Jo Berger Myhre - Penta

Label: Rare Noise Records, 2026

Personnel - Jo Berger Myhre: double bass, 8-string bass guitar, drum machine, additional synths; Morten Qvenild:  hyper(sonal), grand piano, synthesizers; Kaveh Mahmudiyan: tombak, daf, bandır; Jo David Meyer Lysne: guitars, una corda piano, electromagnets; Synnøve Sætre Hveem: vocals.

Norwegian bassist and composer Jo Berger Myhre approaches patterns, drones, and general ideas with curiosity on Penta, his third release for Rare Noise Records. The album, where cultures and disciplines intersect with remarkable fluidity, reunites the core quartet from Live Maneuvers (2023). Myhre specifically composed this music with keyboardist Morten Qvenild, percussionist Kaveh Mahmudiyan, and guitarist Jo David Meyer Lysne in mind, and their contributions become essential to the album’s immersive arc. Guest vocalist Synnøve Sætre Hveem appears on two tracks, adding further textural depth.

Theme and Variations” opens by weaving emotional tapestries through piano, understated percussion, and bass, all suspended against a grainy white-noise backdrop. The piece feels like a meeting point between Olivier Messiaen and Philip Glass. “Abyss in B-flat Minor”, a tribute to Norwegian shoegaze band Serena Maneesh, unfolds like a meditation steeped in longing, while “Solo Improvisation”, with Myhre stepping fully into the foreground, provides one of the album’s finest moments—deeply grounded, introspective, and rich in tonal nuance.

Myhre, who alternates between acoustic bass—often played arco—and a vintage Hagström eight-string bass guitar, uses chordal textures and dexterous fingerpicking to broaden the music’s sonic possibilities. “Augmentation in G-flat” moves through a 5/8 pulse, combining radiant guitar currents, counterintuitive piano splashes, and astral synth effects while Hveem’s ethereal vocals occasionally merge with the keyboard’s lower register. Its fusion of jazz, ambient textures, and world-music inflections gradually dissolves into a floating atmosphere.

Ancohemitonic Turn of Events” feels simultaneously ritualistic and spontaneous, incorporating syncopated drum machines, resonant bowed bass, and acidic synth bursts into a globally inflected electronic soundscape enriched by rhythmic noodling and whistled melodies. The album closes with “Ending on a Low Note”, whose title aptly reflects its poignant and mournful character. Small percussive eruptions and subtly Eastern melodic contours shape a lament of quiet emotional power.

Myhre’s music pulses with a vital, searching energy, exploring the fragile spaces between breath and sound. His patterned imprints, often reinforced by adapt post-production, casts an occasional spell.

Favorite Tracks:
02 - Augmentation in G flat ► 03 - Abyss in B-flat minor ► 05 - Solo Improvisation


Adam Cordero & Odin Scherer - Sonora

Label: Tidebloom Records, 2023

Personnel - Adam Cordero: alto and soprano saxophone, bassoon, clarinet; Odin Scherer: archtop and acoustic guitars.

Sonora is the second collaborative effort from saxophonist Adam Cordero and guitarist Odin Scherer. The duo, both alumni of the New School, presents 11 pieces for woodwind and guitar that have been developed over three years. Drawing inspiration from various genres and influences, the album explores abstract musical landscapes, balancing robustness and fragility to evoke significant emotional responses. 

The opening track, "Soliloquy for Cotten”, reveals a sparking folk flavor and a great sense of melody, serving as a tribute to the late folk and blues musician Elizabeth Cotten. “Before Dawn” exudes not only lyricism all around but also rhythmic vision, aspects that are transported to “Prairie” in conjunction with an odd tempo and plaintive, braided lines. 

Sonora”, the title track, exhibits a more energetic temperament as the duo's notes dance and wiggle with a changing pace throughout the piece. The album explores various moods and textures, and on “Fireworm”, chromaticism and pedal points take center stage in an unobvious harmonic context.

Probing interesting moods with each song, Cordero and Scherer demonstrate chamber brilliance in their ability to blend occasional dissonance without becoming aggressive. In “Kaaterskill”, for example, they move from a light waltz with fingerpicked guitar to a heavier folk-rock demeanor with deep chordal work. On “Opal”, where Cordero plays bassoon, avant-garde touches are infused into immediately digestible music. Conversely, “Zooxanthellae” takes a more contemplative turn, with quizzical moodiness and a rhythmic complexity reminiscent of saxophonists Henry Threadgill, with whom Cordero collaborated on the acclaimed The Other One (Pi, 2023), and Tim Berne (especially his work with guitarist Gregg Belisle-Chi).

Sonora reflects the duo's timbral taste and willingness to explore sonic functions within a clear-headed gravity. This engaging musical journey showcases their collaborative creativity.

Favorite Tracks:
01 - Soliloquy for Cotten ► 08 - Kaaterskill ► 11 - Zooxanthellae