Time, according to ükya, is a flexible material. It stretches. It folds. It refuses to wait politely. "Soon Means Now" is not just a title; it is a small philosophical correction delivered with a trombone, a guitar, and a drum kit.
The Norwegian trio, who insist on keeping their initial letter modestly lowercase, return on Nakama Records with a follow-up to their debut "We Come for an Experience of Presence". That earlier statement already suggested a group suspicious of musical complacency. Here, Emil Bø, Kristian Enkerud Lien, and Michael Lee Sørenmo sharpen their inquiry into how structure and spontaneity can coexist without neutralizing each other.
Their chosen tools are deceptively traditional: trombone, guitar, drums. No electronics. No orchestral padding. Yet what they extract from this format feels anything but conventional. The trio’s interest in just intonation and European art music could easily have turned into academic stiffness. Instead, it becomes a living tension. Pitch is treated as something elastic. Harmony feels negotiated in real time rather than agreed upon in advance.
The track titles, a sequence of numerical codes, suggest diagrams rather than songs. “1.2.1”, “6.2.1”, “2.3.2”. They read like coordinates or fragments of a larger system. Listening through the album, it becomes clear that these numbers are not decoration. Each piece operates as a compact experiment in proportion and balance. Most tracks hover under three minutes, yet none feel incomplete. They function like distilled arguments, concise but not simplistic.
Bø’s trombone often carries the melodic contour, but rarely in a lyrical, romantic sense. Instead, it outlines microtonal arcs that lean slightly off center, creating a sense of gravitational pull. Lien’s guitar resists the temptation to fill space. At times it provides brittle harmonic scaffolding; at others, it fractures into sparse gestures that feel more like questions than statements. Sørenmo’s drumming is alert and economical, shaping dynamics with precision rather than volume.
What makes "Soon Means Now" compelling is the trio’s refusal to treat minimalism as austerity. There is energy here, even urgency. The shorter pieces flicker by like thoughts that demand immediate attention. The longer closing tracks, particularly “2.3.2”, “7.2”, and “1.1”, allow ideas to breathe and expand. In these stretches, the trio demonstrates how organized sound can remain porous, how a predefined framework can still leave room for surprise.
One senses that ükya’s engagement with just intonation is not a technical display but a perceptual exercise. Intervals rub against each other in subtle ways, producing overtones that feel slightly uncanny. The ear adjusts. What first seemed unstable gradually becomes coherent. The listener is recalibrated.
Recorded at Flerbruket and shaped with a clear, unvarnished mix, the album preserves the immediacy of three musicians negotiating form in real time. There is no excess gloss. Every breath through the trombone, every muted string vibration, every percussive shimmer remains tangible.
The broader Norwegian experimental scene has long balanced conceptual rigor with improvisational vitality. ükya belong squarely in that lineage, yet they avoid sounding derivative. Their music feels young without being naive, intellectual without becoming distant.
"Soon Means Now" ultimately proposes a modest but radical idea: that presence is not something to be achieved later. It is happening already, in the friction between planned structure and spontaneous gesture. The trio does not dramatize this insight. They articulate it, piece by piece, interval by interval.
In a culture that constantly postpones depth in favor of speed, ükya offer a subtle inversion. Soon is not later. It is here, vibrating slightly off pitch, waiting for you to listen closely enough.