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Gorilla Mask: Peter Van Huffel (as), Roland Fidezius (b), Rudi Fischerlehner (dr)

Schorndorf, Manufaktur; 1/17/2020

Silke Eberhard Trio: Kay Lübke (d), Jan Roder (b), Eberhard (c)

KM28, Berlin; 1/13/2020

Schlippenbach Trio: Alexander von Schlippenbach (p), Evan Parker (ts), Paul Lytton, (dr)

Tempel, Karlsruhe, 12/10/2019

Bassdrumbone: Gerry Hemingway (d), Mark Helias (b), Ray Anderson (t)

Eric's House of Improv @ Zurcher Gallery, New York, NY 11/09/2019

Schnell: Christian Lillinger (dr), Pierre Borel (as), Antonio Borghini (b)

Manufaktur, Schorndorf, 11/15/2019

Saturday, March 7, 2020

McCoy Tyner (1938 - 2020)

McCoy Tyner 1973. Gisle Hannemyr.

By Stef

McCoy Tyner passed away on Friday, at the age of 81.

The record I put on right now, after I read the news, is "Sahara", an album released in 1972, with Sonny Fortune on sax, Calvin Hill on bass and Alphonse Mouzon on drums. The album is a delight from beginning to end. Tyner is possibly best known to most music lovers as the pianist of the famous John Coltrane Quartet, and rightly so.

If Coltrane was a giant, so was McCoy Tyner, technically and musically on the same high plane as the saxophonist. "Sahara" is truly Tyner's work, an amazing powerful album led by the pianist, who combines the joy of open musical space with clear structures and themes. Everything on the album is excellent, from the wild and intense "Ebony Queen" over the gurgling and splashing mountain river sounds of the solo piece "A Prayer for my Family", the meditative Asian "Valley of Life" with the pianist playing koto, followed by the energetic steamroller of "Rebirth", and ending with the long majestic and epic title track.

There are many albums by the John Coltrane Quartet that I could call masterpieces, but so is this one. It is varied, massive, free and controlled, highly energetic and fierce. McCoy Tyner shows everything he is and everything he has to give on this album. There are no constraints, just the absolute joy of making astonishing music with a band that is fully on board for this trip.

There are other albums too, and many by Tyner that I could have reviewed in this quick tribute to him, but I'm sure no other album will show the artist he was as well as "Sahara", and possibly one of his albums that comes closest to what free jazz fans might love.

Tyner was a truly great pianist, and an artist who helped jazz transition to a different level than ballroom venues. Like Coltrane, he saw the power of expansive playing, of leaving the beaten track for excursions into outer space.

A great legacy.

Our thoughts are with his family and friends.

Friday, March 6, 2020

David Grubbs, Mats Gustafsson, Rob Mazurek - The Underflow (Corbet vs Dempsey, 2020) ****½


By Sammy Stein

In early summer of 2019 a trio of jazz musicians who, although they had common collaborators and 2 of them had recorded together (Apertura and Off-Road), had never played together as a trio, came together in the Underflow record Shop and Art Gallery in Athens, Greece. Over 2 nights, they recorded a series of solos, duets and trios, making some sublime and some not-so-sublime sounds. The musicians were saxophone player Mats Gustafsson (The Thing, Fire! Orchestra), Trumpet player Rob Mazurek (Chicago Underground Duo, Desert Encrypts) and guitar player David Grubbs. The music they made was acoustic, electronic and atmospheric, in varying amounts. From gentle bell tinkling to grunting, grinding, full throttle bellows and bleats, what emerged was different and a revelation.

The expected happened - three musicians made wondrous sounds and also the unexpected - a solo from Mats, for example but this time on his first instrument, the flute. The trio gelled - really gelled and Underflow became a thing , a group, taking the name of the venue.

David Grubbs brings his fiery energy to the group, and with the grit and spirit of Mazurek's trumpet playing and the power and energy of Mats Gustafsson's saxophone playing the resulting music is intense, gritty and at times so absurdly off-kilter it somehow works even better than if they played in perfect harmony.

From delicacy of touches to terrifying unleashed power, the musicians each bring their distinct nuances to the group. Mats brings almost as much disruption to his electronics as he does to his reeds yet each parlance is so grounded in chordal lineage,it is difficult to decide exactly why some parts work as well, whilst other miss the mark.

From the off with 'City Stone Sleep', The Underflow primes the listener for a volatile and wide ranging sound-scape as electronics form a dense wall, over which engineering effects and sounds rise, verging on the edge of reason. Yet a second listen picks out false-voice and speech-like sounds interwoven into the electronica in the early parts of the track. The first half of the track, it has to be said, it difficult to get through but persist and emerge into the assuredly rhymed consequences. Real voice enters, brief but purposeful, a rhythm is set, the sounds enfold, circle the tempo before quashing it and Gustafsson's baritone sax explodes in brief, breathy woofs before the track builds, takes on increased energy, imbibes atmosphere over steady baritone and completely off the wall improvised trumpet. The final call and reply from sax and trumpet are wonderful.

'Goats and Hollers' is a track full of changes both in tempo and sounds. It also contains some of the most wonderful and completely unfettered vocalisation you could wish for - masterful, powerful, controlled and absolutely key to the effect of this track. The trumpet again is gorgeous, driving, challenging and the guitar fretful, hungry and mesmeric but it is the combination of all these things which create this track and as the vocals let loose, they seem to provide permission for the other instruments to follow suit. Incredible and completely engaging.

'Creep Mission', a David Grubbs composition, has guitar singing, in emergent harmonics over vociferous trumpet and wonderful whoopy electronics, the effect is crazily uplifting, particularly after the point where the guitar is worked into a short but ferocious frenzy, the echoed notes creating an almost solid back-scape for trumpet and later the baritone reeds to vibrate across.

'Not In A Hall Of Mirrors' is all about the air, the breath and the control of Gustafsson - this time on flute but it is the breaths which also add to the music, and the percussive touches of fingers on keys. A gem of a track and when the switch to sax is made the double tonguing is quite extraordinary, transferred across and pretty much as effective as on the flute. Latter interactions between guitar, trumpet and saxophone create a track which has a sense of emergence, development and finally a blossoming. Beautiful.

'I'll Try Anything Twice' is archetypical of three completely individual musicians creating a single track of music - there is a sense of competitiveness, at times a feeling of unity but mostly it is about the noise on this track and the fun of it. A lovely section magically occurs when the guitar sails out across the top before the sax simply picks up the volume and the guitar stops to allow it to flow. There is a beautiful empathy throughout this track and a quietness which lasts almost to the two thirds mark, after which the stut and flow, electronic rivulets and business of the track develops, belying the lack of volume in its intricacy.

