Even though
Bill Laswell was already immersed in numerous projects since the end of the '70s, including leading his loose ensemble
Material, he didn't release a solo record until 1983, and
Baselines was quite a strange album. On the one hand, there's "Upright Man," one of the most infectious grooves
Laswell has ever conceived, boasting ace bass playing and a weird taped sermon as sort-of lead vocals. Then there's "Work Song," which is funky and catchy and features
Phillip Wilson's somewhat off-beat drumming (pun intended). The other tracks are more experimental, weird, and don't catch on as well -- although they all reward repeated listening, for at first the listener might get lost between Ronald Shannon Jackson's irate drumming, Michael Beinhorn's acid-drenched synths and snippets of tapes and shortwave, the stuttering horns of
George Lewis and
Ralph Carney, the undescribable contributions of
Fred Frith, and the vocalisms and percussion (rhythmic and non-rhythmic)
David Moss provides. It's an interesting record, but it's not essential listening, and beginners or fans of
Laswell's less avant-garde music won't get much out of this. If the somewhat comparable
Memory Serves by
Material left you craving more, you might want to give this album a try.