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Showing posts sorted by relevance for query friends and neighbors. Sort by date Show all posts

Thursday, November 10, 2016

Friends and Neighbors - What's Wrong (Clean Feed, 2016) ****


Earlier this fall, in what seems like another lifetime now, I had the opportunity to see Norway's Friends and Neighbors in concert. It was a beautiful Saturday night in New York City, on the night before a big storm was supposed to hit, and myself and a small appreciative audience were essentially treated to a private show.

Friends and Neighbors work in the spirit of 'classic' free jazz. The free jazz that can be traced directly to the likes of Ornette Coleman, Albert Ayler, and Sam Rivers - influences displayed proudly right in the group's name: Friends and Neighbors ('Live from Prince Street') was a recording from Coleman released in 1970, documenting some of the activity from Coleman's loft (which has been credited as a catalyst in the loft scene of 70s NYC) in SOHO.

So, at a different loft in the Lower East Side in 2016, these Friends and Neighbors delivered exciting melodic arrangements that left plenty of room for full-throated fiery solos, each musician delivering a knock out performance. When pianist Oscar Grönberg and bassist Jon Rune Strøm locked in with drummer Tollef Østvang, time became elastic and when André Roligheten's tenor saxophone and clarinet went toe-to-toe with Thomas Johansson's trumpet, it seemed to speed up!

This magic carries over to their latest release, What's Wrong. The opening title track begins with unison modal melody between the trumpet and sax before it's handed over to the piano. Mixing in hints of 'jazz' with sharp dissonant voicing, Grönberg has a light touch but know when to let loose. 'Fool Pay''s melody is a delight - playing off volume and instrumentation, it is a lithe and playful affair, and leads to a passage by Grönberg, again showing a mix of classic jazz feel and uber-Monk phrasings. Roligheten segues into a sax solo that quickly turns out a few excited phrases before hooking up with Johansson'a trumpet for some deft interplay. One other track that's a great exemplar of the well planned exhuberance of Friends and Neighbors is 'Friends', where a long horn driven free sections leads to an avant-funky solo bass passage by Rune Strøm leading to a drum and piano dominated passage that pays respect to Cecil Taylor. Utterly captivating. Finally (at least for this review) is the track 'Melting Snow', a ballad of sorts, that starts with a charming melody delivered in harmony on trumpet and sax, it again features the bass out front backed by a counter melody from the horns. As Østvang enters, his splashes of percussive color add another dimension.

So, here's my recommendation: buy the album and when Friends and Neighbors (or Cortex) are in town, go. What you hear on the records is mouthwatering, what you'll hear in concert is mind blowing.

Wednesday, November 21, 2018

Friends & Neighbors - What’s Next (Clean Feed, 2018) ****½

By Nick Metzger

What’s Next is the fourth album from Norway’s Friends & Neighbors, the quintet of trumpet player Thomas Johansson, tenor sax/bass clarinet player André Roligheten, pianist Oscar Grönberg, bassist Jon Rune Strøm, and percussionist Tollef Østvang. Friends & Neighbors play what they regard as “. . . energetic and melodic free jazz inspired by musicians like Ornette Coleman, Archie Shepp. Pharoah Sanders, and John Carter.” And I have to say, if you have a particular affinity for that 70’s free jazz sound then you will highly enjoy this band. Each song has a theme that is generally reprised and/or modified throughout to ground the improvisations (i.e. archetypal 70’s head/improvisation/tail song structure with some variations). This works out well here because the melodies are infectious and the soloists are amazing musicians. Friends & Neighbors is a band whose releases I actively look forward to. On the surface it would appear that confining yourself to a specific sub-style would yield diminishing returns, but this hasn’t been the case with Friends & Neighbors. They have consistently released excellent music and What’s Next (following 2016’s What’s Wrong) is, I believe, their best album yet.

Influx begins with the horns stating an airy and dramatic melody over harmoniously essential cymbal shimmer, piano chords, and pizzicato bass line. This main theme is interposed with a brief but lovely interlude from the piano and rhythm section as the horns drop out. After this interval, the main theme is played once again and the song fades out. For WLB the band comes out swinging a jagged theme from the horns over the thumping piano and the plodding rhythm section. Roligheten takes his solo on tenor which is underpinned by the clatter of the rhythm section and sharply stabbed out piano chord accents. Johansson solos next as the rhythm section switches to a more bop style beat with a walking bassline. This is followed up by a raucous return to the theme to close out the song. Kubrick’s Rude begins with a lengthy, sophisticated, and bittersweet theme statement followed by a very nice solo from Grönberg (with some slightly audible vocalizations ala Alexander von Schlippenbach). Johansson and Roligheten follow this up with interplay and counter melodies, with just a bit of free play included for good measure, then return to the theme to close the song. Euro finds Roligheten on bass clarinet, with the band playing a staggered melody from which Rune Strøm breaks and solos wildly over measured horn bleats and drum/piano stabs. This transitions into an enthusiastic and manic solo from Grönberg which leads back into the theme.

You could just about guess the name of Reflection after hearing the main horn melody. This track is easy on the ears and contemplative similar to the opener, but this time with a brief interlude from Roligheten on tenor before restating the theme and fading out. Mozart, similar to WLB and Kubrick’s Rude, has an odd timing, giving it a kind of playful feel. This changes up as the song progresses into a more swinging refrain and some really nice horn and piano playing followed by the reprise of the main melody. Thorleif’s Blues is a fantastic number finding Roligheten back on bass clarinet divvying the great intro theme with Johansson as Rune Strøm adds some excellent arco accents. Johansson solos over the minimal but pointillist percussion of Østvang before a restatement and variations of the melody with Roligheten. Headway Heat closes the album with high energy bounce and a wild piano solo. Midway through the track Roligheten takes his solo on tenor and plays his most fiery of the set.

The sequencing of What’s Next is auspicious as it layers airy, contemplative numbers such as Influx and Remembering with sharper, more angular song forms like WLB and Mozart. This sweet-and-sour style of sequencing was used to great effect on the 70’s free jazz classic A Conference of Birds by the Dave Holland Quartet. It works now as it did then, testing the listener with tense and strange melodies before providing a brief respite with one of the gentler numbers. All in all it’s one of my favorites this year, a most welcome set from a terrific band.

Friday, April 5, 2019

Friends and Neighbors w/Brandon Lopez @ Shapeshifter Lab, Brooklyn on April 2, 2019

Friends and Neighbors
By Eric Stern

Friends and Neighbors have been around since 2011. They have issued four records, the last three of which were on the Clean Feed label. Each of these players is involved in other groups, including Albatrosh, The Way Ahead, All Included, Cortex, Universal Indians, and Paal Nilssen-Love's Large Unit. As such, they are at the center of a wide group of projects that have helped to showcase Norway's dynamic jazz scene.

As musicians this five piece group has chops to spare. You have to look carefully or you might miss some pretty magical playing, such as pianist Oscar Grönberg's demonstrating his cross-hands technique without making any obvious show of it.

