British Guitarist Daniel Thompson works in a direct line from Derek Bailey and John Russell, somehow mediating the spikiness of the former and the warmth of the latter in a richly distinctive personal art, simultaneously touching traditions that stretch from historical acoustic archtop artistry (e.g., Eddie Lang, George Van Eps, et al.) to engaging an instrument of multiple voices from strummed and picked and plucked to massaged and scraped strings, tapped-upon bodies and traditional chordal vocabularies surrendering to dense clusters, sometimes rich in dissonant harmonics. In his work, Thompson embraces both the tradition and the instrument as invitation to random material speculation, the body as drum, the string as longitudinal invitation to scratch, tuning keys as material assists, and all the other things about the instrument that arise upon material inspection beyond any initial impression. His label Empty Birdcage Records is rich in varied materials, though here he turns up on other labels as well.
Daniel Thompson - Violet (Empty Birdcage Records, 2025)
To enter the solo CD Violet is to immediately find oneself in a transcendent state, one in which time is simultaneously suspended and insistent, a musical language of startling intimacy, attenuated gestures and under-voiced reflections. Tracks are simply numbered from “Improvisation One” to “Improvisation Five”; their lengths vary from relative brevity, 4’31” for “Three”, to the near epic “Four” at 13’ 26”. “One” begins as a series of evenly strummed dissonant clusters eventually following a series of distinct evolutions. “No. 2” shadows a ground between intimacy and invisibility, sparse gestures on a sea of silence, each new shape as immediate as thought, each minute gesture a kind of micro-composition, bright, isolated harmonics poised against strummed dissonances, sometimes slowing, micro-gestures laid further apart amid a presence that suggests the guitar might be breathing. There’s an exalted level of attention paid to series of micro-gestures – a buzz, a harmonic, paired notes, a 10-minute reverie stretching toward its own disappearance. It’s followed by “No. 3”’s (relatively) loud, fast, chaotic and insistent pace, characterized by sudden shifts in density. “Four” is a master class in diverse approaches shaped into a single work, including an extended passage of high-speed scratched tones. “Five” begins as perfect reverie, with a couple of expansive high-speed bursts, before it returns to a delicate placidity and an ultimate embrace of silence. Like every work here, its evolution feels as natural as breathing. The numbering system is abandoned for the final title track: “Violet” is an eight second burst of insistence that suggests a looped electric guitar.
John Edwards/Daniel Thompson - Where the Butterflies Go (Earshots Recordings, 2025)
This string duo recording chooses the most traditional of string compositions as its model, a Four Seasons with its tracks named from “Summer” to “Autumn” to “Winter” to end speculatively and positively with a brief “Spring” of thrumming to suggest new and future life. Like the other life here, it’s the sense of the closely shared space that gives it its special character.
That opening “Summer” is a genuine hive of sound, brooking scant distinction for its opening minutes, densely plucked acoustic guitar and plucked or bowed bass presenting as a single instrument, the bass replicating the pitches of the lower four strings of the guitar and dropping them an octave, even picking, plucking and spiccato bowing acting as a singular continuum. When the notion of individuation asserts itself, what had been singular simply asserts itself as dialogue, retaining a strong sense of cooperation.
At nearly 21 minutes playing time, “Autumn” represents roughly half the year. It’s a dense dialogue consisting of arco bass and scraped/ wiped high-pitched guitar (they can still overlap in frequency and density), the delicate maelstrom reducing to silence only to gradually rise again with a developing hive of potential. Instruments can usually be distinguished, but that almost seems beside the point of this exalted, telepathic improvising. In the concluding moments, the instruments grow increasingly distinct, the bass insistently bowed, the guitar chorded tunefully, suggesting another evolution is imminent.
“Winter” is a whimper and a scrape, a jangle of disconnected elements slipping toward meaning, a haunted echo of a prepared instrument suddenly given to dizzying chording and lightening-fast picking, some body drumming and the storm is unleashed with the liveliest and least comforting season demanding and overwhelming attention before breaking into an almost pointillist duo of eliding bass tones and rapid guitar strumming, then slipping into a zone of microscopically detailed, evanescent figures, all together grinding toward life’s refresher course called “Spring”.
Tom Jackson/ Daniel Thompson - Dark Kitchen (Confront Recordings 2025)
Dedicated to Derek Bailey and Tony Coe, this is another series of duo free improvisations, a format in which Thompson excels and in which his fitting partners, here the clarinetist Tom Jackson whose recordings encompass work with a range of improvisers, are similarly versed in cooperative creation, in an intensive attention to detail, to finding mystery, to unravelling it and to refolding it into another mystery. The longest work here is the functionally titled “Improvisation One”, a 20-minute piece in which Jackson presents as polyvocal, virtuosic and injured songbird, rapid-fire runs sometimes stretching toward dissolution, before some pastoral re-launch of bell-toned and dissonant guitar harmonics gradually restores the clarinet.
Three shorter tracks are more concentrated, less free ranging. “Improvisation Two” begins with a densely expressionistic clarinet solo, eventually matched by a subtly complex guitar accompaniment that becomes an increasingly significant subtext to Jackson’s compounding bird calls. “Three”, highlighting the duo’s interactive facility, is a high-speed, up and down, back and forth dialogue; “Four” foregrounds Jackson’s lyricism while Thompson creates a quietly unpredictable and abstract soundscape, each gradually becoming more actively conversational.















