Three names appear in dark red at the top of a pale, fibrous square. Beneath them floats a narrow black form resembling an eye, leaf, boat, seed, mouth, wound, or crowd seen from an impossible height. Its interior is filled with hundreds of tiny marks, each almost writing but too small to read. WITHIN appears below in large white letters, clearer than anything else on the cover, as though the album’s one immediately legible object is a direction pointing inward.
The central shape refuses to explain what possesses an inside and what remains outside it. If it is an eye, the marks may be images gathered behind the lid. If it is a mouth, they may be words waiting to escape. If it is a boat, they are passengers. If it is a seed, each mark contains another possible organism. If it is a crowd, the surrounding gray field may represent the distance that makes individuals appear as texture.
Within is an unusually precise title for freely improvised music. The musicians do not begin with a composition that tells them where they are going, yet freedom does not mean that they operate without limits. Each player is inside a body, instrument, history, acoustic room, moment, and relationship with the other two. The music develops from within those conditions rather than attempting to transcend them.
Improvisation is sometimes described through the romance of unrestricted possibility. Anything can happen. But anything cannot happen. François Carrier cannot play a note he has not physically imagined or learned how to produce. Michel Lambert cannot strike every part of the drum kit simultaneously with equal intention. Jean-Jacques Avenel cannot erase the dimensions of the bass, the tension of its strings, the resistance of wood, or the particular instrument supplied by the festival. The musicians are free precisely because they understand what they are inside.
The trio format exposes this relationship cleanly. Saxophone, bass, and drums form one of jazz’s most open structures because no piano or guitar continuously announces harmony. Yet the absence of a chordal instrument does not remove harmony. It distributes harmonic implication among melody, resonance, overtones, bass motion, memory, and whatever tonal center the musicians briefly permit to appear.
Carrier and Lambert already possessed years of shared language. Their familiarity could have become a closed circuit in which the guest bassist merely supplied weight beneath a conversation whose habits had already solidified. Avenel prevents that immediately, not by fighting the partnership but by entering so completely that the duo’s established interior develops another dimension.
A great improvising guest does not simply adapt to the hosts. He makes their previous understanding newly uncertain. Carrier must hear Lambert through Avenel’s bass. Lambert must decide whether a pulse suggested by Avenel is a foundation, temptation, joke, or temporary surface. Avenel must locate the difference between supporting Carrier’s line and creating an independent route that happens to cross it.
“Moment” begins with Carrier alone, establishing not a theme but a quality of attention. His phrases seem centered while refusing to settle. A tone may lean toward melody, pause as though remembering a song, then turn away before recognition can close around it. He is not avoiding beauty. He is protecting beauty from becoming an obligation.
Carrier’s sound can be warm enough to invite the listener into music that remains structurally unpredictable. This is an important distinction. Free improvisation is often made theatrically difficult, as though alienating the audience proves that the musicians have escaped convention. Carrier does not confuse hospitality with simplification. The door is open, but the room beyond it has no obvious floor plan.
The saxophone’s opening solitude also changes the meaning of the trio’s entrance. Bass and drums do not arrive to accompany a finished statement. They reveal that the apparently solitary line had already contained spaces for other people. The music becomes social retroactively.
Lambert rarely behaves like a drummer waiting to identify the correct beat. He plays time as a substance that can be stretched, thickened, scattered, or temporarily hidden. Cymbals may place light around Carrier’s phrase without measuring it. A drum attack may redirect the saxophone before any pattern has been established. Repetition can occur, but Lambert does not become trapped inside the repetition merely because it has begun working.
This gives the trio an unusual balance between momentum and suspension. The music can move rapidly without appearing headed toward a destination. It can become quiet without feeling paused. Motion is generated through relation rather than through a predetermined rhythmic vehicle.
Avenel enters with the enormous advantage of a bassist who understands that low frequency is not synonymous with background. His tone possesses physical authority, but authority does not become domination. He can establish ground and then remove it, leaving the others to discover whether they had mistaken temporary support for permanent structure.
The slightly distant recording of his bass creates an accidental but productive perspective. Carrier’s saxophone and Lambert’s percussion often appear closer to the listener, while Avenel seems to occupy a deeper section of the room. His bass is not always outlined with studio clarity, but its pressure remains. He resembles architecture partially hidden by darkness: edges become uncertain while mass becomes undeniable.
That distance also reinforces the title. The bass appears to come from within the recording rather than sitting neatly upon its surface. One listens into the sound to find him. This active search makes every recovered pluck, scrape, resonant body, and sudden run feel more important than a perfectly isolated signal might have.
“Moment” is not named “The Moment.” The missing article prevents it from becoming one privileged event around which all others must organize themselves. It is moment as material, a temporary condition emerging from countless smaller decisions. Carrier breathes, Lambert shifts weight, Avenel touches a string, and a relation exists for an instant before another replaces it.
Improvised music makes this continual disappearance audible. A composed theme may return, allowing the listener to compare its appearances and experience recurrence as structure. Here an event may occur once and vanish. The musicians cannot recover it exactly because they have already been changed by hearing it.
