Once again collaborating with his longtime associates pianist 
Marilyn Crispell and drummer 
Carmen Castaldi, saxophonist 
Joe Lovano further explores Trio Tapestry's artfully spare, introspective sound on 2021's 
Garden of Expression. The album is the successor to the group's 2019 eponymous debut which was, somewhat surprisingly, 
Lovano's first album as a leader for the storied 
ECM label. Having played with legendary 
ECM artists in the past, including most notably 
Lee Konitz and 
Paul Motian, 
Lovano's work with Trio Tapestry feels like a continuation of that style of progressive, classical-influenced jazz and fittingly brings to mind the sound of 
ECM albums of the '70s and '80s. Tracks like "Chapel Song," "Night Creatures," and "West of the Moon" have an impressionistic quality, evoking the dream-like compositions of 
Claude Debussy as 
Lovano floats against 
Crispell's rippling aquatic arpeggios. Equally enveloping is the title track, in which 
Crispell's far-eyed chords and 
Lovano's dusky tones conjure the '60s spiritual jazz of 
John Coltrane and 
Pharoah Sanders. What's also particularly compelling is just how important 
Castaldi's drumming is to the trio's overall sound. Unmoored by a bass instrument, 
Castaldi's buoyant, textural rhythms seem to suggest as much of a chordal center on any given song as 
Crispell's playing. This is especially true in the trio's more free-leaning moments, as on "Dream on That'' in which the drummer kicks off a rambling call-and-response improvisation that goes from starkly atonal to thickly frenetic and back again. Always at the center of the trio, however, is 
Lovano, whose warm, vocal-like tones and painterly phrases give the album the focused reverence and elevated emotionality of a church service. ~ Matt Collar