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DEBUT ALBUM REVIEW: Swirls by Zenekar

Music Review
Shelia Taylor
March 1, 2026

Sometimes the problem is not understanding the description but trusting it. I can read a band bio, nod along, but my neurodivergent brain will still walk into the first listen with a blank slate. That was the case with Brisbane outfit Zenekar and their debut album Swirls that was released on February 26th. Whatever expectations I thought I had quietly disappeared once the music started and were replaced by the pleasure of discovery and the sense that this record and band prefers experience over explanation.

Swirls is an album built on movement and conversation. Clarinet, accordion, double bass, and percussion pass ideas between them with ease like old friends having a conversation about love, life, and everything in between. The instruments don’t crowd each other, nor “talk” over each other, and they sure as hell don’t settle into a pattern. The compositions travel widely but remain focused are guided by a shared sense of curiosity rather than stylistic display. African rhythmic ideas sit comfortably beside Eastern European harmonic language, while jazz-informed improvisation acts as connective tissue rather than a target.

What stands out across the record is how clearly each piece knows its purpose. “Dark Waltz” reshapes the familiar three-beat form into something weightier and more sharp pointed, while “Native Gardenia” moves with poise by allowing the clarinet and accordion to carry its melodic grace. “Flat Five Jive” injects momentum through a bass led drive and sharp ensemble hits that proves Zenekar are just as comfortable with propulsion as they are with patience.

The title track “Swirls” captures the album’s intent most clearly. Creating a sense of spatial movement, sounds shift and circle while the clarinet offers a steady melodic thread that keeps the one oriented. Elsewhere, “Lament for a Holiday Tango” carries the ache of restricted movement without leaning on sentiment, and “Hemiola” plays with rhythmic tension in a way that feels playful rather than academic.

By the time “After the Bell Tolls” closes the album, Swirls feels less like a showcase of influences and more like a map of shared instincts. Zenekar trusts their compositions, their interplay, and their timing above all else. The result is a debut that rewards attention while remaining generous by inviting one not to keep up, but to gently follow.

Album artwork by Caroline Lanzon

Debut Album, Swirls, Zenekar

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