Skip to main contentSkip to navigationSkip to navigation
Mixing minimalism, jazz and north African gnawa music …James Holden and the Animal Spirits
Mixing minimalism, jazz and north African gnawa music … James Holden & the Animal Spirits. Photograph: Laura Lewis
Mixing minimalism, jazz and north African gnawa music … James Holden & the Animal Spirits. Photograph: Laura Lewis

James Holden & the Animal Spirits: The Animal Spirits review – shimmering astral jazz

This article is more than 6 years old

(Border Community)

James Holden is an Oxford University maths graduate turned DJ, producer and synth wizard who made his name with a suitably cerebral variety of Aphex Twin-inspired rave music. In the last decade, he’s forsaken DJing to front a live band that mixes minimalism, astral jazz and the rhythmic textures of north African gnawa music. The results are often joyous. Spinning Dance overlays Alice Coltrane’s rattling percussion with shamanic drones and ecstatic, burbling flute improvisations, while The Beginning and End of the Earth takes us through a shimmering, space-age, never-ending chord cycle, as if ascending into heaven. Other tracks evoke the buzzsaw organs and fractally mutating time signatures of Steve Reich. If there’s a slight problem here, it’s with the rather lame tenor saxophonist. These soundscapes require a Pharoah Sanders-style voyager who can fly us into stratospheric realms, but unfortunately, Etienne Jaumet’s solos just splutter along the runway without ever achieving lift-off.

Comments (…)

Sign in or create your Guardian account to join the discussion

Most viewed

Most viewed