For me, one of the joys of listening to this group is when saxophonist André Roligheten and trumpeter Thomas Johannson play a hard bop style line in unison. It reminds me of Kenny Dorham and Ernie Henry's work on Two Horns, Two Rhythm. This evening's performance was a mixture of the cutting edge with a strong knowledge of jazz history. Should you so choose, you could even ignore the modern touches and extended techniques and view this as a more traditional group. At one point the band quoted the song 'Autumn in New York' as if to underline this point.

This is a group that plays tunes which have heads and melodies which you could hum. Watching them you realize that these are players so adept at their craft that the results seem effortless. I am very glad I went and strongly suggest you keep your eyes peeled for any of the projects which feature these players. We are fortunate that they travel worldwide so that many audiences can enjoy their craftsmanship.



Brandon Lopez
The opener, Brandon Lopez, gave a really interesting performance where he displayed several modes of playing bass that seemed unique and innovative. At one point he used the handle of his bow to agitate the strings in such a way as to create sounds more akin to those generated by a computer. Having seen him a number of times, it was a pleasant surprise to discover new sides to his playing. Performances like this one clearly demonstrate the musician's great facility on his instrument. It will be fun to watch future performances and see where he takes his impressive gifts.


Friday, November 11, 2016

Vortex of Cortex, their Friends and Neighbors too ...

We were looking through some recent releases and noticed that members of the band Cortex have been pretty busy lately. Following Wednesday's Live in New York and Thursday's Friends and Neighbors, we thought we'd end this rather trying week with three albums loosely and lightly connected through the vortex of Cortex .... 


Damana (Dag Magnus Narvesen Octet) - Cornua Copiae (Clean Feed) ****½


By Derek Stone

Damana, percussionist Dag Magnus Narvesen’s octet consisting of some of the finest musicians in the Norwegian jazz scene, is a curious beast to behold: you’ve got players associated with the “freer” side of things (Cortex’s Kristoffer Alberts on alto, Jørgen Mathisen on tenor), in addition to artists like Hayden Powell (trumpet) and Kristoffer Kompen (trombone), both of whose projects tend to be more lyrical and entrenched in jazz tradition. In addition, relative newcomer Øyvind Dale is on piano, André Roligheten plays baritone saxophone and bass clarinet, and Adrian Myhr helms the double bass. On paper, such a combination of musicians might scream “mismatch,” but (fortunately for us) the reality is quite different: far from being ill-matched, the musicians of Damana make for a thrilling, invigorating group, one that seemingly has no limitations with regard to the elements of jazz that it’s willing to fuse together into new and exciting shapes.

If you happened to be looking for a visual representation of the sound this group makes, look no further than the album cover itself: a matrix of dots-and-lines that alternates between density and sparsity, sometimes spiralling wildly, sometimes arcing gracefully, and sometimes threatening to fold in upon itself completely. With its opening blast of horns and reeds that can only be described as “pummeling,” not to mention Narvesen’s frenetic, busy percussion, “Tapatapa” puts the tightly-wound energy of the group on full display. “Dalbrecht” is similarly high-strung, with an incendiary baritone sax solo from Roligheten that barrels forward like a runaway train. “Chokolypse” swings from tempo-to-tempo, calling to mind some of Mingus’ more manic compositions in its unremitting push-and-pull. Pieces like “Irgendwie, Irgendwo” and “Melitrugal” take a much more traditionalist approach, with languid tempos and melodies that hint at dreamy-eyed sentimentality (without, of course, ever falling into the tepid soup of over-sentimentality). “Karnivalissimo” starts in the same vein, but Narvesen’s jittery drums and Myhr’s rubber-band bass help the piece morph into something else entirely. “For J.R.M.” closes things on a contemplative note; Øyvind Dale’s piano playing is uncharacteristically Impressionistic, and the other players offer a solemn coda to round off the album’s wild, frenzied edges. Cornua Copiae is an exciting, ever-surprising work, one that will undoubtedly appeal to listeners who not only want their jazz to entertain, but to astound.

Steve Noble & Kristoffer Berre Alberts - Coldest Second Yesterday (Clean Feed, 2016) ****


By Paul Acquaro

Coldest Second Yesterday starts with such a piercing, unnerving, squeal and cymbal crash that the album could almost end right there. The listener receives a jolt so visceral that it seems that there is nothing else left for this saxophone and drum duo to do. Fortunately, after a brief follow up skirmish, they prove this snap judgement entirely wrong.

British drummer Steve Noble, has played frequently with other saxophone firebrands like Peter Brotzmann and John Dikeman. Norway's Kristoffer Berre Alberts has a slimmer discography, but is an integral voice in Cortex, Damana, as well as Awosting Falls. Together, they form a potent pair.

In the aforementioned track, 'Animal Settlement' after they take a deep breath, they pull back to a pulsating groove and proceed to show what a lean duo like this is capable of. Quickly regaining momentum, Alberts pushes his instrument to the extreme. Their music is as much muscle as it is melody, and texture as it is time. The music can feel smeared, created in big broad strokes, and at other times ,like all attention is on the meticulous details. The balance between the approaches keeps each moment fresh.

It's a short album - 35 minutes - but so much is packed in that it more than satisfies.

Obara International - Live in MiÅ„sk Mazowiecki (For Tune, 2015) ****½

By Derek Stone

Sometimes great albums slip between the cracks, and get reviewed much later than anyone would like; this is one of those. Released in late 2015, Live in MiÅ„sk Mazowiecki is the third recording by Maciej Obara’s esteemed group. This performance at the Municipal House of Culture in MiÅ„sk Mazowiecki, Poland, is notable for its expansion of Obara International into a quintet. Previous members Obara (on alto sax), Dominik Wania (piano), Ole Morten Vaagan (double bass), and Cortex’s Gard Nilssen (drums) are all here, as well as British trumpeter Tom Arthurs.

Obara International have never shied away from intricate, winding arrangements, but Live in MiÅ„sk Mazowiecki combines these with ever-greater displays of power. Nilssen is, of course, a big part of this. His skittering rhythms and frequent bursts of force have long set him apart from other, more restrained, percussionists, and here he puts that muscular sensibility to good use. Take “Pinnacle of Accura, See?”: I had to check the line-up again, because I was at one point convinced that there were two drummers pounding away. Nilssen is as limber as they come, and Obara’s sinuous compositions give him ample opportunity to illustrate how elastic and engrossing his rhythms can be. One of his most memorable moments occurs on “Idzie Bokiem” - here, Nilssen attacks the kit with as much speed and ferocity as he can muster, and the result is a wild, spellbinding crescendo that draws you in a like a vortex. Bassist Ole Morten Vaagan is likewise a good fit for these compositions. Just listen to the constant metamorphoses that his solo undergoes at the close of “M.O” - from bone-rattling moments of physicality (clatters, clacks, and knocks) to supple stretches of arco, he can do it all. Dominik Wania is equally proficient at adaptation. While he’s comfortable with dropping dense clusters and wispy, near-Impressionistic patches of color onto the compositions, he’s just as effective when it comes to more straightforward styles. The opening minutes of “One For…” are a perfect demonstration of this, with him holding the piece together by means of a gorgeous, lyrical theme.

