SOUND ETIQUETTE
ORENDA RECORDS ALBUMS

ORENDA 0035Sound Etiquette | Sound Etiquette


Nick Obando - Saxophones
Eli Wallace - Keys
Aaron Levin - Drums

In 2014, veterans of the vibrant Bay Area creative music scene Nick Obando (saxophones), Eli Wallace (keys) and Aaron Levin (drums) came together as Sound Etiquette to record their unique brand of adventurous music. Focusing on freeplay, the agile trio deftly melds avant-garde & free-jazz improvisational aesthetics with contemporary influences from electronica, funk and beyond. The result is music that looks both forward and backward, paying tribute to creative musical traditions while reinvigorating them with a distinctly modern character.

Sound Etiquette embraces unconventional roles for all facets of sound. What begins as a melody might develop into the rhythmic foundation of a track. Timbre alone might act as the harmonic center of one piece while elsewhere an ambient texture might become the central “melody.” Often the glimmer of form peeks out from behind an improvisation only to be deconstructed in the next moment. This exploration and manipulation of sonic expectation is precisely where the group draws its inspiration. The goal is to compose in real time by quickly organizing the most compelling elements of improvisations and develop emergent forms that evolve continually.

Recorded in a single day, each of the eight pieces on Sound Etiquette showcases the band’s chemistry and ability to create compelling, cohesive music on the spot. While some of the tracks are culled from longer improvisations, no edits, punches or overdubs occurred during the making of the album. Everything was captured live in the room. Unlike many modern jazz recordings that favor clinical production and separation under the guise of fidelity, this is a darker more organic sound where the errant buzz of a snare or the hum of an amplifier is welcomed as part of the overall ambiance. This is the sound of adventurous music being made in the moment by three bold improvisers who collectively push into uncharted sonic territory. This is the kind of exploration and creativity we are proud to support at Orenda Records.

"This trio’s most obvious influence seems to be early 70’s Miles Davis. With a signature electronic sound that harkens back to the analog nature of that era,"
—Avant Music News

"Sound Etiquette revisits an old, forgotten virtue from the earliest days of electric jazz, when an amplified keyboard alongside acoustic instruments played with pure instinct was synonymous with timbre-rich fuzziness and freedom."
—Something Else!

"The trio has an intuitive sense for group dynamics in musical space. Each knows when to step forward into the mix with a soloistic gesture, and when to offer sounds in support. The sense of listening is present throughout, as is the feeling of collective exploration"
— Jazz Scene Magazine

"There are enough traces of melody in each of their compositions to suggest that it may have started life as tuneful as any song from the Ray Charles songbook. Then, the trio annihilated it."
—Bird is the Worm