This album is a revelation - it is new venture yet it somehow seems completely right for the musicians involved. The real joy of this music is partly the realism because every breath, holler, key flub and percussive sound is heard and felt by the listener. The process of creation is almost tangible. It fits right in with what I know of Gustafsson and his constant search for the discarding of tags, of labels and the freedom to simply create, to be in the music and work with sounds. He seems to have found two completely like-minded musicians in Grubbs and Mazurek and the huge attraction of this music is the partly self-absorbed way the musicians let go, the guitar proving clever, intuitive and yet very creative, the trumpet fizzing and crazily blazing its own path. But also the way the three musicians work together, creating opposite and also united patterns, walking the same path and then veering off on their own journey but ultimately coming together. This is not in any way confusing music. It is honest, open and clear. It is wonderfully OK and a taste of what is to come as this trio grow together.

Recorded by Manolis Aggelakis at Underflow Records and Art Gallery, Athens, Greece, on May 31, 2019. Mixed and mastered by Alex Inglizian, ESS Chicago summer 2019.

Personnel: David Grubbs - guitar;
Mats Gustafsson - flute, flutophone, baritone saxophone, live electronics;
Rob Mazurek - piccolo trumpet, wooden flute, electronics, percussion, voice.

Thursday, March 5, 2020

The Radical Sonic Experiments of Swiss pianist Jacque Demierre


Jacque Demierre is a Swiss pianist, composer, improviser, sound poet and musical theorist, is often considered as one of the most interesting and original personalities in the European free music scene. He has great knowledge of architecture and linguistics, but most of the time he is preoccupied with “the immediate experience of sound” and his attempts to “domesticate” the piano. He keeps perfecting his quest for a delicate balance between the act of real-time improvisation and the process of composition and often focuses on memory, constantly renewed and begun afresh. His latest releases highlight his idiosyncratic, radical tonal language that is as sensitive as it is eruptive, often taking on a noise-like qualities.

Jacque Demierre - The Well Measured Piano (Creative works Records, 2019) ****½


The Well Measured Piano is a perfect introduction for Demierre’s intense experience of confronting the piano as a whole, with its keyboard and its strings. Demierre often finds inspiration in architecture and sees his own engaging with the piano as “a work of measurement - that of the piano as a territory and of its different acoustic regions.” On this solo piano album he plays his own piano that he has owned since his early twenties, but in a new uniquely reverberating space - an old and empty bread oven with bright reflective walls and low arched ceiling in the town of Yverdon-les Bains. Stereo microphones were put at varying distances from the piano in order to capture the density and richness of the resonant sounds. Demierre later overdubbed the three pieces in order to intensify the dramatic elements.

The titles of the three extended and improvised pieces are inspired by poems of British Simon Cutts’ book Monotonie and demands careful listening, or as Demierre defines it: “listening involves tension, profound chaotic movements, and instability. But listening also allows one to organize the chaos of movements, to settle instability, and compose emotions.” He adds: “In the 21st century playing the piano is not just playing an instrument - it is penetrating a space, with all its well-aligned pavements but also its hidden facets, its zones of no laws, its propitiating wilderness.”

The first piece “Dilute the Sky with Care” demonstrates best Demierre’s physical, all-over-the-piano and his poetic manner of weaving and structuring together few parallel, dramatic and detailed narratives. All these themes sound untimely but totally belong to a distinct time, mood and space. “Wind Motet” charges the urgent, immediate creation of sounds with playful and sometimes even noisy, chaotic atmosphere, but also with fleeting lyrical undercurrents. The third piece “To Thank the Morning Rain” suggests a schizophrenic presence - at majestic, reserved melody competes with out-of-tune, nervous and resonant hammering of the piano keys.

Indeed, as Demierrre insists: “the sound experience is the only thing that counts".




Hans Koch / Jacque Demierre - Incunabulum (Herbal Records, 2019) ***½


An incunable, or sometimes incunabulum, is a book, pamphlet, or broadside printed in Europe before the year 1501. Incunabulum is also the title of the first recorded duet of the two Swiss masters of free music - bass clarinet and soprano sax Hans Koch and Demierre,  who plays the spinet (a smaller version of harpsichord) in addition to the piano. The eight pieces were recorded over two days in May 2018 at Le Singh club in Basel, and all the titles are taken from the book I never knew what time it was (all begin with “But…”) by American poet and performance artist David Antin (1932-2016).
Koch and Demierre explore immediate, mysterious sonic terrains, never following linear, familiar routes and always eager to find out imaginative and adventurous sounds and demanding dynamics. But this approach does not mean that Koch and Demierre are focused only on chaotic and dissonant sounds or textures as on the aptly titled "But I Imagined Him Racing Madly Down the Beach to Dive into the Surf " suggests. On the minimalist and poetic “But We Weren’t Prepared to Enter the Game of Musical Houses”, Koch sounds like playing the Japanese shakuhachi flute, associated with Zen Buddhism, while Demierre adds a ritualistic pulse on the piano. “But I’ve Been Living Here for a Long Time” distils the exotic and delicate, Far-Eastern sounds ever deeper. “But This Was All Kind of New to Me” surprises with its lyrical and emotional spirit. Demierre turns his piano to a highly resonant percussion instrument on the last, poetic and ceremonial texture of “But You Know That Even Before You See the Pyramids, You’re Going to Take A Camel Ride”, complimented by Koch's distinct, extended breathing technique.







Urs Leimgruber / Jacques Demierre / Barre Phillips / Thomas Lehn – Willisau (Jazzwerkstatt, 2019) ****½


The free-improvising LDP trio of Swiss soprano and tenor sax player Urs Leimgruber, American, France-based double bass player Barre Phillips, and Demierre has been working together for almost twenty years and is one of the best in its field. Demierre describes this trio as “an incredible space of trust and experimentation”, whose motto is: “stop playing but don’t stop listening… Listening as a statement… Because we do not listen to something, we listen. We are in the act. We produce listening.” He adds that the LDP trio “works a great deal with accident, with fortuitous and spontaneous occurrence.”

For its performance at the 2017 edition of the Swiss Willisau Festival the trio teamed with another unique master of the music of the moment, German, Vienna-based analogue synthesizer player Thomas Lehn. Lehn has collaborated before with Demierre in his 6IX ensemble, and fits organically with the LDP trio's aesthetics.