With all my talk about the rhythm section, it might be assumed that Obara and Tom Arthurs aren’t that interesting - but that’s not the case. Obara has a way of coaxing the warmest and most mellifluous sounds out of his alto sax, all without coming across as overly tender or affected. At some points, like in the aforementioned “Idzie Bokiem,” the streams of notes that he unleashes are positively riveting; they pour out like sparks from a blazing inferno, while still maintaining their characteristic musicality. Similarly, Arthurs moves from honeyed, golden tones to wild ululations at the drop of a hat, and the often-frenzied lines he produces always wrap perfectly around the more measured figures of Obara.

Live in MiÅ„sk Mazowiecki captures a group at the top of their game, and Obara’s multi-layered compositions have something for everyone. Don’t hesitate to pick this one up - you won’t be disappointed.

Thursday, September 5, 2019

Gard Nilssen – The Norwegian Drummer Everyone Wants To Play With


Everybody loves to play with Norwegian drummer and sonic adventurer Gard Nilssen, and not only all the forward-thinking musicians of the local Norwegian and Swdish scenes, but also American guitarist Bill Frisell and trumpeter Ambrose Akinmusere, who joined Nilssen’s groups during this summer’s Molde Jazz Festival where Nilssen was Artist-in-Residence.

The versatile Nilssen may be considered a high-priority fugitive by the jazz police. His musical universe is shaped by the most adventurous heroes of jazz on both sides of the Atlantic - Ornette Coleman, Don Cherry and Pharoah Sanders and Alexander Von Schlippenbach and Chris McGregor. But as the title of an album by one of his groups, Cortex, suggests, Nilssen spirals these high-brow influences into an inclusive Avant-Garde Party Music (Clean Feed, 2018) that is charged by more common additives from the lexicon of Black Sabbath, Deep Purple or Frank Zappa and local art-rock singer-songwriter Susanne Sundfør.

Gard Nilssen’s Acoustic Unity - To Whom Who Buys A Record (Odin, 2019) ****½*

Nilssen formed the unplugged Acoustic Trio, featuring reeds player André Roligheten, known from local groups as Friends and Neighbors and Albatrosh duo and leader of his own quartet, and Swedish double bass player Petter Eldh, in 2014. To Whom Who Buys A Record - a clear reference to Ornette cpleman’s To Whom Who Keeps A Record (Atlantic, 1975), is already the third album of the trio, after two acclaimed ones - Firehouse and the 3-discs Live in Europe, with guests Swedish reeds player Fredrik Ljungkvist and Norwegian sax players Kristoffer Berre Alberts and Jørgen Mathisen (both albums released on Clean Feed, 2015 and 2017).

To Whom Who Buys A Record is the outcome of four years of constant touring and over one hundred performances, and it was recorded live in one room and with no amplification. This albums offer the trio in its prime, perfecting its loose yet deep and close interplay, but, still, sounding greater than the sum of its parts.

The Ornette Coleman connection affects the telepathic interplay and dynamics of the Acoustic Unity. It sounds as owes eternal debt to Coleman’s seminal quartet. The powerful rhythm section of Nilsssen and Eldh dances with the same kind of joyful intensity like the one of Blackwell and Haden on - surprise - the openningr “Mr Cherry” (and alluding to Coleman’s repertoire on pieces with titles as “Broken Beauty”, “Rat on a Skateboard”, “Dancing Shadows” and “Elastic Circle”). The Acoustic Unity plays with same kind of uplifting-Dionysian energy of the Albert Ayler Trio on the seminal Spiritual Unity on pieces like “MasakrÜke” and “Bõtteknott”. But the Acoustic Unity is much more than a reflective unit. It has a strong voice of its own and a totally democaratic dynamics. It sometimes sounds rugged and raw, often delicate and moving and always, wherever it finds itself, sounds smart, searching and charismatic one.

What are you a waiting for? Go and buy this record, the physical one, and know that you have invested in the creative spectrum of the future music business.





Bushman’s Revenge - Et HÃ¥n Mot Overklassen (Hubro Music, 2019) ***½ 


The power-trio Bushman’s Revenge - comprised of Nilssen, who also plays here also on the vibraphone, Wurlitzer and electronics, bass player Rune Nergaard, and guitarist Even Helte Hermansen - is often described as the missing link between Ayler and Black Sabbath. The trio was founded in 2003 when all three musicians were still at their early twenties and Et HÃ¥n Mot Overklassen (in Norwegian: A Mockery of the Upper Class) is its tenth album and the first one to be released on Hubro Music label after a decade-long work with the Rune Grammofon label.

Bushman’s Revenge’s mockery of the jazz upper class is a clever and twisted blend of prog-rock with twangy blues jam, gothic soundscapes with smart improvisations and hypnotic tamboura drones with found-sound samples. Bushman’s Revenge is a trio that enjoys its constant state of multiple and restless identities and never stop clashing and experimenting with new sounds and textures. The best way to deal with it is by simply succumbing to its seductive sonic spell and stop analyzing where one instrument ends or does and where and when another begins.

Bushman’s Revenge takes its Aylerian connection to the most soulful, psychedelic angles and blends its formative, muscular Balck Sabbath ingredients with strong, experimental tendencies (continued on the Molde Jazz Festival with expanded line-up that will feature Swedish reeds player Per "Texas" Johansen and creative, local keyboardist Anja Lauvdal). On Et HÃ¥n Mot Overklassen the trio relies less on its sheer power and more on colorful imagination that asks the listener to find the missing links to classics as in Pink Floyd’s Ummagumma, soon to be twisted into Sonny Sharrock’s Ask The Ages and morphed again with dynamics of Tony Williams Lifetime’s Emergency! or the meditations on John McLaughlin’s Shakti’s Natural Elements, always processed through Bushman’s Revenge arresting, hypnotic spells. Throughout these brilliant ideas and guess games you can familiarize yourself with the great Hermansen, one of the most modest and underrated guitar heroes that walks these days on this planet. Just listen to his work on the passionate yet delicate ballad “Moves Away From The Door”.





Amgala Temple - Invisible Airships (Pekula, 2018) ***½


Amgala Temple is another power-trio, but one that exhausts its muscular power to its fullest, and a local super-group that brings together blues guitar hero Amund Maarud, bassist-keyboardist-guitarist Lars Horntveth, known as Jaga Jazzist, and Nilssen. The cover and the title of its debut album - Invisible Airships - already hints about the direction of this trio - spacey-psychedelic jam improvisations that search for new sonic frontiers while embracing the art of the moment. If Bushman’s Revenge is described as the missing link between Ayler and Black Sabbath then Amagle Temple may link between Sun Ra adventures in deep space and Swedish psychedelic-prog Dungen or between early Deep Purple and the Nigerian, Tuareg singer-songwriter-guitarist Bombino.