Recording complicates this disappearance. The concert was unrepeatable, yet the CD allows its moments to return identically. The musicians improvised without knowing the exact future of the performance, while every later listener can learn that future through replay. Spontaneity becomes fixed evidence.
This is one reason recorded improvisation remains so fascinating. The first listening and the tenth listening are not encounters with the same kind of object. Initially, the listener shares something of the musicians’ uncertainty. Later, familiarity creates memory, expectation, favorite passages, and an almost compositional sense of inevitability around actions that were never planned to recur.
The second piece, “Core,” occupies more than forty minutes and nearly the entire conceptual center of the album. A core may be the interior of a fruit, planet, body, reactor, argument, group, or problem. It is what remains after outer material has been removed, but also what may be least directly accessible.
Carrier and Lambert could be described as the established core, with Avenel entering from outside. The performance overturns that arrangement. Avenel’s bass becomes so structurally important that the trio produces a new core which did not exist before the concert began.
The length matters because forty minutes allows improvisation to pass through states that shorter pieces would have to present as separate compositions. Energy can gather, exhaust itself, redirect, thin out, and return in altered form without the musicians needing to announce that one section has ended and another begun.
“Core” does not justify its duration through constant intensity. That would create another kind of monotony. Instead, the musicians vary density, focus, timbre, and role. At one point a pulse may appear stable enough to resemble an agreement. Carrier can accept it, ignore it, circle it, or introduce a phrase whose internal shape makes the pulse sound different without actually changing it.
This tension between pulse and freedom is one of jazz’s deepest conversations. Pulse can unite musicians, dancers, and listeners through shared bodily expectation. It can also become a form of authority, instructing every event where to stand. Free improvisers do not need to abolish pulse. They can treat it as one participant among others.
Lambert excels at this ambiguity. He can generate forward force without placing the music inside a cage of counted measures. His drumming often seems to contain several possible meters at once, allowing Carrier and Avenel to choose which current they wish to enter. The beat becomes a river delta rather than a railway.
Avenel’s long bass feature changes the scale of listening. Extended bass solos can expose a strange social habit within jazz: audiences may admire the instrument while unconsciously treating its independence as an interruption before the horn returns. Avenel refuses that secondary status. The bass does not ask permission to become narrative.
His solo has weight, motion, and enough internal variation to make accompaniment feel unnecessary, yet Lambert’s percussion deepens rather than crowds it. The two musicians create a world where resonance and attack continually exchange functions. A plucked string can become percussion; a drum can become a resonating chamber.
Carrier’s eventual interruption is one of the performance’s most human gestures. Respectful improvisation does not require everybody to wait politely for clearly marked solo boundaries. He enters with a biting phrase, not to reclaim leadership but to test whether the bass’s developing interior has room for another body.
The intervention could be read as impatience, excitement, humor, provocation, or trust. Carrier knows Avenel’s construction is strong enough to survive contact. The saxophone does not close the bass solo. It opens a side passage inside it.
The sanza or kalimba passage introduces another conception of the low-register musician. Avenel had studied African instruments deeply enough that their appearance was not ornamental proof of cultural breadth. The small metal tongues produce a bright, cyclical sound worlds away from the double bass’s wooden mass, yet both instruments organize music through plucked vibration and resonating bodies.
The sanza changes the trio’s apparent geography. Its repeating figures can suggest a stable pattern, but the pattern is alive with minute variations in touch, decay, and emphasis. Lambert responds without treating it as an exotic object requiring imitation. Carrier can enter its field while allowing its distinct logic to remain.
This moment also reveals how misleading the word “free” can be. A sanza pattern may sound more repetitive than the surrounding free jazz, yet repetition does not necessarily mean restriction. Cyclical music can produce freedom through the endless possibilities of placement inside return. The loop is not a prison when every recurrence offers another angle of entry.
Avenel’s association with Steve Lacy matters here, not because Within resembles a Lacy recording, but because Lacy’s world demanded a particular balance of precision, patience, humor, and openness. Lacy could treat a short melodic cell as material worthy of years of examination. Avenel learned how to remain inside a musical idea without exhausting its life through overstatement.
Carrier brings a different kind of lyricism. His phrases can be emotionally direct while remaining structurally evasive. He may produce a line whose warmth suggests resolution, then let its final tone point into another question. This prevents lyricism from becoming reassurance.
Warmth in free jazz is sometimes treated as a compromise, as though abstraction must remain cold to prove its seriousness. Carrier demonstrates that welcome and uncertainty can coexist. A listener can be invited without being given a map.
“Core” repeatedly becomes fierce, but its fiercest passages are not wars among competing soloists. Intensity emerges from alignment. The musicians hear an opening at roughly the same time and pour energy into it from different positions. Saxophone, bass, and drums remain distinct, yet the distinction no longer prevents them from behaving like one large organism.
Collective improvisation reaches its most exciting state when nobody can be identified as merely causing or responding. Carrier may appear to initiate a change, but perhaps Lambert’s previous cymbal texture created the pressure that made the phrase possible. Avenel may alter the bass motion, but perhaps he is answering something in Carrier’s breath rather than his notes. Cause becomes distributed.
