Marc Soucy’s “Turn For The Worst” is anything but a musical disaster—in fact, it’s a daring and triumphant piece that twists tradition into something wildly alive. Recorded live in a literal cellar decades ago with his longtime bandmates Ray Lavigne (drums) and Jeff Carano (bass), this long-recovered gem now breathes again thanks to meticulous restoration and a whole lot of heart. Released on July 11 and accompanied by a video drop on July 18, it joins the “Antarctica Mythology” as one more vibrant brushstroke on the trio’s sonic mural, an ode to musicianship, memory, and mad ambition.
From the first piano phrases, Soucy lays down a smoky, jazz-inflected atmosphere that nods squarely at George Gershwin, but the piece soon veers off the grid into stranger, more thrilling territory. Enter the Zappa-esque madness: irregular time signatures, rhythm breaks that feel like gear shifts on a rollercoaster, and bursts of electric guitar that slice through the mix with sharp, unpredictable flair. It’s equal parts sophistication and irreverence, like watching a tuxedo-clad symphony orchestra suddenly break into a back-alley jam.
Despite its name, “Turn For The Worst” doesn’t spiral into chaos, but builds it carefully, like a city skyline drawn in noise and harmony. The music ebbs and flows with cinematic precision. One moment, you’re drifting through a late-night subway ride, piano glinting like neon off rain-slicked pavement; the next, you’re shot skyward in a flurry of guitar and drums, caught in a blinding crescendo of sound. Yet through it all, the trio maintains an uncanny cohesion, anchoring the madness in something deeply musical.
There’s a pulse to this piece that feels unmistakably urban. It’s about New York City and sounds like it: the syncopated chaos, the jagged beauty, the constant sense that something strange is happening just around the corner. Soucy, Lavigne, and Carano perform and converse, each instrument responding to the other, shifting focus and leading the listener through backstreets of melody and shadowy crescents of groove. The fact that this came from a small basement session only makes the achievement more astonishing.
“Turn For The Worst” is not background music, but demands presence. It asks you to sit up and listen, to follow its curves and misdirections, and to celebrate the spirit of collaboration that defines it. With this long-awaited release, Marc Soucy has cracked open a time capsule and found it still humming with life. It may be a footnote in the wider musical cosmos, but it’s a damn compelling one; a small, brilliant defiance against the idea that art fades with time.
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