Amgala Temple knows how to control its mighty, wild power. The trio plays with radiant elegance, virtuoso solos, intoxicating grooves and intensifying tension spiced with many surprising twists that lead to the cathartic climaxes. Nilssen sounds as unstoppable, force major hat challenges and keeps pushing Maarud and Horntveth to higher, freer stratospheres. Just listen to the many ways that Nilssen and Maarud climb the heavenly stairways on “Bosphorus” or how Nilssen solidifies the infectious groove of “Avenue Amgala” or cements the aggressive-dramatic atmosphere of “Fleet Ballistic Missile Submarine” along the hyper-athletic solo of Maarud. “The Eccentric” even invites you to test your dancing moves, but only if you are fit enough to keep up with the energetic flow of this trio. The last piece “Moon Palace” will remind us all that soon enough we may find out that Sun Ra’s space is indeed the place to be.





Friday, July 20, 2018

Kongsberg Jazz Festival, July 2018


By Paul Acquaro

Early(ish) on an unseasonable warm and bright Saturday morning in Norway, the final day of the Kongsberg Jazz Festival, I was at a kiosk poking at the festival T-Shirts. I was looking at the colorful wheel logo of the main festival shirts, but was also intrigued by the more suggestive line drawing of a person with a cigarette on a different one. "That is the special shirt," said the woman tending the booth, "it means you were a part of the festival that’s not for everyone." She was speaking about the Saeringfest - the festival within the festival - the one where John Butcher and Joe Mcphee played, along with Kaja Draxler and Susana Santos Silva, as well as Mat Maneri and StÃ¥le Liavik Solberg, among many others - had played the previous evening. "Yes," I replied, "I'll take that one."

Kongsberg is a small industrial city about an hour West-North-West from Oslo nestled in a valley. Coming down into town you see the ski slopes (now green with leaves and grass) and then a dense orderly jumble of homes and industry. In the middle of the city is a wide fast flowing Numedalslågen river with a set of man-made and natural waterfalls that had at one point driven the industry. It was an old mining town, and I was told that now the main industry is making bombs. Wikipedia does mention that Kongsberg is where a large defense contractor is located, so I am assuming that my informant was correct. This particular early week in July, the whole town is transformed by the Kongsberg Jazz Festival into a bustling zone of street food vendors, techno-music blaring indoor/outdoor venues, and a confluence of people attending all of the festivals within the festival. It was a brilliantly programmed to bring together almost anyone ... for example, you could see Aha, Sting and Shaggy, and the Dum Dum Boys and nothing else if you'd like. Or you could focus on the well oiled jazz machine of the Chick Corea Akoustic Band, Mike Stern and Randy Brecker, and Greg Osby. Or you could go further off the beaten path.

Often, that non-beaten path was down to the historic building which housed the old silver smelters in the old part of the city by the river’s edge (as close you can get, for some reason a swift moving road lines one side of the river). Here is where the Saeringfest was held as Aha was lighting up the night nearby next to the historic Kongsberg Church. However, this is not where this story begins…

THURSDAY, July 5th 

Clashes (accordionist Ida Lovli Hidle & Ensemble Allegria)
I arrived in Kongsberg around 3 p.m. on Thursday. I had really hoped to see guitarist Hedvig Mollsted and her trio performing, Mollestad's music tends towards metal ‘jazz’ and this concert promised to be an interesting commission based on the paintings of Ornulf Opdahl. I was not familiar with his work before, but it does seem to complement Mollestadt's heavy approach. Instead, I began my day at the historic Kongsberg Church, seeing "Clashes", a classical/jazz mix that also involved a bit of theater. The opening sequence featured accordionist Ida Lovli Hidle, who dressed in old fashioned clothing, wandered up to the stage where she met up with the chicly clad Ensemble Allegria. Admonishing words were pantomimed between the lead violinist and the accordionist and the light tune she had been playing turned self-conscious and fearful. Riffing off the clash between the orchestra and soloist, they engaged in a captivating give and take. The rich interplay grew tenser and tenser and the orchestra began verbalizing. Then, they whispered harshly "Do you think you can just come in for free?" Then, hitting a musical stride, the tone turned darker, and they said "go away!" It was hard to not hear it without thinking about the current sentiments in Europe about migrants and refugees. The irony of course is how incredibly lovely the music that they made together in this turbulent dance.

Erlend Apneseth Trio
Photo: Ron Jansen
As the group started on their next piece, I made my way to the modern concert/movie hall a little further over the hill, to see the Erlend Apneseth Trio. Apneseth plays the Hardanger fiddle, a traditional Norwegian instrument with 8 or 9 strings - four playable strings like a violin and the others sympathetic ones vibrating below the fretboard. The trio, with guitar and drums, had reached a droning crescendo at the point in which I entered the hall, and carried these vibrations to a climax. With an array of acoustic instruments and a pile of electronics next to the guitarist, the group drew deeply on folk music but with obviously more modern rhythms and treatments to create mesmerizing songs. Charged with long repeating segments and exhilarating accelerations, the group played an exciting, but simultaneously, relaxing set. 

Jon Rune Strøm Quintet
Photo: Hans Christian Graaner
I followed this up with the Jon Run Strøm Quintet at the Energimolla rock club set in a historic brick building at the very bottom of the valley, on the other side of the river. Bassist and group leader Strom writes catchy and quite rhythmic jazz that plays off traditional free jazz and hard bop, and is brought to life by trumpeter Thomas Johansson, saxophonist André Roligheten, second bassist Christian Meaas Svendsen, and drummer Andreas Wildhagen. All four players are deeply entwined in the Oslo music scene which hosts other high octane jazz groups like Cortex, Gard Nillsen's Acoustic Unit, and Friends & Neighbors (to name just a few!). The set opened with the two bassists playing kicking up a cloud of musical dust, while the horn players stood in between with eyes closed. The drums came in, one bass began a more tuneful bass-line and then, the sax with a theme that at times pushed the technical edges of the sax but never went totally over the top. The trumpet took over and with laser like focus pushed the band up to the next notch: the music was alive! The compositions are vehicles for the horns, and Strom’s rhythmic concepts allow for a great deal of freedom and invention but never leaving the 'tune' behind. This is true for the basses too, Svensen delivered a deep and sinewy accompaniment-free solo and then was joined by Strom for a tasty contrast of styles, which finally wrapped seamlessly back into the group. Check out their recent Clean Feed recording here.


En Corps
Photo: Morten Kolve
The last concert I attended was on my highly anticipated list - no, not Sting and Shaggy who were playing up by the church, but rather En Corps, with pianist Eve Risser, double bass player Benjamin Duboc, and drummer Edward Perraud. The piano trio lit up the end of year lists on the blog back in 2012 and only followed up in 2017 with their second album. Risser just released a duo album with pianist Kaja Draksler and a tremendous large ensemble album White Desert Orchestra two years ago. The group began by playing with expectations - a quiet rattle from the prepared piano, gentle droning notes from the bass, and a splash of high-hat. As the music picked up not a sound or note was out of place, be it a scape of the drum or pluck of a muted piano string, each carried the music a bit further with purpose and poise. When the change came, the stage had been set, and it came as a sweet surprise: fleshier chords, thicker bass lines, and the percussion switched from a pulse to a rhythm. The repetitive piano figures were interspersed with intricate passages and the group soon became a tightly controlled tornado of sound. The climax came over an hour into the long arc of the piece, after an intense drum solo and an ecstatic piano pressing again and again on a chord until it was bouncing off the brick walls and low ceiling of the Smeltehytta.