This is what conversation ideally promises but rarely achieves. Ordinary conversation is filled with waiting to speak, defending positions, rehearsing answers, missing tone, and treating another person’s sentence as raw material for one’s own performance. These musicians listen in a way that changes what they are prepared to say.
Listening is not passivity here. Lambert can answer Carrier by contradicting him. Avenel can refuse a suggested direction. Carrier can cut across a bass passage. The health of the conversation lies not in constant agreement but in the confidence that disagreement will produce more music rather than terminate relation.
The album’s cover shape can now be seen as this collective body. Hundreds of tiny marks fill one enclosed form, each distinct enough to create texture but too intertwined to read separately. From a distance they become one object. Close inspection reveals that oneness is made from irreducible multiplicity.
The form resembles an eye because listening has become another kind of sight. The trio cannot see where the music is going, but each player perceives movement through sound. The eye is filled not with an image but with nearly written marks, suggesting that perception and language have not yet separated.
It resembles a seed because the concert contains possible futures. Carrier and Lambert would continue carrying this improvisational partnership across countries and collaborators. Avenel’s presence would remain a singular branch, a meeting preserved because Carrier brought recording equipment and believed the night might contain something worth keeping.
That practical act deserves attention. Live improvisation depends upon extreme presence, yet documenting it requires anticipation. Microphones must be placed, levels chosen, equipment transported, storage prepared, and permission secured before anybody can know whether the music will justify the effort.
The imperfect bass balance is evidence of that vulnerability. Carrier was not operating inside an ideal studio with unlimited correction. The festival supplied an instrument and a room; microphones captured what they could; the musicians played. The resulting sonic limitations are not proof that circumstances failed. They show the circumstances within which success had to be invented.
“Experience,” the final piece, lasts under eight minutes after the vast interior of “Core.” Its title completes a subtle progression: Moment, Core, Experience. First there is an event in time. Then the musicians enter its center. Finally, what happened becomes experience, something carried forward by players and listeners after the sound has ended.
Experience is not identical to memory. Memory preserves or reconstructs what occurred. Experience changes the organism that remembers. A musician who has played with another person cannot return completely to the condition before hearing that person’s decisions.
The last piece therefore feels less like an encore than a compressed afterlife. The trio has already discovered its common language during the long central passage. “Experience” can move with the knowledge produced there, even though no formal theme has been established for them to reprise.
Shortness acquires power after forty minutes. Every gesture appears aware that the concert’s available time is narrowing. This does not force the players toward a grand conclusion. Improvised music rarely benefits from pretending that an hour of uncertainty has secretly been moving toward one final chord.
Instead, the ending establishes a boundary after the fact. The musicians stop, and everything before the stop becomes the piece. Silence converts activity into form.
Within may also describe the listener’s changing position during the album. At first, we stand outside the trio examining how three musicians relate. Gradually, distinctions become less administrative. We stop tracking leader, rhythm section, guest, solo, accompaniment, and begin hearing one field of decisions.
This does not erase identity. Carrier’s reed remains different from Avenel’s string and Lambert’s skins and metal. The musicians do not merge into anonymous texture. True collectivity requires that difference remain audible. Otherwise unity is achieved by elimination.
The record is political in this quiet sense. It presents no program, protest, or social theory, but it demonstrates a temporary society built through attention. Leadership moves. Support becomes initiative. Interruption becomes contribution. An invited outsider changes the core. Nobody needs to become less himself for the group to become more than three individuals.
The title’s inward direction can also be psychological. Improvisation reveals decisions before a performer has time to turn them into a public story about himself. Habit, fear, confidence, curiosity, generosity, and aggression enter the sound faster than verbal self-description can supervise them.
But music never grants transparent access to another person’s interior. We do not hear Carrier’s mind, Lambert’s private emotions, or Avenel’s complete history. We hear actions shaped by those hidden realities. Within remains inaccessible even while it produces audible consequences.
That mystery protects the musicians from becoming symbols of their instruments. Carrier is not simply the lyrical voice, Lambert the restless timekeeper, and Avenel the grounding elder. Each role changes throughout the performance. The saxophone can become percussion. Drums can become atmosphere. Bass can become melody, rhythm, architecture, or tiny metallic cycle.
Leo Records has long provided a home for performances whose value lies partly in refusing the standardized dimensions through which jazz is marketed. A forty-minute collective improvisation with no composition credit, no conventional tune sequence, and imperfectly balanced live sound is a difficult commercial proposition. It is also exactly the kind of event a record label can save from disappearance.
The CD becomes a container marked WITHIN. Its plastic and aluminum hold one hour in Calgary, three bodies, an audience, a supplied bass, Carrier’s microphones, and thousands of decisions nobody could reproduce by instruction.
The central black shape on the cover never opens. Perhaps it does not need to. Within is not a locked interior waiting to be decoded. It is the act of entering.
Carrier breathes into the reed.
Lambert unsettles the clock.
Avenel pulls a large wooden body toward speech.
Three people listen until the room grows another room within it.
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