Nick Fraser - Areas

Label: Elastic Recordings, 2026

Personnel - Tony Malaby: tenor and soprano saxophone; Kris Davis: piano; Nick Fraser: drums, piano harp; John Kameel Farah: electronics and sound processing (#1,4,7).

Toronto-based drummer and composer Nick Fraser reunites his exploratory trio for a third outing, Areas. There’s a remarkable synergy within this forward-looking, bass-less group, rounded out by two fearless musicians: pianist Kris Davis and saxophonist Tony Malaby. With Fraser’s unobtrusive yet ever-present rhythmic drive anchoring the foundation, Davis injects rich harmonic color and angular melodicism, while Malaby—a force to be reckoned with in contemporary jazz—consistently impresses with gruff, confident tenor attacks.

Three of the album’s six pieces are credited to Palestinian-Canadian pianist John Kameel Farah, who digitally processes duo improvisations by Fraser and Malaby. “In the Wreckage” opens the record in a dispersed, disorienting, and gloomy mode; “Howling Circuits” leans on drone-based processing, with Fraser on piano harp; and “Brood” sustains an eerie, incantatory languor within its sinister atmospherics.

Mimic” is a highlight, unfolding with simultaneous intensity, shadow, and complexity. Ominous low-register percussive attacks—emerging from a clever blend of standard and prepared piano—alongside shimmering cymbal textures, invite Malaby to expand into a high-powered middle-register vortex, unleashing guttural multiphonics and cyclic sweeps with growling force.

Equally striking is “There Are Other Ways”, which brims with excitement. Malaby’s solo introduction finds contrapuntal support in Davis’ quasi-mechanical motion. As the saxophonist delves into brooding sonorities, emphasizing an earthy tone and impressive range, Davis locks into a woozy, spiraling, almost robotic march, with Fraser’s active drumming providing propulsion. The trio transports us into an uncharted, rambunctious sonic universe where textures are fragmented and reassembled with daring intent.

Area” adopts a more ruminative stance. Initially, Malaby resists steering his expressive horn toward a fixed destination, while Fraser and Davis anchor an angular terrain with curiosity and tension. This unease soon erupts into a storm, marked by weighty, cacophonous saxophone interjections delivered with biting tone and piercing acuity. It ends calmly, though, melodically driven by soprano. Initially tense, the closer, “Sketch 57”, suggests a meditation, with gradually harmonized passages underpinned by rattling percussion and ample space for free interaction. The trio engages in a fluid sonic conversation whose sinuous paths lean into abstraction, with a brief but effective surge in intensity.

Fraser’s compositions foster a flowing improvisational language, allowing each musician to showcase distinctive timbres and dynamic interplay in service of the collective. Areas offers a compelling mix of surprise and atmosphere, striking a thoughtful balance between formlessness and structure.

Favorite Tracks:
02 - Mimic ► 03 - Area ► 05 - There Are Other Ways