FRIDAY, July 6 

Scheen Jazzorkester & Thomas Johansson
Photo: Odd Eirik Skjolde
At 2 p.m. the 12 members of the Scheen Jazz Orchestra, led by trumpeter Thomas Johansson, filled the deep stage of the Energimolla. The first blast of the band announced the bombastic anthem which they would return to again later. It quickly changed into a driving groove and a core piano, bass, drum and guitar (Even Helte Hermansen of Bushman's Revenge bringing some of the power!) Johansson was stationed towards the side, directing the band, and signaling the return to the theme which rose in energy each time it came around. They broke into a freer section featuring an out solo by the alto saxophonist. Then Johansson and the tenor saxophonist engaged in some free playing, bouncing sounds off of each other, picking up on each other’s ideas. Other textures came into play as well, a flute during a reflective moment, a piano led small group interlude, all adding to the shifting tonal pallet. The packed house burst into applause at the end and as the band began an encore song.


Chick Corea Acoustic Band
Photo: Birgit Fostervold @knipselyst
After a quick bit of trumpeter Mazen Kerbaj and drummer (and one of the festival organizers) Stale Liavik Solberg performing at a small art gallery nearby (I was only able to catch the final moment of their performance), I checked out the Chick Corea Akoustic Band performing in the large Kongsberg Musikkteater. I owe a lot to Corea, in fact one of my first CDs that I ever owned was Romantic Warrior from Return to Forever, bought used at Pier Platters in Hoboken, NJ. I was malleable enough to dig the baroque fusion and it led me to Corea's first Akoustic Band album. The group, Corea, bassist John Patitucci and drummer Dave Weckl began with 'Morning Sprite' off their eponymous album. A highlight was Corea’s tune 'Life Line', which featured the angular melody and exciting syncopations he is known for. However, it was Pattitucci's bass solos that had the audience erupting into applause each time. I had hoped to catch the festival's featured artist Marius Neset sitting in Corea. Neset has been described as " reinvigorating the post-70s fusion ‘big tenor’ tradition of Michael Brecker, Chris Potter and Jan Garbarek", and I could imagine it being a nice match. However, things were piling up and I was eager to get on to the next event.

Saeringfest

The Saeringfest, back in the Smeltehytta, was the center piece (for me) of the Kongsberg Jazz Meeting part of the festival, perfectly programmed for adventurous listeners. Drummers Solberg and Paal Nilssen-Love - whom also curate the Blow Out! festival in Oslo in August, booked this festival within the festival, and themselves book-ended the venturesome performances. The care and thought behind this series was evident from the line up to the sequence to the setting. In the dark, medieval-feeling setting of the old smelter.

Pascal Niggenkemper (b), John Butcher (s), Agnes Hvizdalek (v), Joe McPhee (t/s), Stale Liavik Solberg (d, not in pic)
Photo: Mats Even Omberg
Opening the event was a quintet consisting of vocalist Agnes Hvizdalek, trumpeter/saxophonist Joe McPhee, bassist Pascal Niggenkemper, saxophonist John Butcher, and Solberg. Hvizdalek began with an array of sounds from click and chirps sounding like her own language, as the others filled in behind. Butcher made the first move away from the groups’ collective churn, playing a series of overtones while answering in his own dialect. McPhee then took over with a spirited passage on trumpet and saxophone, alternating between melodic lines, overblown sax, and the occasional vocal outburst. The vocal solo was the most unusual collection of pops and clicks, and was a good match for Solberg who peppered his playing with scrapes and slides in response, and Niggenkemper, with his trademark lamp shades, provided both bass and buzz to the underlying sound. The music was a beautifully connected collective effort, together spinning an unusual world of sound.

Randy Peterson, Mat Maneri
Next up was the duo of violist Mat Maneri and percussionist Randy Peterson - a collaboration with a long history which showed throughout their strong performance. Maneri played deeply engaging melodies and Peterson pushed and prodded the violist. Moments of quiet inflection befit the spare instrumentation, but they also filled the room with a booming intensity. The flow of ideas was non-stop with Maneri dramatically using double stops and sonorous legato notes. However, it was a solo by Peterson that was the highlight of the set – so inspired that the audience burst out in such appreciative applause that the musicians just stopped, nothing more needed to be said.


Kaja Drakler and Susana Santos Silva
Following the energetic arc of Maneri and Peterson came the piano and trumpet duo of Kaja Drakler and Susana Santos Silva. The duo released 'This Love' on Clean Feed a few years ago and their connection as a duo was as intense as the previous one, but expressed differently. Drakler's prepared piano provided a vibrating underlayment to Silva’s microtonal explorations, creating together an ethereal atmosphere. Together, they seemed to be looking inward and listening closely to each other. The pianist struck a delicate balance between notes and prepared sounds, and Santos responded lithely. A blast of extended technique followed, a rumble of the piano’s lower end and shaping of the strings along with fuzzy blasts from the trumpet came together in an fervent union.

Arashi: Paal Nilssen-Love, Johan Berthling, and Akira Sakata
The last group was Arashi, the turbulent trifecta of saxophonist Akira Sakata, bassist Johan Berthling, and drummer Paal Nilssen-Love. The group’s name means “Storm” in Japanese and they lived up to it wholeheartedly starting with a blast of sound that could have been mistaken for the historic smelter firing up. It was classic free jazz brimming with technique and passion. PnL was a precise percussion machine, giving the group its throbbing pulse. However, the duo of Berthling and Sakata could have held their own. Sakata saxophone played with a mixture of passion and technique (a mix of Brotzmann and Vandermark) in an interrupted flow (like Irabagon), while tearing at the instruments seams. His clarinet playing revealed a more introspective side, just as expressive, though a bit gentler. At one point, Sakata turned in a vocal performance, throat singing nonetheless and then deep growling words in Japanese, that was at once startling and perfectly organic. The group’s control was impressive, and their ability to dial it in and turn it up gave the show a dramatic flourish the encapsulated a thoroughly engrossing evening of music.

Leaving the hall into the light Norwegian night, the famous opening rift to Ah-Ha’s “Take Me On” wafted over the streets and, though I had had enough sound for the day, I still wandered over to the Energimolla for a musical night cap by the energetic "Afrobeat, Ethio-jazz and big band funk" fun of the Goran Kajfes Subtropic Orchestra.


