Other Worlds Android Trio
Album info
Album-Release:
2021
HRA-Release:
24.10.2023
Album including Album cover Booklet (PDF)
- 1 Anger Dance 05:06
- 2 Concentric Lines 04:11
- 3 Extra Terrestrial Folk Dance 05:18
- 4 Miscellany B 04:23
- 5 Serial Tune 04:19
- 6 Fanfare 03:41
- 7 Secular Athletes 03:22
- 8 Open Air 02:53
- 9 Cryptosaur 04:47
- 10 Take Me 05:40
- 11 Water Song 04:37
- 12 Quark 05:06
Info for Other Worlds
Max Kutner, Eric Klerks and Andrew Niven, virtuosos all, were all also schooled in playful virtuosity, sprung rhythms, and no-holds-barred experimentation while playing in one or both of two of the great legacy bands of progressive music: The Grandmothers of Invention, who specialize in the reinvention of the Frank Zappa/Mothers of Invention repertoire, and The Magic Band, John “Drumbo” French’s uncannily inspired tribute to the music of his mentor and monster, Don “Captain Beefheart” Van Vliet.
“That’s how we kind of came together. We all sort of crossed paths in Australia for the first time in 2014 when there was a joint tour with the Magic Band and the Grandmothers,” Kutner says. “And, you know, we were all like ‘This is great, but we need to do our own thing.’ We can’t just play in legacy bands; we have to pay homage to the things we like by making our own stuff.”
There is another legacy link here in the presence of co-producer, keyboardist, and guitarist Mike Keneally, who was Zappa’s “stunt soloist” during the late 1980s, as well as a great composer and songwriter in his own right.
“I knew Mike, because we’d premiered one of his orchestral pieces in L.A. in 2011, and I’ve been in close with him ever since,” Kutner says. “And I figured that if there was anybody who would get all of the different references—the reference points for what we’re trying to do—and kick us in the ass to make sure that we were tighter in doing it, it would be Mike.
With Keneally on board as musical guest, band counselor, technical supervisor, and ultimate aesthetic arbiter, Android Trio has made the album they really wanted to make—and Kutner stresses that Other Worlds is an album, in the best and most old-school possible way.
Other Worlds, Android Trio’s second release, is a fully fleshed out compositional statement, with intricate production strategies and an assortment of extraordinary guests.
Ironically, the global pandemic that left the trio unable to meet in the flesh for more than a year also allowed them to make a record that blends grand statements with rhythmic complexity. “Because we weren’t limited by studio costs and all that, we just went hog-wild on overdubs,” the guitarist explains. “So we were able to make an album to a level of excess that’s more like the things we grew up listening to. Kind of like Gentle Giant, or Genesis: this huge sound.”
"The wonderful new album from Android Trio is a thrilliant ride, Max Kutner, Eric Klerks and Andrew Niven, virtuosos all, is serious progressive rock in every sense... I love this, it sounds big, it thinks big, it is big." (The Organ, UK)
"...a magnificent instrument jazz fusion which frequently crosses into progressive rock territory to give a sound rather like King Crimson meets Frank Zappa meets Return To Forever.
The album is a delight with headphones but also great just to sit back and soak in the wonderful atmosphere the band creates and the sonic landscapes they produce with time changes aplenty but never is the album too challenging.
This is music for your ears, head, heart and soul and is so life affirming, intense and vitally alive, pure genius!" (Velvet Thunder)
Andrew Niven, drums, percussion, synth, sequencers
Eric Klerks, bass, 8-string guitar, synthesizer-bass
Max Kutner, electric and acoustic guitar
Additional musicians:
Mike Keneally, keyboards, guitar, samples
Jonathan Sindelman, keyboards, organ
Daniel Rosenboom, trumpet
Jessica Lurie, baritone saxophone
Gregg Bendian, vibes
Produced by Mike Keneally and Android Trio
Android Trio
The group formed during extensive touring as members of the renowned Magic Band (formerly Captain Beefheart & the Magic Band) and the Grandmothers of Invention (formerly Frank Zappa’s Mothers of Invention). After playing together on a lark at a café in Sydney, Australia in 2014, Niven, eight-string guitarist and bassist, Eric Klerks, and guitarist, Max Kutner, decided to carry on exploring the possibilities of combining their varied stylistic directions. Road Songs, the first official document of these explorations, attests to the richness of each trio member’s unique performance background and acts as both a tribute to the fabled world of traveling music and a harbinger of the new sonic color that arises from ignoring genre hierarchies.
Booklet for Other Worlds