Bill Laurance & Michael League | Keeping Company | November 1, 2024
“For us to take a common project and drive it forwards together is an affirmation of who we are: we’re just good friends and we’re celebrating that with this album.” – Bill Laurance
There are some duos which can seem as if they have been patched together. And there are others which come into being naturally and completely of their own accord. The pairing of pianist Bill Laurance and bassist/oud player Michael League is very much one of the latter; the two musicians have known each other since student days. During a chance meeting in Leeds, England, as sidemen on a one-off project, the two quickly formed a musical bond
that would grow through the formation of Snarky Puppy in 2004 and its development over years of touring together, a number of solo albums and collaborations, and finally, in 2020, the birth of their duo.
Bill Laurance and Michael League’s new duo album, “Keeping Company,” is at the opposite end of the spectrum from all the extraversion, large scale and sheer oomph of Snarky Puppy; the focus here is on a shared inner perspective. That much is apparent immediately from the choice of instruments. Laurance has cast aside electronic keyboards and concentrates on piano, acoustic in sound although the piano strings have been occasionally and lightly prepared. Michael League chooses a fretless acoustic bass guitar and the oud. An extreme contrast to the pure groove of Snarky Puppy, here he goes for a transparently sparse but atmospherically rich sound. They do just fine without the band, creating a special freedom for both participants. “The oud in itself has a specific associative space,” says Bill Laurance from the orchestral perspective of the piano. “When I compose, my aim is to transport the listener. That works with the sound of the oud. It’s not a guitar, it has something exotic about it. It’s a canvas on which you can paint a lot of things. On the first album, we discussed whether Michael should play a fretless nylon string guitar. He tried it out, but it didn’t produce the same emotion as the oud. Due to the oud being fretless, it can access a whole new world of expression and created new colours for the duo. That fascinated us.”
Their curiosity is undimmed. “Keeping Company” is the duo’s second album after the internationally acclaimed “Where You Wish You Were,” released in January 2023. The preparation phase was extremely productive. Both musicians wrote numerous sketches and compositions, with Bill Laurance alone writing up to three ideas a day for weeks on end. Finally, the abundance of new material had to be whittled down. “The first album was more about establishing a sound and exploring the dynamics. Now we want to delve deeper. There’s even more personality in the music. We also wanted to try out things we hadn’t explored before in this format, a touch of soul jazz, for example. We also made it a priority to record practically everything live, without unnecessary overdubbing. We have found a particular beauty in concentrating on what happens organically without too much extraneous thought or effort.
The whole idea of broadening horizons by taking excursions into the unknown is second nature in this partnership. Michael League, for example, has never formally studied the oud in a classical context. He knows the instrument largely from his brother, who studied it while living in Greece in the early 2000s, and is mentored by Ara Dinkjian, one of the world’s most respected masters of the instrument. But he himself has explored the short-necked lute largely from his own perspective (as encouraged to do so by Dinkjian) and therefore ornaments differently, intuitively, and with a unique accent. Bill Laurance, on the other hand, dispenses with the expansive and grand-standing aspects of the piano. He prefers cantabile melodies, rhythmically clever, clear accompaniments, and compact improvisations. The pieces themselves seem like miniatures- hints at ideas rather than final or definitive statements.
And that, as a duo still making discoveries, is all that they need to do here. “Keeping Company” is a snapshot of an unusual team, catching moments like a collection of Polaroids in sound. Bill Laurance and Michael League are still in the wonderfully inspiring phase of joint exploration. Everything is open. The music sounds spontaneous and intuitive. It has the power of the personal and builds on a friendship in which shared humour is a part of what happens naturally. Perhaps one day other players will join in. But for the time being, this intimate musical dialogue is the ideal form of artistic conversation for Bill Laurance and Michael League.
Line up
Bill Laurance | piano
Michael League | oud, fretless bass, vocals
Track Listing
Katerina
You
Yours
Escher
How Does It Feel
Stonemaker
Africa
Clay
Where You Wanna Go
Trails
Iki Keklik Bir Kayada
Cuttings
Jazzwise (UK)
“a masterwork in expressive quietude“
Jazz Journal (UK)
“Pared-back music that sometimes swings, sometimes haunts, sometimes broods, but always engages.”
Era Jazzu (PL)
“a collective creation of sounds and textures”
Backseat Mafia (UK)
“There’s a structure and economy to all the pieces on ‘Keeping Company’ which sustains freshness and ensures the listener stays locked into every moment”
Esensja (PL)
“”Keeping Company” is a powerful example of the fact that you don’t need a lot of money to make an album that will capture the imagination of listeners for a long time.”
Blue in Green (UK)
“yet another testament to Ross McHenry’s phenomenal and ever-evolving mastery that has garnered without doubt one of his most compelling projects to date.”
La Habitacion Del Jazz (ES)
“Laurance and League offer us a wonderful sound journey, full of balance and absolutely contemplative”
Bluebird Reviews (UK)
“Keeping Company is the perfect demonstration of the forward-thinking, exciting musical alchemy of two artists in constant progression. An extraordinary record.”
Songlines (UK)
“another masterclass in atmospheric elegance”
Downbeat (US)
“alrting us to a larger intelligence behind the pleasent surfaces”
All About Jazz (US)
“shimmer with rhythmically hypnotic melodies” / Best albums of 2024
Paris Move (FR)
“an artistic blossoming”
Blue in Green (UK)
“typically exquisite… a beautiful collage of folk-tinged, neo-classical jazz created by definitive masters of their craft”
Jazz Italia (IT)
“demonstrate their ability to push the boundaries of jazz in new directions”
Jazz Views (UK)
“a space of intimacy and exploration”
TSF Jazz (FR)
“a deeply beautiful record“
UK Jazz News (UK)
“This contemplative yet engaging set of duos cuts that cross the boundaries between jazz, classical music and Eastern forms. Highly recommended“
FIP Radio France (FR)
“Together they create cinematic music without borders“
Twisted Soul Music (UK)
“a beautiful collage of folk-tinged, neo-classical jazz created by definitive masters of their craft”