Willisau features two extended improvisations titled “Monkeybusiness” 1 & 2. The first one is more loose, abstract and totally intuitive, stressing insightful, deep listening and immediate, natural flow of searching and shaping of fascinating sound realms, textures and dramatic, intense dynamics. The four musicians work individually but always listening with elephantine ears to what the others are brewing. Lehn becomes instantly an integral part of the fast, deep interplay, as if he was playing with the trio for many years. The second piece intensifies even more the dramatic dynamics but often references the distant sound universes of free jazz and sometimes even touches fleeting melodic veins, but, again, in a total free, democratic and quite subversive and ironic manner.

Willisau is another remarkable chapter in the history of the LDP trio. And Demierre observes: "without memory there is no improvisation. Each new concert [of the trio] is thus constructed from the memory of the last concert played…"



Jacque Demierre - ABÉCÉDAIRE: ABC-BOOK (Lenka Lente, 2018) ***½



This bi-lingual book – in French and English – collects Demierre's insights, thoughts and perceptions about the “examination of my experience of sound,” from the point of view of him as a pianist, performer, composer, improviser and academic scholar with great knowledge about linguistics studies, modern architecture and poetry. Demierre writes that John Zorn conducted with him for Arcana VII: Musicians on Music (Hips Road/Tzadik) triggered an impulse for this book.

Besides the alphabetical, short chapters, some are quoted above, this book offers a bonus - a mini disc with an unpublished composition of Demierre for voice, “Ritournelle”, that reflects his profound interest in linguistics. This piece was performed by Demierre on March 2018 and brings to mind the Dadaist works of Dutch sound poet and vocal artist Jaap Blonk. “Each word is repeated- with a tempo of about 30 bpm- in a way to create horizontal acoustic matter that unfolds in a movement of consonant and vocalic morphing”.

ISBN : 979-10-94601-22-8



Tuesday, March 3, 2020

Sam Weinberg – the interview

Sam Weinberg. Photo by Peter Gannushkin

Fotis Nikolakopoulos: Why play this kind of music? Why improvise? What does it mean to you? 

Sam Weinberg: I became interested in improvisation fairly early in my life, so I think I often take it for granted. Even though my primary practice has been improvising with people, I don't necessarily prize it over composition. I do think, though, that there are certain ecstatic moments of genuine human connection and transcendence that can only occur within improvised music. I'm fortunate to have experienced these things first hand as both a player and an audience member, and they have served to remind me of the true magic that can come from this activity. I am also interested in the process aspect of it – there are no smoke and mirrors with this type of music; the process of its creation of it and the creation itself are inextricable. This is a thrilling thing to witness and to participate in. To that end, the development of an improvisational language (its growth, changes, various branches of interests and holes to burrow your head in for a time) are of chief importance to me. Robert Morris had a big piece at the Leo Castelli Gallery that he called the "Continuous Project Altered Daily", and I often think that that's an apt way to think about growth of an improviser and how the various contexts shape and continuously alter the language, disposition, content of their work.

FN: Is improvisational music (not just jazz) important today? In what sense?

SW: It's hard to say if it's ever been "important", but I don't think that's really for me to say in one way or another as I can't say what "important" would mean in general, or for who. I do know, though, that it is important to a cadre of loyal and dogged fans around the world (as evidenced by, for instance, you, from Greece, wanting to do this interview with me). And of course there's a global community of musicians for whom improvised is their bread and butter, so of course it is important to them. But I'm not suffering from some delusion that leads me to believe that there's some massive "importance" to this stuff beyond the people who are interested in it or who find their way to it somehow. But such is the case for all art, and it seems like it has basically always been that way. I'm eternally grateful to every artist who did what they did (and do what they do), despite the large resistance or otherwise apathetic reception. I don't think that art is important to most people in any form, certainly not in a way that asks people to experience something beyond their phones. But it is world-making and momentous for those who do care...

FN: Tons of new releases on the internet every day. What differentiate the "good" from the "bad" stuff for you as a listener and an artist?

Well, I'm not sure the extent to which the torrent of new releases or the ease at which one can record and release an album, impacts aesthetic judgment from listeners. That is to say, there's always been good and bad music released, and it has been incumbent upon the listener to find the stuff which speaks to them. But to not get too mired in the debate, I think maybe it'd be more fruitful for me to list some things I've been listening to in the past couple weeks and people can make up their own mind about anything being good or not – John Coltrane from 1964/5, Tommy Wright III (and many other Memphis rappers), Evan Parker solo and with Parker/Guy/Lytton, Extra Life, Judee Sill, one song on the new Steve Lehman record, Olivia Block, Waza trumpet groups from Sudan, this long Vito Acconci narrative called "the Bristol Project", Nate Wooley "Syllables", US Maple "Sang Phat Editor", MBV "Loveless", Ruth Garbus' new one, Jason Lescalleet, field recordings from New Guinea, Radigue, the Cocteau Twins record "Blue Bell Knoll", Mahmoud Guinia, John Wiese, etc etc etc. I listen widely and often and don't think my omnivorous habits could've been quenched quite to the same degree as they are now. So for that I'm thankful.

FN: Playing for a bigger audience, at least trying to reach one: would you consider this a compromise?

SW: Malvolio said it best: "some are born great, some achieve greatness, and some have greatness thrust upon them"

FN: The current political, financial and social situation in your country: how doe it affect you as a musician and in what ways?

SW: Clearly things are unwell here, and evidently throughout the world, too. The jingoism, racism, nationalism, and hatred seems to be pervasive throughout the world. These are heavy times, and it often feels like some sort of horrific simulation. The phrase "President Trump" still feels fictitious. I remember when Trump was elected there were all of these people talking about how art would get better or that somehow this would spur on some sort of renaissance. I haven't witnessed this, or if I have I haven't seen any tangible connection to art that's resonated with me and its overt political overtones. But this all recalls your earlier question about the importance of any of this in general – it is important for me to keep doing what I'm doing, so that I can make a sliver of sense for myself of this horribly convoluted and wretched lot we've cast for ourselves here. And I'm sure many of my peers agree with that. Having said that, and obsessive relationship with improvised music can feel maybe a bit silly in the face of autocracy, but I don't think the response to that is to make pedantic art which deals with the current political situation directly.

Sam Weinberg – The Greek Cassette (maarakora, 2019) ****½


By Fotis Nikolakopoulos 

The distance between Bloor’s (a trio that Sam Weinberg is a member of and one of my favs for 2019) Drolleries CD and this cassette is huge but very telling. It tells the story of an artist who is in a path of discovering his own unique voice and doesn’t care about labeling his work. Or,even, following one safe road.

