024

Personnel - Andy Milne: piano; John Hébert; bass; Clarence Penn: drums + Ingrid Laubrock: tenor saxophone (#1,4,6,9); Yoko Reikanu Kimura: koto (#2,4,6,9)

Pianist and composer Andy Milne reunites his Unison trio, featuring bassist John Hébert and drummer Clarence Penn, to present the ten captivating compositions that make up Time Will Tell, an album that feels invigoratingly fresh and demands attention. Milne’s previous album, The ReMission (2020), was inspired by his cancer diagnosis, treatment, and cure, but for this new one he was highly influenced by findings related with his biological family, as he was adopted as a child. The addition of illustrious guest musicians, Ingrid Laubrock on tenor sax and Yoko Reikanu Kimura on koto, enriches the sonic landscape, bringing their diverse talents and individual artistic influences to the forefront.

The album opens with the harmonious waltzing cadence of “Purity of Heart”, where Laubrock’s firmly centered tone and Milne’s melodic prowess take center stage. “Lost and Found”, reflecting Milne’s quest to locate his birth mother, introduces Kimura’s koto, adding enigmatic tones and a dark atmosphere that, without anticipation, morphs into a sweeter passage where the melody breathes. Later on the recording, Laubrock joins the quartet for the more straightforward “Lost and Found: Reprise”, which, nonetheless, blossoms in seven.

Beyond the Porcelain Door” and “Kumoi Joshi” also include saxophone and koto, each offering distinct sonic journeys. The former shapes as a half-dreamy, half-realistic avant-garde procession with a bold rhythmic shift into septuple meter and a malleable bass solo, while the latter, evoking poignancy through the exoticism of sounds, exposes thoughtful saxophone considerations and piano lyricism over a firm lockstep before modulating the surroundings for a fine koto solo.

The trio’s chemistry shines brightly on Penn’s “Papounet”, characterized by an enlivening harmonic progression and a nonuple meter backdrop produced by the regular alternation of five and four beat groups. Commanding the attention, Milne constructs and distorts phrases with impressive pliability. The piano-bass-drums triangle works its way through nicely textured pieces, and the closer, “Apart”, is no exception, delivered with soulful balladic instinct and sensitive brushwork.

Opting for variety under a post-bop umbrella with a special eclectic touch, Milne explores colorful frameworks where the voices of his bandmates become an extension of his own clear and accurate compositional delineations.

Favorite Tracks:
02 - Lost and Found ► 03 - Papounet ► 04 - Beyond the Porcelain Door