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Dienstag, 23. Februar 2016

COOL BRITANNIA - POST-JAZZ FESTIVAL VIENNA 2016

Cool Britannia

A young generation is roughing up the British jazz scene


London is like a magnet. More and more jazz musicians from all over the world settle in the metropolis of 13 million people. At the moment a young generation is breathing new life into jazz in Britain: Post-Jazz is the name of the trend, which feeds on a lot of contemporary sounds.

Polar Bear brought on the change. Ten years ago the band was at the forefront of a new generation of musicians, who didn’t want to play jazz according to the old rules anymore. Drummer and bandleader Seb Rochford comes up with quirky compositions, which develop out of the dialog of the two saxophones and combine laid-back rhythms, elastic bass lines und accessible tunes. The music takes its time and opens up spaces. “We destruct the conventional jazz format”, says Rochford.

Polar Bear

In the music of Polar Bear electronic sounds are an important ingredient. The musician who handles laptop, joystick and sampler is John Burton, also know as Leafcutter John. He submerges the music in a digital sound bath. From techno to house and drum ‘n’ bass – lots of the new club sounds are digested.

If one of Polar Bear’s regular saxophonists is indispensable, Shabaka Hutchings takes the job. The London based saxophonist, who originates from Barbados, is a visionary artist. In search of his personal roots he left the free improvising music scene a while ago to play more danceable music with the Sons of Kemet. They created a sound combining Caribbean rhythms with the noise and hectic of metropolitan life. Their line-up sticks out: while the tuba blows earthy riffs, the two drummers (Seb Rochford and Tom Skinner) create a dense braid of patterns over which Hutchings blows his horn in an ecstatic manner.

                                                                  Tom Skinner, drummer
The musicians form a network to help out each other. Tom Skinner is not only one of the drummers in the Sons of Kemet, he also plays in Alexander Hawkins’ trio. The pianist from Oxford pursues his own path. His trio music is based on the concept of independence in unity. Each member follows his own compass, while not necessarily interacting all the time. Nevertheless the music intuitively develops into a coherent whole.

Hawkins is also active as a soloist. Every time when he steps on stage on his own he resists the fear of silence by stuffing it with a barrage of notes. His spectrum is wide: from free improvisation to the destruction of jazz standards to melancholic ballads – every element melts together into one big set.

A similarly versatile musician is Lauren Kinsella. The London based vocalist covers an array of styles from jazz ballads to spontaneous music making. With her band Snowpoet she comes closer to singer/songwriters such as Joni Mitchel or Björk than to jazz standards. The musicians of Snowpoet create an electronically enhanced stream of sounds, over which Kinsella floates with her bright expressive voice. The lyrics are so intimate and crabbing that her songs turn into sung poetry.

From Kinsella’s atmospheric songs to the intuitive interaction of the Alexander Hawkins Trio and from the melodious and rhythmical interwovenness of Polar Bear to the ecstatic density of the Sons of Kemet – British post-jazz is not a coherent style, more a diverse trend, which reaches beyond jazz out to new grounds.

Diskographie:
Polar Bear: Same As You (Leaf)
Sons of Kemet: Burn (Naim Jazz)
Alexander Hawkins Trio (AH Music)
Alexander Hawkins: Solo Piano - Song Singular (Babel)
Lauren Kinsella: Snowpoet (Two River Records)



Sonntag, 14. Februar 2016

DAILY TELEGRAPH: The best jazz albums of 2016 (so far)

Daily Telegraph:

The best jazz albums of 20166: ALY KEÏTA, JAN GALEGA BRÖNNIMANN, LUCAS NIGGLI: KALO-YELE  (INTAKT RECORDS)

What would the combination of two Swiss jazz musicians and an African musician from Ivory Coast lead to? A limp specimen of flavourless “world jazz”, would be the sceptical response. In fact this CD is a delight. Clarinetist Jan Galega Brönniman and drummer Lucas Niggli were actually born in Cameroon, and seem to have a natural affinity for the idioms of African music. Aly Keïta plays the balafon, a kind of West African xylophone, and the kalimba, a tuned row of flexible metal plates plucked with the thumbs, known in the West as a ‘thumb-piano’. 
Composing honours are shared among all three, but the natural joyousness of Keïta’s pieces make them instantly recognisable as his. The two melody players swap roles constantly, first one supplying the repeating pattern underneath the melody line, then the other. Niggli’s drumming is so deft he often creates the illusion of shadowing the melodic patterns. It’s a proper meeting of equals, which is what makes this unlikely album so successful. ★★★★☆ IH]

Kalo Yele

Freitag, 17. Oktober 2014

So long, Eric - A tribute to ERIC DOLPHY

DAILY TELEGRAPH, 17th OCTOBER 2014

Aki Takase and Alexander von Schlippenbach, So Long, Eric!, review: 'joyous'

These new arrangements of Eric Dolphy's work contain just the kind of compositional jazz ingenuity he would have admired, says Ivan Hewett