This cassette, having the same title in greek, came out late 2019 from the small greek label of maakora. It is basically two 15 minute tracks spread on each side of the cassette consisting of various field recordings manipulated in many, musical and non-musical, ways by Weinberg himself. There isn’t even a moment inside those 30 minutes that would make you wonder. This is a deeply personal release, one that ignores any boundary given by what we call a linear approach to music making (and career building).

Various surroundings are being recorded, transformed and manipulated. Every day street life, background noises (everything is noise, we mustn’t forget that), birds humming, some wind instrument here and there, a guitar strumming, people (but how many?) digging up something. Numerous commentators appear out of the blue like a fluxus performance and then disappear again for ever. There’s a high chance we listed to Sam’s voice at some points but I wouldn’t be so sure of that.

The Greek Cassette might seem like a spin off for Sam Weinberg. A playful recording between his “real” ones that border between free jazz and improvisation. I cannot agree. This is him, I dare say, trying to figure out and present, again in an almost non-verbal way, everyday life, it’s struggles, atrocities and sweet moments.

@koultouranafigo

Monday, March 2, 2020

Sam Weinberg/Tyler Damon/ Henry Fraser – Foment (Amalgam, 2019)****



Once you become familiar with anything, it’s not easy to be impressed by whatever new derives from it. It’s a natural process I guess. Being a fan of free jazz and collective improvisation as a way of expression, the their ethics plus the everyday functions that come from it, you are exposed to many different recordings and ideas. It’s a free thinking music with libertarian ideas per se. One that has produced masterpieces, wonderful recordings of music by some of the most important renegades of 20th century’s music. It’s hard, sometimes impossible, to leave all this knowledge of the past behind and listen to with new ears, without prejudice even, anything new that comes out of what we nowadays call the ever expanding universe of free jazz. It gets even more difficult, I dare say, to evaluate the new stuff, great recordings coming out to us on a monthly basis. The comparisons are always there while the expectations are most probably high.

Sam Weinberg, apart from being one of my favorite wind players at the moment, falls into most of the aforementioned categories. Following this review, tomorrow, you will find a very short interview plus another review of a very different recording, one that proves that Sam struggles to broaden his horizon. On Foment though, we hear two long free jazz tracks of collective improvisation. His comrades are Henry Fraser on the double bass and Tyler Damon on drums and percussion. Continuing onto my earlier thoughts, listening to so many people (especially in jazz) who are so articulate and demanding with their playing, makes me always focus more on the interaction of the musician. We are talking about collective improvisation in any case.

Improvisation is a practice that comes from everyday life. Whenever it is not a mannerism to be sold in corporate ways, it includes ways of thinking, interacting and playing that produce spectacular results. There are moments in Foment when their interplay belongs to the great recordings of free jazz of the 60’s and 70’s. The two long tracks, Sleet and Bait, are full of the trio’s struggles to communicate. A communication that involves each other but also the listener, you and me. On Sleet their playing is more aggressive. The sax lines are fiercer, the bass offers us the rhythmic abnormalities of plucking and whatever other verbs are out there to describe the double bass. While the drums of Damon are a constant highlight. He is in the middle of things from time to time, either accompanying (in a linear dialogue with the bass) Fraser, or following up a sax phrase. Even though this is an antithesis, his playing is probably the highlight of Foment. On Bait, they seem to get lost in a trance and follow each other lines, sometimes even getting close to melody.

I do not have a clue of how Foment, in terms of spacing and room recording, was recorded. What they produce though declares vividly that this is a stellar recording of three artists interacting on a non hierarchical basis. Go for it all you good people reading these lines and, as always, support small labels.

@koultouranafigo

Sunday, March 1, 2020

Providence: An Interview with Szilárd Mezei

Part 2 of 2
Szilárd Mezei ©Manja Holodkov
By Nick Metzger

The Vojvodinian multi-instrumentalist and composer Szilárd Mezei is one of the most original and interesting voices working in the fields of jazz and improvised music today. His multi-faceted work includes leading multiple groups, both inside of Serbia and internationally. A major cornerstone of his work is the blending of traditional Hungarian folk music with free jazz, as well as his endeavors in solo and ensemble free improvisation. He’s one of the busiest musicians in the field but made the time to answer some questions for the Collective over the course of the past year or so (for which we are especially grateful) which touch on his background, projects, influences, and listening habits.

NM: You’ve stated in the past that both of your grandfathers were musicians, your mother is a highly proficient and celebrated artist, as is your sister if I’ve done my research correctly. How did your upbringing aid or hinder your developing musical ambitions? Why did you choose music over the visual arts?

SM: My grandfather from my mother’s line was a trumpet player and leader of a local brass band in the village where my mother was born. I never met him, because he died 4 years before I was born. I know from the stories of my grandmother, that even though he was a farmer, physical worker, etc., the only thing for what he was interested in was music. When he was adult, he got lessons from a conductor, a learned, qualified musician of music theory, so after he composed for his brass band some pieces, polkas, etc. Unfortunately, all these scores were lost in a house-fire after his death, so I could not see them. My mother is a graphic and fine artist; usually – if I can, but almost everytime– I use the graphic works of her for the covers of my CDs. Her work is very important to me, her taste of esthetics in every field of life is always a starting point for me. I’m very bad in fine arts, drawing, etc., I draw only, sometimes, titles of my works, if I cannot find a good word or sentence for the titles of my composition, but these drawings are very simple. (By the way, the titles of my compositions are very important to me, I choose them very carefully.)

My sister is a theater director and actress. We work very often together, meaning I’m writing a music for her theater-shows, and also she sing in some of my vocal projects, she is very talented in music, also with very prolific hearing and voice.

I choose music very early, and honestly, I don’t remember why, I know only that music was always the center of my interest.

NM: Your main instrument is the viola, and you’ve studied the violin formally, when and why did you decide the take up the violin? What is it about the violin family of instruments that resonates with you?

SM: I learned to play violin in primary and secondary music school, and after, I studied composition at Music Academy in Belgrade with Professor Zoran Eric. I switched to viola in 1998 because I felt that violin is too much virtuoso and too much ”brilliant” instrument for me, and I felt that I can better play the music I imagine on viola, which is somehow a bit of a handicapped instrument because the small measure, but have some sound, which I like very much. I like the bowed instruments a lot, and I like a lot of old violas (gamba, etc.). I play occasionally, and almost only in solo (sometimes in duo) on double bass, and very rarely on Koboz (Kobza) and Oud, authentic Hungarian folk music.

