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Trumpet Player's Ethereal Soundscape Captivates Listeners

Summary

  • Composer Chris Williams' latest album "Odu: Vibration II" defies genre classification
  • Collaboration with saxophonist Patrick Shiroishi and trombonist Kalia Vandever
  • Album recorded live but has an airy, ethereal quality
Trumpet Player's Ethereal Soundscape Captivates Listeners

In October 2025, trumpet player and electroacoustic composer Chris Williams released his latest album "Odu: Vibration II," a captivating 39-minute suite that defies easy genre classification. Recorded live at New York's Roulette Intermedium with saxophonist Patrick Shiroishi and trombonist Kalia Vandever, the album blends ambient atmospheres, otherworldly soundscaping, and some of the cleanest, purest tones that brass and reeds can produce.

Depending on where the listener finds themselves in the album's sprawling expanse, "Odu: Vibration II" might resemble a drone piece, an improvisation, or a group meditation. Williams has described the work as a metaphorical descent into a cave, with the vastness and mythic dimensions of the experience captured in the music.

Despite its live origins, the album doesn't particularly sound like a concert recording, perhaps due to the extensive effects processing used by the three musicians. The airy, ethereal quality of the music feels more in keeping with the album's expansive, enveloping fusion of genres, evoking a sense of ritual, seance, or even ego death as the boundaries between instruments and players dissolve.

Disclaimer: This story has been auto-aggregated and auto-summarised by a computer program. This story has not been edited or created by the Feedzop team.

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The album is a captivating 39-minute suite that blends ambient atmospheres, otherworldly soundscaping, and pure brass and reed tones, defying easy genre classification.
The album was recorded live at New York's Roulette Intermedium, but it doesn't particularly sound like a live recording due to the extensive effects processing used by the three musicians.
Saxophonist Patrick Shiroishi and trombonist Kalia Vandever joined Williams in the recording of the album.

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