Jim Black & The Shrimps - Better You Don't

Label: Intakt Records, 2025

Personnel - Asger Nissen: alto saxophone; Julius Gawlik: tenor saxophone; Felix Henkelhausen: bass; Jim Black: drums.

Highly influenced by alternative rock, avant-garde jazz, and electronic music, American drummer Jim Black has explored countless group configurations alongside a wide range of artists. His 12th recording of original songs, Better You Don’t, is his second with The Shrimps—a sharp, eruptive Berlin-based trio featuring Danish altoist Asger Nissen and German musicians Julius Gawlik on tenor saxophone and Felix Henkelhausen on bass.

The buoyant “The Sheila” captures Black’s subversive knack for rock-inflected textures, channeling raw energy and spontaneity. These qualities come alive through a motorik-like rhythm that heightens kineticism, a sturdy, funky bass groove, and loose, creative saxophone lines that may align briefly before splitting apart to interact freely. “Better You Don’t” and “Backtracks” follow a similar path—indie rock-leaning tracks powered by muscular drumming and energetic solos that never lose sight of melody.

OK Yrself’ is an expressive, communicative ballad shaded by cymbal restraint. Black extends that sophistication across the kit, crafting a chamber jazz mood steeped in mournful tones before opening toward hope in the final saxophone improvisation. “Cane Di Male”, introduced by dark bass-and-drum contours, arrives with plenty of saxophone obliqueness, evolving into a punk-rock demeanor marked by sturdy bass lines, nimble drum fills, and occasional kick-drum surges.

While “Stone Placid” unfolds conversationally within an open framework— its ending enlivened by phenomenal percussion under sustained horn drones— “Actually Probably Matters” thrives on jostling horn interplay, with the saxophonists soaring in playful upper-register zigzags. Occasional multiphonics emerge before Nissen and Gawlik consolidate the melody over a robust swinging rhythm.

Always thought-provoking and firmly contemporary, Jim Black and his Shrimps show how their rapport has deepened through mutual dedication to the music.

Favorite Tracks:
01 - The Sheila ► 04 - OK Yrself ► 06 - Cane Di Male ► 09 - Actually Probably Matters