NM: Your Túl a Tiszán Innen Ensemble is absolutely captivating; your utilization of the themes from archaic Hungarian folk music in the compositions transforms and elevates them into something else entirely. How do you manage to add so much depth whilst retaining the essence of the original songs? Are you planning more releases from this ensemble?

SM: Hungarian language and Hungarian archaic folk music are from the same root. For me the phenomenon, Hungarian folk music, is my native musical language, and when I’m playing or composing my music, the language is always present somewhere deeply in me, even if I’m not using concrete folk music (which I’m using very rare).

My project with Hungarian folk songs from my region started a long time ago. Ethnomusicologist, the late Anikó Bodor (1941-2010), was the most important music scientist in our region, and fortunately she was a friend of my mother, and a friend of my family, so we were connected not only by music, but personally also. She collected in 6 big books all the archaic Hungarian folk songs. My project is based on these books. In that project I establish an 11 piece ensemble “Túl a Tiszán Innen” (which is a game with words, means Beyond the Tisza river and from here of Tisza river, so from the both sides of the river), with Serbian, Hungarian and one Slovakian musicians from Vojvodina. Vojvodina is a multiethnic region in Serbia, an autonomic province, with a lot of nations. Vojvodina is from 3 part, Bánát, Bácska, Szerémség. Bánát and Bácska divided by the river Tisza. So, we live in this side and that side of Tisza river. There are a lot of songs which text beginning like “Túl a Tiszán”, which means “beyond the Tisza”, and there are some which text “Tiszán innen”, which means from this side of Tisza. So, the name is kind of playing with these words, expressions, and it also characterized our reality.

Almost all the members are from this region, but not everyone is Hungarian – anyway, there are a lot of mixed people, mixed nationality –most of them are Serbians (my longtime collaborators in my other projects), and also some Hungarians, Slovakians. And most of them are not familiar with that tradition.

As I told, that project is about my homage to that tradition, and of trying to put some positive things for that tradition in my way of work. But, of course, all my projects are of the same importance for me. Essentially, that project is very similar with my other projects, so I used almost the same attitude, the only thing is that I use these folk songs, which of course determined the result.

In the project all the songs are archaic Hungarian folk songs from my region, and they are part of huge tradition of archaic Hungarian folk music heritage, which was discovered by Lajtha, Bartók, Kodály. There are no known composers, these songs are from oral tradition, 99% from peasant population, from villages, etc. The songs I used are from my region, but of course in some variants some of them exist also in other regions. I grow up with these songs, with that tradition. That project using these songs is a long time composing project for me, the double CD “Citromfa” is the third release of that project (released at FMR), and also released the fourth double CD, called “Turizmus” (also on FMR). The fifth double CD of material is recorded and waiting for release, and we had this year a couple of very important and very successful concerts with that Ensemble with these material in Serbia and Hungary. I’m preparing to compose the next material, so that project is a long-time composing project, since there is a huge (6 book volume) edition of these songs edited by Anikó Bodor. So, it is a kind of gold mine, and very inspiring for me. I’m a contemporary composer and improviser, but also a big fan of Hungarian folk music, that project is some kind of homage from my side to this tradition. On other hand, there is a very important movement in Hungary and around Hungary where Hungarians live, which is focused on authentic performance of these songs in their original style. Also, there is an important thing, that I living in Serbia, as a part of the Hungarian minority here, probably you know, that after the Trianon contract in 1920, the 2/3 territory of Hungary was detached from Hungary (that you have 300,000 Hungarians in Serbia, 2,000,000 in Romania, 700,000 in Slovakia, etc.)

These archaic folk songs are usually from peasant life, very often about love, and some things connected with village life (very similar to blues, for example), and sometimes they are with humor. The original instrumentation of these songs is various, but first of all, these songs are sung a cappella. Besides that, there are some instrumentations, like a tambura groups, bagpipe, flutes (peasant flutes, like a recorder), hurdy-gurdy, bowed string group, as it is in Hungarian instrumental folk music tradition. But the base is the vocal; a cappela. My instrumentation is abstract, and the compositions on these folk themes are also abstract, so there is no traditional background or intent to be traditional and stylistically archaic. My intent is to make new music using these songs as some kind of homage to that great tradition, focusing on the region of mine.

NM: You’ve mentioned that you consider your septet (with some variations) to be the central medium of your work, what is it about this group that makes them your main vehicle?

SM: The Septet formed in 2005, This is the third in a series of chamber ensembles, and is preceded by my quintet and piano quintet. For long time, that formation is the most important formation in my music, since it is not a small formation (like my trio or quartet), and also not too big for managing it, but I can explore my music through that formation. Also, the members of the formation are the closest and longest collaborators of mine.

The septet's repertoire consists more than 30 compositions, written specifically for this arrangement. There is an evident tendency in the focus of the musical content towards researching complicated musical solutions in terms of chord and counterpoint structures, as well as multilayered sonic scores on the musical plane. I’m dedicated to exploring the possibilities of orchestration which, in relation to the composition of the instruments in the ensemble, offers great versatility of choice. The Septet's program ranges from completely free improvisation to organized improvisation and strict, written composition. And in terms of genre, it ranges from Hungarian folklore-based compositions to contemporary music and jazz. Septet is also a kind of link to larger arrangements and chamber ensembles.

NM: The bedrock of many of your ensembles is your trio with bassist Ervin Malina and percussionist Istvan Csik; how did you meet these musicians and what is their relationship to your composition process?

SM: I met these fantastic guys in 1999 and 2000. I started to play with István in 1999, and then he invited Ervin, in 2000. It is important to mention, that István was only 21 years old, when we started to play, and Ervin was only 19. And they were almost ready for all these shit, what I wanted to play. Free improv, contemporary music, rubato playing – it was really unknown fields, and they was very opened and very talented to make that music with me, and to come with me to these unknown fields. I’m very honored for that. After long years playing together, they are very stable collaborators, they know immediately what I’m thinking and playing, and also I know while composing, what they will do with the written material. That relationship is some kind of brotherhood.
The music of the trio has perhaps the widest spectrum of my ensembles, as it ranges from totally free improvisation to strict written composition, and in terms of genre it stretches from songs based on Hungarian folklore to contemporary music and jazz. All three instruments have a solo role, and usually bass is treated as a melodic instrument just like the viola. Although one might think that the capabilities of orchestration are somewhat limited by the small size of a trio, the advantages of the stringed instruments are certainly represented.

