
There was a persistent, smoky jazz flavor that weaved its way throughout Alif Tree's "French Cuisine". Vinyl crackles, dusty instrumentation and vocals from classic jazz singers like Nina Simone and Shirley Horn were a strong component to the sound. Along with the jazz influences there were French and Latin touches as well and the whole thing finished off with a near fifteen minute ambient epic that really resulted in two tracks with a long moment of silence in between each. For his new album, imagine Alif has spent some time watching seasons of The Soprano's and discovering a more vibrant, triphop influenced personality to his taste in jazz.
Track Listing:
Aurevoir
Way Down South
Never Be the Same
Reality
Mai
Que Tu
Not Gonna Waste My Time
Without Her(th)
Timestretched
Dead Flowerz
Just as with French Cuisine, this new album Clockwork explores a variety of jazz, blues and acoustic folk influenced phases. And as with that previous album, this one ends with an epic 27 minute long experiment. Of course when you don't count all the dead air, it's really two tracks that equal little more than seven minutes in all. While the first is a somber piano piece backed by double bass and brushed snare, the second part easily qualifies as a sound experimentation.
"Mai" is one of the strongest tracks here. Its smoky French lyrics are sung by Emilie Satt and it's the kind of sound that famed compilation series like Hotel Costes built their name on. If you still can't get over the sound of that Soprano's theme song, you'll love the gravely sound of "Way Down South". "Reality" and "Without Her(th)" are both wonderful triphop oriented tracks. You'll find some really nice surprises on the other songs as well, so give it a full listen before deciding what you think.
As far as I'm concerned, with Clockwork, Alif Tree have delivered an album that stands with exceptional grace next to French Cuisine.