Today, acclaimed guitarist and Wilco member Nels Cline released “Slipping into Something,” the third single from his upcoming album Consentrik Quartet (Blue Note Records), out March 14, 2025. The release is the eponymous debut of the guitarist’s band comprising saxophonist Ingrid Laubrock, bassist Chris Lightcap, and drummer Tom Rainey. By turns swinging, grooving, bracing, mesmeric, and quietly stunning, the album spotlights the ensemble’s profound chemistry as well as Cline’s versatility as both a player and a writer.
This spring, Nels Cline will be touring the Northeast with Consentrik Quartet, including April 14 at Le Poisson Rouge in New York City. The band will also be celebrating the album release with a performance at the Big Ears Festival in Knoxville, Tennessee on March 30. Cline will in fact be making four appearances at the festival this year including performances with eucademix (March 28) and Jenny Scheinman (March 29), as well as the first live show by an expanded version of The Nels Cline Singers (March 28) since the release of Share The Wealth in 2020. Full list of tour dates below, or visit nelscline for more info.
Cline’s range is undeniable. Think of how he elevates the songs of Jeff Tweedy as a member of Wilco, or the diverse musical terrain he’s traversed on his albums for Blue Note Records over the past decade — from the gorgeous, sweeping mood music of Lovers featuring lush arrangements by Michael Leonhart to the wide-open sonic audacity of Share The Wealth, the latter featuring his longtime group the Nels Cline Singers.
Consentrik Quartet also underscores his ceaseless appetite for and encyclopedic knowledge of great improvised music: Committed jazz observers might hear echoes of the guitar/sax frontline attack and programmatic scope of the John Scofield/Joe Lovano quartets, as well as the soft-spoken intensity and seamless blend of composition and improvisation that defined the various iterations of the Jimmy Giuffre 3. It also calls to mind adventurous 1960s Blue Note classics by Andrew Hill, Eric Dolphy, and others. In fact, Consentrik Quartet feels at times like a roadmap to Cline’s rich and considered palette of influences.
Of course, Cline, a genial and generous man, can’t help but channel praise toward his empathetic bandmates. Compared to his often-otherworldly Singers, he explains, the Consentrik Quartet is “much more of a jazz group, if I dare use that word. I wanted to have the music reflect the players, and have the players come forth so that everybody is able to hear them and enjoy their lucidity and their mastery.”
“I’ve got one of the greatest drummers on the planet in the band in Tom Rainey,” says Cline. Rainey, probably best known for his work with Tim Berne and Laubrock, his spouse, is that rare avant-gardist who can expertly color and improvise freely, then swing with old-school ferocity. Lightcap has earned acclaim for his original music and his collaborations with Regina Carter, Craig Taborn, Joe Morris, Matt Wilson, and other luminaries, and Cline praises the vast reach of his skills.
A superb avant-gardist whose music is equally challenging and alluring, Laubrock has left Cline dumbstruck over the years as a co-leader with Rainey and in groups like guitarist Mary Halvorson’s octet. “I heard her negotiating these perplexing chord changes in that band, with this amazing combination of great facility but also a kind of intimacy,” he says. “Honestly, when I listen to her playing on the Consentrik record, I’m consistently blown away. To me, it sounds like it’s her record because of how she shines.”
April 2025 – Consentrik Tour
3/30 – Knoxville, TN @ Big Ears
4/7 – Portsmouth, NH @ The Press Room
4/8 – Northampton, MA @ Iron Horse
4/9 – Hamden, CT @ Space Ballroom
4/10 – Nashua, NH @ Nashua Center for the Arts
4/11 – Marlboro, NY @ The Falcon
4/12 – Philadelphia, PA @ Solar Myth
4/14 – New York, NY @ LPR
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