NM: You also compose for dance and theatre how did you get involved in these endeavors? What is it about working in these mediums and with these artists that you enjoy the most?

SM: The very important part of my work is composing for theater, not only for dance and choreography, but for modern theater. I made till now more than 60 scenic music for theater pieces. I worked with famous Hungarian/French choreographer, Josef Nadj, and with a lot of theater-directors in Serbia, Hungary, Slovenia, France, Romania, Poland, Mexico (most important directors are Kinga Mezei, András Urbán, Anca Bradu, Tanja Miletic-Orucevic...). Music for theater is for me a bit different than other music I work, but my intention is always to have organic relationship with the other segments in theater (text, decor, etc.) I believe in that organic connection, and I’m always trying to keep up the dignity and importance of music in theater, like in ancient ritual theaters.

NM: Do you find working on projects such as these, where more than one artist vision must be realized to be more restrictive or liberating? What are the dynamics of working with a director or a choreographer, do they expect certain things of you, or have you been given complete creative freedom? Which do you prefer?

SM: I can speak only about theater-music or work with choreographer (very rare). I have to say, that that music which I’m writing for theater is completely different from my own music, but in the same time, it is very close. Different, because I’m serving the ideas of the director, serving the needs of the show, but in the same time, I’m writing the music I imagine for that show. However, it is always depending from the director of the show. Some directors have very concrete ideas about the music; some are not, so it is always different. I like most, if they have concrete ideas, because then I can try to fit in that idea, and I have more possibilities to make more versions. But of course, in my career I worked with the directors, which always counted on my music, and I always had enough creative space to work.

NM: You have also released works of completely improvised music as well, mainly with your international ensembles or solo, and as you have accurately mentioned in other interviews improvisation is the basis of all music. With this in mind, how does your improvisation practice at home or in the studio inform your compositions?

SM: Yes, my opinion is that improvisation is the base of every music. I’m playing in parallel completely improvised music – usually with special formations, first of all with my friend, cellist, Albert Márkos in duo, then with Nicola Guazzaloca in duo, and in trio with Tim Trevor-Briscoe, and also with Joel Grip, Vasco Trilla, Matthias Schubert, etc. With my own formations I play rarely fully improvised music, but my compositions are also based on improvisation, and all of my collaborators are very good improvisers, and when I’m writing for my own groups, I always know, for which musicians I’m writing. This is very important to me. When I’m writing a symphonic work of course I cannot know who will play it, but I’m still trying to find a technique (aleatory, for example), which can give more freedom for players.

But it’s very important that I don’t like to separate these directions (improvisation, composition) in my music. All of them are fundamental in my thinking about music. Composition is my profession, improvisation is the fundament of all music, and Hungarian folk music is my native music language. Jazz music is also very important – in a way, that so called jazz music can organically integrate these music directions. What I wanted to make, an organic music, which cannot be put in any drawer, which can have very serious messages, good feelings for any listener, and at the same time to speak in a serious musical language. I know that it is a bit ideal, but that is my intention always.

I think that if someone works seriously, they have to try to realize the music he/she want. I would be more happiest person/musician if I would have more opportunities to play my music – my compositions with my formations, and my improvised music with my instrument with various great musicians - more often in live concerts in my country, abroad, and in some festivals in Europe, etc, instead of having a lot of releases... I think, that is the first paragraph of my philosophy of music... of course, we can talk deeper about my philosophy concerning music, but it would take more time...
NM: Successful free improvisation can be an ecstatic experience for both the musicians and the audience. As an artist who has a great deal of firsthand involvement with free improvisation, what factors do you think makes the experience the most affective for both the audience and the musicians?
SM: It is a very hard question… Free improvisation is something, for what I believed long time, that is the most honest way to play music. Nowadays, unfortunately I have to see that it is not true. It becomes also a brand. However, I still believe, that good improvised music cannot be played without honesty, and without good efficiency. Today we can hear a lot of so-called improvised music, but these musics cannot compare with really good improvisation.

In practice, when I’m doing free improvisation, a fully free improvised concert in solo or in formation, before playing I’m trying to empty my mind, and to not have any preconception of what will I play. I’m empty until the first sound of my playing (or our playing, if there is a formation). That is, because if I planned anything before, it was determined in wrong way. But, for sure, I have to be prepared to improvise, which is a long-long (takes lot of years) learning process in musical and technical way.

Szilárd Mezei  ©Zdenko Stricki 

NM: Your musical output is abundant; given the complexity of your compositions and the size of some of your ensembles I would imagine that you would have to be a very organized and driven person to be capable of pulling all these projects together. Are you a naturally driven person, or does this arise from necessity?


SM: I don’t know, for that question maybe my lovely wife could answer better… Yes, I’m an accurate person in some way, but in other hand, I’m very confused and freelance… I have a lot of ideas, and I have always problem with time… I’m living in some other timescale, and sometimes it makes complications, since I have to be a present husband, a present father of my four children, etc. But, somehow, at the end everything works. Simply, I believe in Providence (the protective care of God or of nature as a spiritual power).

NM: What is the current free jazz scene like in Novi Sad? Are there any local musicians whose work has particularly impressed you?

SM: In last years there is a free jazz – or better to say, improvised and experimental music - scene in Novi Sad, but it unfortunately (because the very low, almost nothing, financial support) is not too strong. In Novi Sad there are a lot of musicians with I’m working from almost 20 years, and they are always impress me.

NM: Who have been your favorite collaborators (outside of your main groups) over the years? Who would you like to collaborate with in the future that you have not?

SM: First of all, Albert Márkos, the cello player and composer. We have a duo since 2000, we always play completely improvised music, we are very good friends, also. I had a big honor, that I played in duo with my, let’s-say-master, the late and great György Szabados (1939-2011). Also, I’m very happy always when we have the opportunity to play in trio with Tim Trevor-Briscoe (reeds) and Nicola Guazzaloca (piano), from Bologna, Italy, our trio has existed from 2010, and lately we had a new tour here in Serbia and Hungary, which was very-very successful. It is also completely improvised music. With Nicola we have a duo also, which I like a lot. I have also a longtime collaborator, the great double bass player Joel Grip, from Sweden, living in Berlin. We played a lot in duo, and we had a nice tour in trio with him and the great Sten Sandell (piano) in Serbia/Hungary and after in Sweden/Norway. I had earlier few times a very nice collaboration with Matthias Schubert (tenor sax).

