© 2026 Michigan State University Board of Trustees
Public Media from Michigan State University
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

Frisell's Floratone Creates an Exotic New Language

Floratone features jazz guitarist Bill Frisell, drummer Matt Chamberlain, two electronic music producers and guests Viktor Kraus, Ron Miles and Eyvind Kang.
Floratone features jazz guitarist Bill Frisell, drummer Matt Chamberlain, two electronic music producers and guests Viktor Kraus, Ron Miles and Eyvind Kang.

Two years ago, jazz guitar Bill Frisell and drummer Matt Chamberlain spent a few days free-associating in the recording studio. Their extemporaneous jams were then sampled, cut up and mixed together to create an unusual album project called Floratone.

Floratone started with flashes of improvisation, two musicians riffing live and unscripted in the studio and when those jam sessions ended, the veteran producers Lee Townsend and Tucker Martine got busy. After some cutting and pasting, looping and rearranging, the initial sparks grew into thick, overgrown, multi-layered grooves. Traces of blues and funk weave through echoes of Jamaican dub and flashes of jazz anarchy.

Once the framework of a tune was in place, Frisell and Chamberlain returned to the studio to add simple melodies and more layers. Townsend says the goal was to build around those spontaneous ideas, surrounding them with the wondrous atmospherics of electronic music. Floratone got that and more: This is some of the most vital and exciting guitar work Bill Frisell has ever committed to tape.

Listening to these unlikely swirls of sound is almost like the beginnings of some exotic new language, rising like steam from a swamp. They're like nothing else. Some old school jazz musicians will probably scoff at the way Floratone was made, but it's some of the most riveting instrumental music to emerge this year.

Copyright 2022 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Tom Moon has been writing about pop, rock, jazz, blues, hip-hop and the music of the world since 1983.
With federal funding eliminated, WKAR relies more than ever on community support to sustain essential services that remain freely available to everyone in mid-Michigan. Your support helps shape what comes next for public media in our region. The best way to support WKAR is by becoming a sustaining member today or by upgrading your current gift. Support WKAR TV Here | Support WKAR Radio Here.