4 out of 5 stars
'His recorded legacy is tantalisingly small, but its power to inspire gets stronger': free jazz pioneer Eric Dolphy
'His recorded legacy is tantalisingly small, but its power to inspire gets stronger': free jazz pioneer Eric Dolphy Photo: Don Schlitten
Eric Dolphy’s star just keeps on rising. The life of this great pioneer of free jazz was cut cruelly short in 1964, when he died of diabetic shock, and the recorded legacy is tantalisingly small. But its power to inspire gets stronger, particularly amongst the more avant-garde players in Europe. Earlier this year the power couple of European free jazz, pianists Aki Takase and Alexander von Schlippenbach, put together a festival in Berlin dedicated to Dolphy’s memory. It culminated in a gathering of some of Europe’s finest players, plus American vibes player Karl Berger. Takase and von Schlippenbach made new arrangements of a dozen or so of Dolphy’s finest pieces for the final concert, and nine of them appear on this CD.
It must have been a joyous evening. The applause is warm, and the players get carried away too, as the frequent whoops and shouts show. The band of 12 players is much bigger than the ones Dolphy led, and the arrangers seize on the opportunities this offers for new colours and combinations. Everything is brilliantly re-imagined, and infused with quick-witted humour. Most importantly the music-making keeps touching base with Dolphy and the tradition he sprung from, however wild and free it often becomes. The extreme points are certainly far apart – compare the austere, written-out five-part counterpoint of Serene with the happy, burgeoning anarchy of Miss Ann. Yet the whole thing coheres.
Dolphy’s wonderful Hat and Beard, a tribute to Thelonious Monk, is the best thing on the CD. It launches off with an astonishing polymetric mash-up for the two pianists, before seizing hold of Dolphy’s ingenious repeating bass pattern and making it misbehave. This pattern shoves its way into the melody line, and is eventually reharmonised in a way that offers a hidden hommage to the original – just the kind of compositional ingenuity Dolphy would have admired. In all the CD is a joyous thing, which should convert even a hardened free-jazz sceptic.
So Long, Eric! is out now on Intakt Records

Mittwoch, 4. September 2013

Schlippenbach Trio in the UK in December


SCHLIPPENBACH TRIO

Alexander von Schlippenbach: piano / Evan Parker: sax / Paul Lovens: Drums
19. & 20. December London, Vortex

The Rollings Stones of the jazz world - creative improvisation since 1970




Donnerstag, 29. August 2013

Trio 3 & Jason Moran - review in THE GUARDIAN


THE GUARDIAN
25 July 2013



4 out of 5


Trio 3 Plus Jason Moran
 Refraction - Breakin' Glass
  (Intakt Records)

by John Fordham

That raw, elemental, soul-baring jazz sound inspired by Albert Ayler and late-period John Coltrane has fewer guardians nowadays, perhaps as cutting-edge jazz has reverted to structures, albeit more precisely mathematical ones. But three of its most creative current representatives are Trio 3 – performers with close connections to the African-American "New Thing" of the 1960s in sometime Coltrane bassist Reggie Workman, drummer Andrew Cyrille, and World Saxophone Quartet alto and sopranino player Oliver Lake. Trio 3 date from 1986, but they've enjoyed very fruitful recent collaborations with brilliant contemporary pianists – Geri Allen and Irène Schweizer, and now Charles Lloyd sideman Jason Moran. Long passages on this set still involve the uninhibited Lake unleashing wild, multiphonic sounds and high-end inquisitions, or Workman scurrying through tumbling group-improv episodes with dark bowed-bass slurs. But the set is full of good tunes, too, such as the nu-funky, distantly Bad Plus-like title track, Cyrille's free-swinging Listen and the jarring, exclamatory Vamp. Moran steers everybody with ingenious hooks, and his own loose-limbed solos show how inventive he can be whether the setup is prescriptive or non-existent.




Mittwoch, 7. November 2012

RADIO RADIO RADIO: Schlippenbach plays Monk


LATE JUNCTION
BBC RADIO 3
Presented by Max Reinhardt

Thurs 15 Nov - 11pm till 12.30 am


box of delights in which you'll find John Surman's Saltash Bells, the complete Tezeta by Gètatchèw Kassa, Thelonius Monk's Brilliant Corners performed by Alexander Von Schlippenbach and a Ravel Nocturne played by Alexei Lubimov & Alexei Zuev



CD: Schlippenbach plays Monk - Alexander von Schlippenbach: Solo Piano (Intakt Records) 

Montag, 5. November 2012

CONCERT: AKI TAKASE and HAN BENNINK plus Paul van Kemenade

TAKASE & BENNINK in LONDON, 9 December 




The fantastic duo of Japanese pianist AKI TAKASE & legendary Dutch drummer HAN BENNINK with guest Paul van Kemenade (saxophone) will play at The Vortex, London, on 9th of December, 8:30 pm. More information: vortexjazz.co.uk

Listen to:
CD: Aki Takase / Han Bennink: Two for Two (Intakt CD 193)

further information: www.intaktrec.ch
press photos: http://www.intaktrec.ch/photogallery.htm