|
Since the band's inception in 1996, Georgia natives San Agustin (electric guitarists David Daniell and Andrew Burnes, drummer Bryan Fielden) have performed with a multitude of notables from the improvised and minimalist communities, including Loren Connors, Thurston Moore, Rhys Chatham, and many others. The trio has released two albums, a three-CD box set (2003's The Expanding Sea), and several EPs and collaboration releases, all drawn from live performance recordings.
San Agustin's improvisations—or, more properly, "spontaneous compositions"—demonstrate an incredible range, drawing from the band's roots in minimalism, free jazz, metal, folk, blues and beyond, creating a flowing, dynamic stream-of-consciousness song form. They effortlessly summon haunting moments of introspection, enveloped in clouds of bluesy guitar notes, then sweep it all away with great electric gales; drones rumble and shimmer in the aftermath. This is a tremendous ensemble, creating a genre-defying yet archetypically American music.
For booking, contact Front Porch Productions.
"[San Agustin] works in suspended
slow-motion patterns that revolve around simple resonating phrases,
like a rock trio stripped of all content—just leaving a
bare skeleton of tone traces behind. The beauty is in its strict
restraint; unlike many improvising trios, the group never heads
off into chaos, with every piece a tamed and trimmed exercise
in controlled feedback and subtle cymbal chimes. Bridging post-rock
and avant-garde on one axis, and on the other retaining a strict
adherence to rock tradition, the feel is of a familiar austerity
that calls to mind the chilling moments of Sonic Youth's first
album."
—The All Music Guide
"Trio from Georgia that purvey a floating
ethereal improvised gauzy veil of sound. Jazzy drumming (in the
best sense) and criss-crossing picked guitar parts by turns meditative
and discursive, these guys have a great take on group dynamics
and are justly lauded... Entrancing."
—Corpus Hermeticum
on San Agustin's The Expanding Sea (2003):
Recorded live in several cities during Table of the Elements' 2001 European showcase tour, San Agustin's The Expanding Sea ebbs and flows with a murky and unwavering resilience. The three discs that make up the set feature the band, whose members are based in Atlanta and New York, creating droning instrumental waves that linger between moments of ominous tension and candle-lit reverberations. Documenting six performances that, when combined, stretch out for more than 132 minutes, the release flaunts a complex group of musicians bending the rules with formless simplicity.
Recorded in Villeurbanne and Grenoble, France, disc one captures guitarists Andrew Burnes and David Daniell, along with percussionist Bryan Fielden, crafting shimmering feedback that fades into warm, introspective washes of sound. The gently sloping arrangements evoke a tattered sense of Americana filled with rural, dream-like desperation.
Recorded in Brussels and Zurich, disc two fosters a similar mood, but reveals a more temperamental side of the music. Quiet arrangements bulge to a sweltering and chaotic peak of frenzied rhythms before sinking back into unwavering ripples of isolation. It's a disturbing swell that brings about a sense of frustration, but is soon overcome by tranquility as the music resumes its course.
Disc three picks up in Berlin and Bordeaux, France, with calm clarity. Here the tension wanes, bringing the flowing motion of The Expanding Sea full circle and leaving off right where it started.
—Creative Loafing, Atlanta
|