I have also a duo with very good bass player Ernő Hock. Also I have new plans to play with fantastic drummer, Vasco Trilla. All these fellow musicians are part of my life, and I’m much honored that I have that honor to play with them. Also, I had an opportunity to play with Joelle Leandre, George Haslam, Michael Jefry Stevens, Joe Fonda, Harvey Sorgen, Tim Hodgkinson, Charles Gayle, Frank Gratkowsky, Jens Balder, Hamid Drake, Peter Ole Jorgensen, Herb Robertson, Martin Blume, Róbert Benkő, Phil Minton, Roger Turner, Vasco Trilla, Samo Salamon, Mihály Dresch, Evelyn Glennie, Jon Hammersam, István Grencsó, Ernő Hock, Ádám Meggyes, etc.

My dream is to play with Evan Parker, Raymond Strid, Anthony Braxton, Paul Lovens, Alexander Hawkins, and again with Charles Gayle, Joelle Leandre, Sten Sandell, Phil Minton, Matthias Schubert…

I never played with electronic musicians; that is not my cup of tea. Also I never used electronics in my music.

NM: What kind of music are you listening to these days? Have any recent records impressed you?

SM: I’m listening to a lot of musics, very often, when I’m riding a bicycle. I’m listening to a lot of different kinds of music: classical, jazz, contemporary, and I’m trying to listen to the new musics released recently. My favorites are nowdays Braxton’s ZIM Sextet and Creative Music Orchestra (NYC) 2011, and also compositions of Dai Fujikura, again and again the oeuvre of Béla Bartók, Witold Lutoslawsky, Duke Ellington, Lennie Tristano, György Ligeti, Thelonious Monk, Steve Lacy, Mal Waldron, Anthony Braxton, György Szabados, Mingus, Giuffre, John Carter, etc. But, the main piece I admire first of all, from a musical and compositional perspective, is Bach’s St. Matthew’s Passion. I never heard better music, better composition.

NM: What is your favorite way to listen to music? For example, on headphones or speakers, at your home or in the car?

SM: Ideally, to listen to the music live, after that, to listen to the music in my room on my Hi-Fi, but recently mostly I can only listen to music while riding a bicycle… Hope it will be changed soon.

NM: What are your non-musical influences?

SM: I have inspiration from a lot of directions. Usually they are not first musically. I like a lot philosophy (among others: Kierkegaard, Ortega y Gasset, Hamvas, Jaspers), literature (among others Beckett, Dostojevsky, Bulgakov), poetry (among others Koncz, Sziveri, B. Pap, Weöres), fine arts (among others Giacometti, Cezan, Bicskei, my mother’s work), social things (not actual-politics at all), etc. And of course, I have inspiration from music, and from my musicians, from musicians I’m playing with and from music to which I’m listening. I can order some names, without completeness from Hildegard von Bingen until Anthony Braxton, in line with Duke Ellington, Thelonious Monk, Charles Mingus, Eric Dolphy, Warne Marshe, Lennie Tristano, Jimmy Giuffre, Mal Waldron, Steve Lacy, György Szabados, Evan Parker, Béla Bartók, Witold Lutoslawsky, György Ligeti, etc etc.

NM: You’ve recently debuted a new quartet line-up with Ivan Burka from your septet on vibraphone. Are there any plans to record this quartet?

SM: Yes, we had some new very successful concerts with that Quartet, and hopefully we will record an album. I’m very excited to do that, since that is my new small formation where I can to explore new ideas.

NM: What does the title of your latest release from Túl a Tiszán Innen Ensemble, “Turizmus” (translates to English as “Tourism”), allude to, if anything? It seems like an interesting title given the collection’s model.

SM: It is very funny thing. For that recording we get a grant from the town I live and the project get money from the fund for tourism. That is the reason. Hahaha.

Saturday, February 29, 2020

Szilárd Mezei - Sleeping Time/Before Noon (Klopotec, 2019) ****½

Part 1 of 2


By Nick Metzger

Szilárd Mezei's double album "Sleeping Time/Before Noon" compiles its material from several live solo performances given by the multi-instrumentalist and composer, with the dates on “Sleeping Time” set between 2010 to 2017 and the entirety of “Before Noon” arising from a recital in Novi Sad in 2014. The extended time period over which the collection spans serves as an integral of his methods and techniques, revealing an artist as intent on pushing the limits of his instruments as he is in reveling in their roots and traditional characteristics. His playing throughout is completely free and provides a stark contrast to the more composed work for ensembles that we’ve covered on the blog recently.

"Sleeping Time (West)" and "Sleeping Time (North)" both begin abruptly with intense, high velocity bowing that for me conjure thoughts of Braxton's "For Composer John Cage" with its gruff and inarticulate fever. Both quickly settle into more lamentive, lyrical playing. The recording of "Sleeping Time (West)" in particular does a nice job capturing the ambience of the concert, with Mezei even receiving some brief canine accompaniment. The tracks continue with fluid, melodious passages that are interspersed with broad dynamics. Lines of wiry multiphonic scrape are inundated with short, tasteful pizzicato flourishes and deft runs. "Eppen akkor" and "Eppen az" both find Mezei commanding the double bass to great effect, as the sequencing provides a good contrast with the viola pieces. These tracks range from pointillistic, dance-like pizzicato to a rough arco that rumbles and groans like the hull of some great wooden ship. On "Olany" Mezei returns to his viola with a more varied approach. There are longer strokes of melodious playing infused with muted string pops and jagged, hissing bow work.

The second half of the album is initiated with the expressionist stylings of "Delelott" on which Mezei plays heavily with timbre, dynamics, and rhythm. In contrast "Kikerics" is shorter and more linear, finding Mezei pulling off gorgeous runs of melody in concise, effective lines. "Fecskek voltak" elaborates on this lyricality while also delving into sweeter territory, finding Mezei lengthening his stroke and broadening his vibrato. His use of chords and drones are employed to great effect. On "(rajz - letra)" Mezei pulls sharp pointillistic textures from his viola, the softness of the dynamics belies the intensity of his playing. "(rajz - maszk1)" is a roughly 30 second statement that runs directly into its sister piece "(rajz - maszk2)", both are brisk and to the point, with Mezei ripping thin jagged figures from his viola before returning to the bass fiddle for the last quarter of the album. On "Walking Bus", he stows abstract rhythms beneath thumping, percussive lines and concludes the piece with an expressive arco. "Auto Moto" dispenses a variety of cadenced lines, some of which parallel traditional jazz basslines. On "Ami titok" his bow work is broad and expressive, using beautiful airs and tonal contrasts to hypnotize the listener. "Ima" is colored by its dynamics, ranging from silence (or near-silence) to haughty pulls of low register groans, closing as a whimper. On the final piece "(rajz - 3alak)" the bass is worked over in a manner similar to the viola tracks sharing it's surname, closing the album in shades of frost and bramble.

