Travis Laplante – The Golden Lock (New Focus Recordings, 2024) ~ The Free Jazz Collective


By Lee Rice Epstein

I’ve had relatively few performances as transformative as seeing Battle
Trance, the saxophone quartet led by Travis Laplante, perform live in Los
Angeles a couple years ago. Laplante’s music has such profound sincerity
and openness, I find it impossible to listen and remain unmoved. His
latest, The Golden Lock—for a quintet featuring Erika Dohi on
piano, Charles Overton on harp, Lizzie Burns on double bass, and Eduardo
Leandro on percussion—takes a subtle but meaningful turn in the musical
language used, and the result is as impactful and affecting as ever.

Set in seven movements over three tracks, “The Golden Lock” feels
substantially different from anything Laplante’s done before, while bearing
all the signs and signifiers of his compositional and improvisational
practices. There are rhythmic and tonal echoes of previous works, enough to
remind you “The Golden Lock” exists within a universe of compositions. And
yet, the distance between them extends further as the album progresses. For
one thing, almost shockingly, it’s three whole minutes before Laplante’s
tenor is heard; instead, it’s Dohi’s ringing piano that enters first,
laying down a melodic framework upon which he and Overton will later build.

None of this is to say the music is entirely calm or restful, there is a
lengthy run towards the end of “The Golden Lock II” that’s a breathtaking,
five-part acrobatic performance. Coming out of it, Burns opens Part III
revisiting the melody first laid out in Dohi’s piano intro. While each
movement feels—forgive belaboring a metaphor—like things clicking into
place and/or opening up and out. Not only does each player take a solo turn
throughout the duration of the piece, but the duos and trios within the
broader work serve to bring the performers closer to one another. Dohi and
Leandro’s duet flips into a brief but magical Overton and Dohi duet. There
feels like a tremendous amount of personal and emotional risk in the music,
and these clusters amount to a kind of trust-building exercise that accrues
over the course of the album. Everyone gets a chance to be exposed to the
audience, and they get equal chance to support and be supported by their
collaborators. Some of this is due to Laplante’s urgent, sensitive
composing, and it’s equally due to the makeup of the quintet; surely,
another quintet of players can perform the music—personally, I’d be really
interested to hear how an accordion might fit in here—but only this quintet
could present “The Golden Lock” to us with this level of dedication. It’s a
testament to Dohi, Overton, Burns, and Leandro and their commitment to
seeing through Laplante’s superb and at times breathtaking vision.





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