SATURDAY, July 7

I awoke Saturday looking forward to the trio of the legendary pianist Bobo Stetson and drummer Jon Christensen, with the soon to be legendary Fredrik Ljungkvist (I’m basically ripping this description from the program notes). Again at the Energimolla, I made sure to get to the club a bit early to get one of the coveted barstools on the upper level, and sat with two long-term Kongsberg Jazz Festival attendees from Tromso. Chatting a bit, they told me about older festivals and how this one had grown so much over the years. Our conversation soon turned to what we’ve been listening to, rare record finds, and up and coming musicians we’re excited about. Avant-garde music, the universal language on unity.

Bobo Stenson, Jon Christensen, Fredrik Ljungkvist
Photo: Birgit Fostervold @knipselyst
Stetson's trio began with slow and spaciously with flowing runs and pointed notes. Ljungkvist's playing was energetic but restrained, you could feel the potential energy behind it as he pushed at the light structures being floated by the pianist. Christensen's spare clatter against the drum’s rims, along with the cymbal splashes added color but also hinted at a greater force to come. After the first minor flare up, Ljungkvist switched to clarinet, and the woodsy sound melded nicely with the with piano and drums. The music took on a classical bend, delicate an assured, each note meant to savored and enjoyed. The pianist and reed player bounced off each other as Christensen's drumming provided a running commentary. They segued into a bluesy tune that moved at torch ballad speed, and Stetson found some Monk-ish voicings to offer. An energetic tune followed, with strongly articulated angular lines from the saxophone and fierce block chords from the piano. The dry spare sound of the group veered between the romantic and adventurous always with thoughtful motion and grace. A rather perfect start to the day of music.

Avanthagen: Oslo 15 & Sofia Jernberg
Photo: Magnus Stivi
Next, I made my way back to the site of last night's Saeringfest and took a seat for a series of performances that could in a sense be considered an encore to the previous night, even reprising some of the musicians. First up was Avanthagen: Oslo 15 & Sofia Jernberg. The all vocal group gave me pause, at first, as I am not the most amendable to vocal improvised music, however the presence of Jernberg, whose work with the Fire! Orchestra and some other groups over the years has impressed me. The group began with a weary sounding "ahh", followed by chirps, guttural moans, and a buzzing like a hive of bees. My curiosity was piqued and defenses lowered. They proceeded with an evolving set of sounds, seemingly led by certain unusual sounds, which I attributed to Jernberg. There was some sort of use of an iPad as well, perhaps guiding the musicians to act together, creating sounds and passages along varied tonal themes. Individual voices would rise above the group, sometimes conveying strife, consonances, and sometimes just weirdly alien sounds. I overcame quickly my original prejudice, and enjoyed this effecting and engaging performance. 

Mazen Kerbaj
Photo: Magnus Stivi
Lebanese trumpeter Mazen Kerbaj, of the "A" Trio, came up next with his instrument and a table full of accessories - like plastic tubing, lids, and little rattly things. His prepared trumpet consisted of, at first, attaching the long tube between the trumpet and a saxophone mouthpiece. Placing the lid above the horn's bell, which sat upright on his lap, he began blowing into the tube. More like an industrial era engine than an instrument, the sound was a mechanical whir that he kept adding more to, as he slowly manipulated the sound through the intensity of the air pressure. His Rube Goldberg approach to the trumpet was visually captivating, as its operation was magical, and sonically unusual. 

John Butcher and Akira Sakata
Rounding out the short series was a duo of woodwind players John Butcher and Akira Sakata. At the previous night's mini-fest, they both played contrasting shows, Butcher probing and Sakata fiery. Meeting up here, their two distinct styles came together well. Starting out quietly, they soon reached an assured middle ground. With Butcher on tenor and Sakata on alto, they moved through rapid scales, flirted with extended techniques, and blurred notes together. Moments of swirling saxophonics were hypnotizing - and when the pitch really rose - demanding. At one point, Sakata took out a small bell, and with throat-singing and an idiosyncratic language of sounds, gave Butcher a unique challenge to respond to on his soprano sax. They ended as they began, Butcher on tenor, Sakata on Alto, confidently twisting about each other, looping over, under, and through each other’s musical threads.

Tanaka, Lea, Strønen
Photo: Christian Haukeli
The evening's concerts began with the trio of drummer Thomas Strønen, pianist Ayumi Tanaka, and saxophonist Marthe Lea. The delicately expressive group played fittingly against a huge floor to ceiling windows looking out on what could be an ECM album cover - if you took away the ubiquitous construction crane in the middle of the frame. They began with a minimal repetitive figure under floating chords, gentle notes from the sax, and a guiding pulse from the drums. Suddenly, they built up to a fast peak, then, they let it go. Strønen's drumming, on a kit extended with a giant concert bass drum, is an expressive and reliable well of inspiration. He guided the group suggestively from his seat, while Tanaka's approach on the piano seemed to gentle extract the notes from the keyboard, rather than percussively striking them. Lea's tone on the saxophone was strong and a perfect complement to the crystalline tension between Tanaka and Strønen. Lea's restlessness on stage had a little bit of a distracting effect however, walking around when not playing sax, she struck strings within the piano, and tossed percussion elements around stage, which seemed a bit extraneous. Regardless, just the opening moments of this young trio’s music was enough to soothe any fears about a next generation carrying forth the cool "Nordic Sound", their gentleness, quiet urgency, and reserved storminess demonstrated the music is in good hands. 

Marius Neset Trio (not in pic)
Photo: Svein Bjørnsen
One of the feature concerts was artist in residence saxophonist Marius Naset's trio with guitarist Lionel Loueke and cellist Svante Henryson, which was held in what amounted to a steel cage inside the town's mid-century circular movie house (which has probably been replaced by the gorgeous new movie theaters across town where I caught a screening of the John Abercrombie documentary "Open Land" - a must see for appreciators of the late guitarist). Playing Naset's compositions, the music was a mixture of classical, jazz, and folk - with a strong strain of Americana emanating primarily from Henryson but also reflected in some of Loueke's voicings and skeletal chord choices. The guitarist also vocalized behind his guitar lines. Naset wove delicately behind and before the strings, sometimes shadowing the chord melodies, and other times soaring over them. The music was convincingly modern with its syncopations and occasional rock-like passages, but at the same time folkish in it directness and earthiness. A short solo piece from the cellist, steeped in American folk and bluegrass, with counterpoint, double stops, and a finger picked like melody, was jaw dropping. The groups smooth transitions obliterated the stylistic boundaries but at the same time, their virtuosity never obscured their music.

Christian Wallumrod and Madga Mayas
Photo: Magnus Stivi
Back at the smelter, pianist Magda Mayas and electronics wizard Christian Wallumrod were refining the air around them. Mayas plucked at the strings in the piano while Wallumrod produced dark electronic noises. There was no hard delineation between the acoustics and electronics, it all blended into a steaming ingot of sound. Mayas moved from the piano to the Clavinet, however the overall effect of their efforts was to stay the course, with a rhythm established by the electro-acoustic pulsations and the unconventional extracting of sounds from their instruments.

