Break Stuff is an album by the Vijay Iyer Trio recorded in June 2014 and released on ECM February the following year. The trio features rhythm section Stephan Crump and Marcus Gilmore.
Thom Jurek in his review for All Music says that "This trio aims at an interior center, finds it, and pushes out, projecting Iyer & Co.'s discoveries."
In The Guardian, John Fordham gave this album four stars out of five, saying, "Iyer, bassist Stephan Crump and drummer Marcus Gilmore sound joined at the hip even when sometimes seeming to be investigating completely different tunes, but almost everything here feels just as jazz-rooted as the three classic covers on the tracklist."
John Garelick of The Boston Globe stated:<blockquote>Like the pianist and composerâÂÂs other trio records, it makes for a satisfying, portable Iyer, alternating math-y rhythmic concoctions like the post-minimalist âÂÂHoodâ (for the Detroit techno producer DJ Robert Hood) and âÂÂMystery Womanâ (which draws from the compound rhythms of South Indian music) with varied jazz standards (Thelonious Monk's âÂÂWork,â John Coltrane's âÂÂCountdown,â Billy Strayhorn's âÂÂBlood CountâÂÂ) and more atmospheric originals. Iyer, bassist Stephan Crump, and drummer Marcus Gilmore have fully incorporated electronica and hip-hop into a jazz vocabulary. Despite the album's layered meters, you couldn't ask for a more swinging âÂÂWork,â or a more moving solo-piano treatment of âÂÂBlood Count,â ending with a repetition of the questing opening phrase over somber low-register chords. With all of this band's attention to rhythm, it's nice to have an isolated example of Iyer's sensitive voice leading, his beautiful touch and tone.</blockquote>