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Vasco Trilla & Lu?s Vicente: Ghost Strata

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Artist: Vasco Trilla & Lu?s Vicente
Title: Ghost Strata
Format: CD + Download
Label: Cipsela Records (@)
Rated: * * * * *
There’s a particular courage in releasing an album that refuses to hide behind density, harmony, or even the polite illusion of structure. "Ghost Strata" by Luís Vicente and Vasco Trilla offers no such comforts. It stands there, almost bare, and dares you to listen without expecting to be guided.

Recorded in Barcelona but assembled from a broader European improvisational lineage, this duo encounter feels less like a conversation and more like a geological survey. The title isn’t decorative. Each “Strata” behaves like a layer of time, pressure, and residue, built not through accumulation in the traditional sense, but through friction, interruption, and careful attention to absence.

Vicente’s trumpet avoids lyricism in any conventional form. When it sings, it does so reluctantly, as if aware that melody might be a kind of betrayal. More often, it fractures into breath, metallic whispers, elongated tones that hover just long enough to suggest intention before dissolving. There are moments where it recalls the stark vocabulary of Don Cherry or the spatial austerity of Jon Hassell, but stripped even further, reduced to gesture and air.

Opposite him, Trilla doesn’t accompany so much as destabilize. His percussion is a field of events rather than a rhythmic foundation. Textures scrape, resonate, scatter. Silence is used not as a pause but as an active element, shaping the contour of each piece as much as any struck surface. At times, it feels like he’s playing the edges of sound itself, testing how little is required for something to register as presence.

“Strata #1” opens with a cautious probing, both musicians circling the space rather than occupying it. By “Strata #2” and “#3”, the interaction deepens, though deepening here doesn’t mean intensifying in any obvious way. It’s more about trust, or at least a shared willingness to let things remain unresolved. Sounds appear, hesitate, and withdraw, leaving traces that linger longer than the events themselves.

The longer “Strata #5” closes the album with a kind of suspended gravity. There’s no climax, no catharsis waiting at the end. Instead, the piece stretches time until it becomes slightly uncomfortable, forcing you to confront your own listening habits. Do you wait for something to happen, or do you accept that this is what’s happening?

What makes "Ghost Strata" compelling is its discipline. Free improvisation often risks excess, the urge to fill space simply because it exists. Vicente and Trilla resist that instinct. They carve rather than accumulate, removing as much as they add. The result is music that feels precise without being rigid, open without being formless.

It’s not an easy listen, and it has no interest in becoming one. But within its restraint lies a peculiar kind of clarity. Not pristine, not pure, but honest in a way that more elaborate constructions rarely achieve.

You don’t leave this record with melodies in your head. You leave with a heightened awareness of sound itself, which is a less convenient souvenir, but arguably a more durable one.

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