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Tauk - Homunculus CD (album) cover

HOMUNCULUS

Tauk

 

Crossover Prog

3.32 | 12 ratings

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siLLy puPPy
Special Collaborator
PSIKE, JRF/Canterbury, P Metal, Eclectic
3 stars Formed in Montauk, NY on the extreme eastern tip of Long Island, TAUK was conceived in 2007 by Matt Jalbert (guitar), Charlie Dolan (bass), Alric "A.C." Carter (keyboards/organ) and Isaac Teel (drums) but like many such acts from lightly populated areas moved to the closest metropolitan area which happened to be New York City in order to launch its career. TAUK has been known as a band that is known to defy typical genre categorization but is basically a fusion band of sort but not only drinks from the wellsprings of jazz, prog rock, funk, classic rock, hip hop and ambient but is known to deliver its instrumental tapestries in a rather post-rock fashion.

HOMUNCULUS was the band's debut album that received lots of praise upon its release for its hard-charging melodic fusion of disparate genres that create transcendental emotional connections in pure instrumental form. This album is basically a jammy fusion type of experience without any vocals to be heard. In addition to the four members of the band, Fredo Ortiz offers extra percussion on several tracks. The music is pretty much set to slow creeping tempos to more mid-paced processions and each track stands out from the rest with the tones and timbres providing the commonalities that keep it all connected.

TAUK is an interesting band indeed as it wends and winds its way through the ten compositions on HOMUNCULUS with the spacey opener "Dead Signal" setting the stage of a post-rock sonicscape decorated with jazzy drum rolls, Coltrane-esque chord progressions and occasional guitar antics with the jamming sensibilities of bands like Phish. Starting with the second track "Afro-Tonic" it becomes clear that TAUK is about changing things up and delivers a heavier funky bass groove and more accessible crossover appeal before drifting into the next track "Hello Narwhal" which begins with a metal guitar riff a la Black Sabbath but fortified with jazz chord progressions and Latin percussion.

One strength of this album is the professionally sounding production which was carried out by Robert Carranza of Mars Volta and Jack Johnson fame. While the musicians only craft a slow to simmering sound and never exercise any virtuosic chops at all, much of the album's appeal comes from the warm sounds in the mix as they overlap and provide sonic counterpoints to an otherwise fairly straight forward procession through the musical fields. While the album has a rather dream feel for most of its run, once in a while it does rock out a bit such as on the closing "In The Basement Of The Alamo," however these moments are fleeting and the album predominantly hums along in smooth jazz mode with spaced out atmospheres and post-rock percussive drive.

If you are in love with some of the slower paced jazz-fusion records of the past such as those by Nucleus or similar artists then you may love this a lot more than i do. While the music on here is beautiful in its presentation, the album comes off as a bit underwhelming with an aimless procession through smooth jazz-fusion by-the-numbers tunes that admittedly offer some extras to set itself apart from the pack but in the long run doesn't really deliver enough meat with the potatoes. This is the kind of music i really enjoy as background music while i'm focusing on another activity but the album fails to dazzle the senses with outstanding compositions or any sort of instrumental wizardry. Nice debut and well produced but ultimately misses the ultimate mark of inducing pure musical ecstasy.

3.5 rounded down

siLLy puPPy | 3/5 |

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