Like the night before, the day ended at the Energiemolla, this time with violinist Ola Kvenberg’s energetic show the was a cross between a jam band, virtuosic prog rock, and early fusion. A perfect ending to a musically adventurous and exhausting festival.

It’s worth noting that a festival like Kongsberg does not spring forth from nowhere. Aside from it's long history (it's been held every year since 1964), behind the scenes, and making the scene, is a strong network of government offices, schools, and private organizations dedicated to supporting the arts and the artists. In a time of ever increasing hostility to the arts, especially in the US, it's important to take note of what Norway is doing. I won't profess to understand it all perfectly, but essentially there is a strong network of regional "Jazzsenters" with some government funding helping to organize and support jazz musicians and groups and which are a driving force in the Norwegian jazz scene. Speaking of which, the club "Nasjonal Jazzscene" in Oslo too plays an important part in giving musicians a high profile venue to perform.

There is a lot to admire about people making a concerted effort to support music, and the ones who dedicate their lives to making it, and a festival like the Kongsberg Jazz Festival and its Kongsberg Jazz Meeting component is but the tip of an iceberg.

Monday, April 7, 2025

Uplifting Music for the Current Turbulent Times

By Eyal Hareuveni

Just when you think that there is little hope as the world is being dominated by demented, authoritative rulers with reptilian tendencies, three European bands (with one American), equipped by decades-long experience of the Dutch The Ex, may convince you that resistance is the best defense, in music, in lyrics, in thought and action.

Paal Nilssen-Love Circus with The Ex Guitars - Turn Thy Loose (PNL, 2025)

This is a match made in heaven. Norwegian Paal Nilssen-Love Circus - vocalist-dancer Juliana Venter, trumpeter Thomas Johansson, alto sax player Signe Emmeluth, accordionist Kalle Moberg, bassist Christian Meaas Svendsen and Nilssen-Love on drums, cymbals and gongs - released its debut album Pairs of Three (PNL, 2022) and suggested an ecstatic mix of rhythms and melodies from the Northeast part of Brazil and Ethiopia juxtaposed jazz and free improvisation. But Nilssen-Love wanted to shake up its pre-arranged sets. And there is no better choice for such a mission than The Ex guitarists - Terrie Hessels (aka Terrie Ex, who recorded three duo albums with Nilssen-Love), Andy Moor (who with Terrie Ex, Ken Vandermark and Nilssen-Love are the Lean Left quartet) and Arnold de Boer.

Turn Thy Loose was recorded live at Amsterdam’s Bimhuis in February 2024. The ecstatic outcome affirms that Nilssen-Love instincts were right on spot. Nilssen-Love had only one rule: anyone can play - or fuck -any part of any song at any time, and play as free as possible. I was fortunate enough to experience this uplifting, manic clash of sounds at the Music Unlimited festival in Wels, Austria, last November, but unfortunately there will only be a few opportunities to experience this massive rhythmic beast in the near future.

Almost immediately, you feel that you are part of a wonderful treat. The music moves all over the place, and the musicians never have a grasp of what awaits around the next corner. The Ex Guitars introduce a raw, punkish edge to Nilssen-Love's irresistible rhythmic patterns and Circus’ eclectic, colorful celebration of sounds. One moment you may dream on the sensual melodies of Brazilian Nazaré da Mata, on the next one you will jump and scream the stupid lyrics of obscure Scottish punk band The Stretchheads’ “I should be so Lucky”; you may blush by Venter’s seductive lyrics of Circus live favorite, the cathartic “Pussy Pussy Cha Cha”, but will join her when she shouts “resistance is defence” (and most likely put thai piece on repeat as soon it is over); and make sure you crank up the volume on the band's new mosh pit dance piece, “Calls: Let They Free!”, calling for the freedom of Julian Assange, recommending Zulu’s Ubunto philosophy (sometimes translated as "I am because we are". Venter was born in South Africa), and remembering the late South African ant-apprtheid hero Steve Biko.

70 minutes of ecstatic, joyful noise by one of the greatest bands around.


Archer - Sudden Dusk (Aerophonic, 2025)

Sudden Dusk is the debut of the free improvising quartet Archer - guitarist Terrie Ex, Chicagoan sax hero Dave Rempis (on soprano, tenor and baritone saxes) and the Norwegian rhythm section of double bass player Jon Rune Strøm (who plays with Nilssen-Love in his Large Unit, and the Frode Gjerstad Trio) and drummer Tollef Østvan (who with Strøm also act as the rhythm section of Universal Indians with Joe McPhee, and Friends & Neighbors). Sudden Dusk was recorded during the second, American tour of Archer (following a tour in Norway in 2023) at Constellation in Chicago and The Sugar Maple in Milwaukee in April 2024.

Ex’ rhythmic urgency, his complete irreverence to form or narrative, coupled with a wild imagination and a Dadaist, provocative sense of humor, make him the wild card of any outfit, and especially of Archer, with his restless determination to deconstruct and dispose of improvisatory tropes. Rempis’ Brötzmann-like blasts of sound, his explorations of texture and timbre and broad sonic arsenal make him the perfect foil to match that of Ex. Strøm provides muscular bass lines while Østvang completes this powerful beast and pushes its interplay with great momentum.

The three pieces move seamlessly between unrestrained, manic energy where Ex and Rempis are busy in spiraling, tenacious dogfights, to surprisingly contemplative and soulful parts, where Archer investigates subtleties of tone and timbre. But as Rempis summarizes Sudden Dusk, it is “a carefully calibrated balance between the pent up energy of baited breath, and the slow release of a long exhale”.

The Ex - If Your Mirror Breaks (The Ex, 2025)

The Ex, like Nilssen-Love circus, is also a kind of dance band, and most likely you may find that it is almost impossible to keep your body or soul intact while listening to its new album If Your Mirror Breaks. The Ex just celebrated its 45th anniversary and matured beautifully from an angry punk band into an impossible-to-label, powerful quartet. The new album is released after seven long years since the last album, 27 Passports (Ex, 2018), but, fortunately, it finds the quartet - Hessels, Moor, de Boer and drummer-vocalist Katherina Bornefeld, recharged and in top form, ready for new adventures.

The album erupts like a collection of ten short-story songs that offer surrealist daydreams, calls to action, ominous warnings and bursts of vitality tapped into the pulse of time. The album is dedicated to the late Steve Albini (who recorded four albums of The Ex), and mastered by Bob Weston (who played with Albini in Shellac). The cover artwork is by Hessels’ partner, Emma Fischer.

Anyone who has experience The Ex, live or on record, will recognize immediately the buzzing, fierce and uncompromising riffs of Ex and Moor, the possessed vocal delivery of de Boer, and Bornefeld’s unique drumming with the distinct cowbell sound. If Your Mirror Breaks brings The Ex’ intoxicating, intense recipe to perfection. Guy Peters, The Ex’ biographer, is absolutely right when writing that this album is for the ages, as it “reflects the conflicting ideas and moods of its time, while pushing forward, convinced there’s always a more viable alternative around the corner”.