Buy from Klopotec:
https://www.klopotec.si/klopotecglasba/cd_szilardmezei

Friday, February 28, 2020

Grünen - Disenjambement (Trokaan Records, 2020) ****½


By Martin Schray

Grünen first performed in April 2009 when Robert Landfermann (bass) invited Achim Kaufmann (piano) and Christian Lillinger (drums) to participate in his ongoing concert series “Not without Robert“ at the Loft in Cologne. Their first encounter was immediately recorded and released by Clean Feed Records (read Stef’s review here). While the first recording was completely improvised, the trio has combined pure improv with preconceived material on their second album (Pith & Twig, also on Clean Feed) in order to take “new turns with written material, some of it rhythmically quite intricate and/or evoking images of surrealistic jazz and song“, as they put it. For their new album Disenjambement the band recorded at the Loft again - as part of a four-day-residency in June 2017. During the day they rehearsed and in the evening they played live and processed the developed material. They played two sets each evening and in the second sets the trio was mostly supported by musicians like Frank Gratkowski, Thomas Lehn, Carl-Ludwig Hübsch and Elisabeth Coudoux.

As on their second album there are improvised parts and notated elements on Disenjambement (here exclusively by Achim Kaufmann). However, Kaufmann isn’t the leader of the band, the trio is actually a real collective. There’s no hierarchy, there’s no distinction between solo artist and rhythm section, instead there’s a constant shifting of functions. “Mondegreen“, the opener, begins with Kaufmann playing weird Monk chords paired with a small, romantic, but rhythmically broken melody, which then shines through again and again in the composition. But the actual theme only emerges when Lillinger and Landfermann enter the piece and reflect it in a variety of ways. This predetermined statement is followed by improvisations on a rhythmic structure based on the theme, which is almost chopped up by Lillinger when he briefly intersperses quite monotonous, but loud rimshots in the style of a clockwork. Kaufmann's piano literally sparkles in front of Lillinger's nervous beats and Landfermann's independent, self-confident runs. Eventually, the head is taken up in the final part again. The piece is a perfect example of the trio's music, which attempts to combine the piano trio tradition with contemporary jazz and modern classical music by initially providing different material for all three players, which can then be varied and improvised with.

Another characteristic piece is “Fsinah“, a composition the trio also recorded for Pith & Twig, which consists of different thematic variations, which are initially interrupted by improvised and even contrasting intermediate parts. The central improvisational part is based on a rhythmic structure of only one bar. There are several formal parts in the piece, in this case a larger A/B form with a main part and an extended coda like on “Mondegreen“. The trio improvises with both parts, creating a constant up and down of emotions and surprising drop outs of bass and drums, yet everything is held together by the rhythmic structure that opens up and contracts all the time. The result is a tense and lyrical modern jazz piece with relaxed and funky beats, deconstructed parts, e.g. when Kaufmann makes use of the two pianos provided by the Loft, so that he could use a regular and a prepared one, which creates new and interesting polyphonic dimensions (something which becomes even more obvious in “Mierenneuker/Quincunx“).

Yet, my favorite piece is “Lost Gesture/Green Istria“, a composition consisting of a two-bar polyrhythmic structure in which the individual players selected different levels, which then alternate and overlap. Here Kaufmann’s idea of the music becomes obvious: creating some kind of meta-version of different musical genres like bebop, modal jazz, even 1970s new wave, without quoting it in a postmodern way. The piece develops a strong, dark groove with Kaufmann’s left hand and Landfermann’s bass exploring the low registers of their instruments before it dissolves in pure sound excursions.

Asked about his influences Kaufmann says that this was hard to define. He states that he found it interesting to think about what already existed and to do something new with it, to find a new level. This goes far beyond pure piano trios, he’s rather interested in larger contexts, in whatever kind of trios. That includes non-piano formations like the ones by Steve Lacy and Jimi Hendrix. And indeed, if you know this, you can find abstractions of rock, free jazz, classical music and even the above-mentioned new wave. The more intense you listen to the album, the more interesting details are revealed. This is what the future of piano trio music could sound like.

Disenjambement is available as a CD.



Watch the band live here:

Thursday, February 27, 2020

Brian Groder Trio - Luminous Arcs (Latham, 2019) ****½

By Stef

This is the third album by the trio of Brian Groder on trumpet & flugelhorn, Michael Bisio on double-bass, and Jay Rosen on drums. Their previous albums "Reflexology" and "R Train On The D Line" date from 2014 and 2016 respectively. With three musicians of this caliber, nothing much can go wrong, and that seems to be the starting point of a wonderful exploration of blues and deep roots of jazz, all performed without explicit real themes or structure, an approach which offers the three artists free reign to listen hard to each other and to go well beyond the use of their automatic pilot.

On the previous albums, easy anchor points could be found, agreed concepts, themes, melodic lines. Now, all that seems to be thrown overboard for a deeper dive into the essence of music.

In a way, they revive old concepts and revel in it. By analogy, in the liner notes Groder mentions the importance of older forms of (Scottish) words that are now rarely used anymore, but which are still very evokative and used as inspiration and titles for the improvisations: visions of the universe, the sky, of the seasons, of nature, whether the visual or its underlying physics. The deep roots of the music and the endless sky meet in the past, with a vision to the future, a rare combination which seems to work well musically.

The album alternates melancholy and meditative moments with lightly boppish uptempto improvisation, such as "Spanglin", "Sundog" - with a key role for Jay Rosen's energetic playing - and "Crystal Lattice". On the slow pieces, Groder's warm and clear tone on both trumpet and flugelhorn match perfectly with Bisio's authentic, intimate and human sound - listen to "Far Between" - supported by Rosen's sensitive implicit percussive support.

The sound is traditional in essence - and without extended techniques - but free in its delivery, while at times breaking through the conventions and exploding, as in "Smoored" (which means suffocating - a word no longer used in English, but which still exists in Dutch), led by Bisio's powerful arco.

Overall, the trio manage to create a great listening experience, full of variation, balance and intensity, and I'm sure that the album's combination of accessibility, deeply felt emotions and free form, as well as the stellar interplay will please many listeners. I can only hope it doesn't take another three years before we hear of their next album.


Listen and download from Bandcamp.