"Learning Sanskrit, his first recording with drummer Jason Cheek and bassist Dennis Baraw, is less concerned with tracing jazz's boundary lines than with exploring the space within them. Compositionally, texturally, emotionally, the album's eight songs are diverse. "Gingerbread Man," with its stuttering intro and pull-push dynamics, swings like a cut from one of those heady Blue Note LPs from the '60s. The dewy cymbals, probing bass and fluid electric guitar work in "Poplar" recall classic material from another great jazz imprint, the atmospheric ECM label.
For a debut release, Learning Sanskrit is tight and well-played. Lines' hands simultaneously coax lovely clusters of notes from the piano in "Not So Much," reminding me of Brad Mehldau's skillful two-handed solos. Speaking of Mehldau, his "When It Rains" is rendered energetically here, with Cheek and Baraw brewing up a quiet storm over Lines' graceful melody. Like the Trio's other songs, this interpretation of Mehldau impresses with its attention to detail and dignity."
-Phillip Buchan
Flagpole Magazine
November 21, 2007