
Reviewed by Ben Hogwood
What’s the story?
“A thought experiment equipped with drumsticks, circuitry, and the desire to go beyond hardwired limits”. So reads the Bandcamp appraisal of Laurence Pike’s first album for the Balmat label – which doesn’t behave as its title implies.
“My loose concept was: What does music sound like when the expectations of late capitalism are removed from it?”, says Price. “How might a jazz musician from an idealised culture of the future, or even another world, utilise musical language when the conventions of style and marketing are no longer a factor in music making?”
For one thing, Pike is the only consistent presence through the album, the ‘jazz quintet’ being a figment of his vivid imagination. Three occasional guests are credited, however – alto saxophonist Ben Lerner, pianist Novak Manojlovic and Nico Callahan, described as providing ‘additional synthesis’.
The utopias are very real, going beyond jazz in search of ambient, electronica and post-rock.
What’s the music like?
Rewarding. Pike’s varied work as a soloist but also as part of Szun Waves, Pivot aka PVT, Triosk and Liars means he has an acute ear for what works with percussion – and that reaps dividends here.
Pike’s sonic palette is impressively varied. On one hand is Manojlovic’s freely flowing piano on Guardians of Memory, where urgent pulses are detected from hi hats and tapped cymbals. Often his music suggests the weather – an approaching storm, the wind in the trees, a humid day on the edge of a desert. All these things and more could be determined by The Shame of Jazz to Come, with its brooding synth pads and rustling percussion, but elsewhere Pike’s thoughts are more fractured and dislocated.
Saxophonist Lerner”s contributions are telling, while Pike’s ability to evoke nocturnal scenes is maintained in the subtly atmospheric Night Bird and dappled beauty of Possible Utopias itself.
Does it all work?
It does – because Pike’s music has refreshing details of unpredictability, original textures and riffs, and a feeling for the listener that all this is taking place outdoors, under the stars.
Is it recommended?
It is – and proves a fine addition to an already impressive solo body of work.
For fans of… Szun Waves, Luke Abbott, James Holden, Portico Quartet
Listen / Buy
Published post no.2,920 – Wednesday 17 June 2026



