For most of Bitchin Bajas’ 15-year discography, the trio has adhered to the Oblique Strategies aphorism, “Repetition is a form of change.” Cooper Crain, Rob Frye, and Dan Quinlivan would fire up their keyboards, lock into an iridescent loop, and explore all of its hypnotic possibilities. As they committed the passage to muscle memory, inevitable shifts would happen—nudge a rhythm here, tweak the resonance there—and what started as a pleasant few seconds of analog synthesizer tones and breathy flute notes became a wormhole, a way to experience the passing of time in a state of suspended animation.
But a seed was planted in 2017, when, on the expansive double album Bajas Fresh, the band covered “Angels and Demons at Play,” a Sun Ra tune from the 1960 record of the same name. The distance between a cosmically minded, psychedelic synth outfit and a cosmically minded, psychedelic jazz ensemble is shorter than you think. And given the Bajas’ place in the middle of Chicago’s jazz and experimental Venn diagram, their version felt like a natural, inevitable evolution. “Angels and Demons at Play” opened the Bajas’ methodology, allowing a more developed melodic sense to emerge from their cascading zone-outs. It portended their next moves: While waiting for 2022’s Bajascillators vinyl pressings, the Bajas expanded on the idea on Switched on Ra, choosing eight more Sun Ra compositions to interpret. Earlier this year, the group reunited with fellow Chicago travelers Natural Information Society for Totality, a gorgeous collaborative record that evoked Bennie Maupin’s The Jewel in the Lotus, if Cluster had made it.
Heady and daydreamy, the Bajas’ latest album, Inland See, benefits significantly from this new, somewhat looser approach. On past records, the band fit sequences together like horologists painstakingly tweezering the gears of a clock, letting the spellbinding mechanics run for a small eternity. Here, the trio zooms out a bit, repeating entire phrases instead of small arpeggiated figures, giving these four tracks a more songwriterly feel. Peaks and valleys take the place of constant expansion. The songs still swirl together into billowing masses, full of slow-cycling envelopes and acutely arranged bleeps and bloops, but it’s more like watching cumulus clouds change shape than an ever-thickening brume. For perhaps the first time in the Bajas’ catalog, there are parts of Inland See that can get stuck in your head.