If Your Mirror Breaks begins with The Ex’ poetic take on Walt Whitman's “Beat! Beat! Drums!” poem from 1861, with the call: “Beat beat drums, before the judge / Beat beat drums, into the church”. It reflects the doubt and insecurity of the current distressful times (“Monday Song” and “Wheel”), but favors love (“The price of love is the price of life / And that's what people should realise” in “The Evidence”, inspired by the documentary film Meeting the Man: James Baldwin in Paris) and passionate compassion ( Bornefeld sings “New life force unfolds for those who flow / with the song of their souls. Always” in “Wheel”). It ends with the joyful thrust of “Great!”, and instantly becomes part of your daily musical diet.

See more here: https://youtu.be/dnF9WV5F8ns?si=2IwZZygUeClweldQ

Sunday, May 9, 2021

Jonas Cambien Trio - Nature Hath Painted The Body (Clean Feed, 2021) ****



Belgian-born, Oslo-based pianist Jonas Cambien chose a quote from the 1653 book The Compleat Angler by Izaak Walton for the title of the third studio album of his trio. This illustrated book celebrated the art and the spirit of fishing in prose and verse. You can equate the aesthetics of Jonas Cambien Trio to the experience of fishing. This trio is not interested in capturing heavy, well-crafted textures but is focused on the experience itself of music-making, stressing that nothing is out, nothing is prohibited, and that the music goes everywhere, unpolished, challenging and surprising. Like fishing, music-making is a means for exploration of your art and yourself as a creative artist (and, obviously, as an attentive listener).

Cambien also chose perfect partners for his musical journeys. André Roligheten, who plays the soprano and tenor saxes and the bass clarinet, plays in drummer Gard Nilssen’s Acoustic Unity and Supersonic Orchestra, Friends & Neighbors quintet, the duo Albatrosh and sax player Eirik Hegdal’s Team Hegdal. Drummer Andreas Wildhagen plays in fellow drummer Paal Nilssen-Love’s Large Unit, Lana Trio and in various Nakama’s musicians cooperative-label projects. Both played on the previous albums of the Trio, all released by Clean Feed. Cambien plays also the soprano sax on one piece and the organ on another two pieces.

Cambien composed all the pieces but his compositions are simple and suggestive baits for collective trio improvisations. The trio, in its turn, never repeats itself and searches for new modes of conversational, open and playful dynamics, improvisation strategies and moods. The trio plays - literally - as it deconstructs and reconstructs Ornette Coleman’s harmolodics motives on “1 000 000 Happy Locusts” and experiments with a repetitive, rhythmic theme on “Herrieschoppers”. Cambien and Roligheten soprano sax duet on “Hypnos” offers an abstraction of imaginary whirling dervishes dance and serves as an introduction for “Mantis”, where the Trio dives deeper into an irresistible, mysterious trance-like dance “The Origins of Tool Use” is an open improvisation with Cambien playing prepared piano and organ, and the following “Bushfire” employs a repetitive theme in search of an introspective interplay. “Freeze” alternates between the chamber, sparse segments that rely on extended techniques of all three musicians, and sudden and powerful outbursts. Roligheten adds Mediterranean veins into the stubborn ostinato of “Yoyo Helmut”. The last piece is a twisted but emotional ballad, articulated beautifully by Cambien on the piano and organ, and subverted cleverly by Roligheten’s exploration of extended breathing techniques and Wildhagen’s sparse, mechanical drumming.

Nature hath painted the body of the fish with whitish, blackish, brownish spots, according to Walton. Jonas Cambien Trio’s fishing-like journey is colored with fresh, brilliant intuitive and almost telepathic dynamics.


Monday, July 4, 2016

And Nilssen-Love Connects All

Frode Gjerstad Trio - Steam in the Casa (PNL, 2016) ****



The trio of Norwegian free jazz and free improvisation pioneer, reeds player Frode Gjerstad, has been working steadily since 1999, touring annually and documenting its work mainly through live recordings from its many tours around the globe. Steam in the Casa is a live recording from the Casa Del Popolo club in Montreal, Canada, captured on November 2015. The trio features Nilssen-Love, a founding member of the trio, and double bass player Jon Rune Strøm, who joined the trio in 2011 and also plays in Nilssen-Love Large Unit.

Gjerstad explains that trio was indeed “pretty much steaming” in the night of the recording. Gjerstad was mad that Air Canada that almost wrecked his old Martin alto sax, making it so he could not get “a strong sound out” or play the three lowest notes. Nevertheless, Gjerstad decided to play this instrument. “That gave me an extra push, I guess: I really wanted to show to myself that the Martin is good even when it’s crippled! I love the sound in that horn!”

The trio sounds super hot and in top form despite the sax incident, exploding with irresistible energy and tight interplay where Nilssen-Love and Strøm keeps pushing Gjerstad with fast-shifting rhythmic dynamics. Gjerstad can take any rhythmic idea and expand it into a structured road map that will challenge the eager Nilssen-Love and Strøm to follow, always taking chances, spicing the dense and tight interplay with a clever sense of humor. Just listen to pieces as “Stranger in a Common Place”,  the longest “Dodging Borders” or the surprisingly quiet and peaceful “Wobbly Rails” and you will be convinced that this is one of the best working groups around, and no doubt, you will fall in love with the sound of that crippled Marin sax.


Thomas Johansson / Øyvind Storesund / Paal Nilssen-Love - Revolution Before Lunch (Tammtz Records, 2016) ****


This ad-hoc Norwegian trio was formed by trumpeter Thomas Johansson in 2015 as a part of his Master's Degree at The Norwegian Academy of Music. It features the original rhythm section of Gjerstad Trio, Nilssen-Love and double bass player Øyvind Storesund. Johansson plays in Nilssen-Love Large Unit and in other modern jazz outfits as Cortex, All Included, and Friends & Neighbors.

This trio was recorded at the Nasjonal Jazzscene Victoria club in Oslo on February 2015, and the recording is the debut one of Johansson newly-founded Tammtz label. Johansson is a charismatic musician with a strong sound of his own, assured, round and full, flowing with arresting ideas. The rhythm section of Nilssen-Love and Storesund keeps him on his toes, forcing him to adjust his ideas into the urgent, propulsive rhythm section that keeps shifting its rhythmic dynamics. Nilssen-Love and Storesund sound as a telepathic, inseparable unit, but wisely leaving enough space for Johanssen to deliver his commanding solos.

The first two pieces, the propulsive “Close As Hail” and the more moderate “Pouch Of Skin”, sound as an introduction to the 26-minutes tour-de-force of “Incomprehensible Beats”. After Johansson adapted himself to the immediate, shifting dynamics of Nilssen-Love and Storesund, these two experienced improvisers push Johansson even further, opening and varying the rhythmic envelope constantly, coloring his extended breathing techniques and some of his most lyrical playing with great imagination and detail. Johansson meets this challenge with remarkable success, claiming his status as a leader to reckon with in the rich legacy of fiery, free jazz meets free improvised trio format.