By Brian Earley
Sometimes I catch myself living a pathetic fallacy, finding parallels in
song development, timbre shifts, volume dimensions, or any element of sound
really, and feeling a correlation to the moment, whether social, emotional,
political or otherwise. And even though composer and saxophonist Amalie
Dahl uses evocative titles like “floating,” “slow motion,” and “in flux,”
amplitude and hertz themselves are not drifting and turning through the
morning headlines of suffering, rising fascism, and encroaching chaos. But
the world needs an image for longing, or at least I do, if I am going to
confront and make some sense out of the violence unfolding across the
globe. The world is in lurching flux, and Dahl’s latest work,
Dafnie EXTENDED, Live at Moldejazz from Sonic Transmission Records, meets the
moment, even if I know I am making it so out of personal necessity.
Amalie Dahl’s Dafnie is the active quintet of Norwegians Dahl (composition
and reeds), Oscar Andreas Haug (trumpet), Jørgen Bjelkerud (trombone),
Nicolas Leirtrø (bass) and Veslemøy Narvesen (drums). On the band’s two
earlier releases, 2022’s Dafnie and 2024’s
Står op med solen
, the music one moment voices itself small and intimate and then shifts
suddenly into dynamics that sound far larger, louder, and varied than they
should for only five instruments. According to EXTENDED’s press
release, in this new work “Dahl aims to expand and intensify the Dafnie
sound and create a larger, more powerful musical experience.” Dahl attempts
this by doubling the rhythm section and adding a total of seven new
musicians to the group: Sofia Salvo (baritone sax), Henriette Eilertsen
(flute and electronics), Ida Løvli Hidle (accordion), Lisa Ullén (piano),
Anna Ueland (synth), Ingebrigt Håker Flaten (double bass), and Trym Karlsen
(drums), and in doing so she creates a Dafnie big band that explodes
through my speakers out of the softest reverberations of sound.
Take, for instance, the third track on the album, “drifting_turning.” The
work opens with one bass quietly bowing harmonics over the other, but by
the 1:30 mark the basses produce perhaps the loudest and biggest bass sound
I have ever heard through scratches, bangs and extended techniques. Dahl’s
saxophone sneaks into the aural scape and begins to play a seemingly
improvised one-two-three melodic pattern. However, in a move characteristic
of this album as a whole, around 2:45 the band joins the saxophone and
varies the same melodic fragment. This parallel between improvisation and
composition is striking on this album, and nowhere is it more effective
than on this song. The band begins to grow in volume, see-sawing in unison
at a three and five note uneven melody until, at 4:50, the band absolutely
explodes, unleashing torrents of sound that burn the once hushed melody to
ash, out of which soars a solo of Anna Ueland’s synth electronics that
annihilates the sonic air around it while the double rhythm section crashes
underneath. At 6:15 the band begins to swing like the Ellington at Newport
musicians had fallen off their chairs all the while keeping the blues
going. The bass and percussion soon project forceful speed and the synth
soloist, accordion and horns, inspired to do the same, urge the sound into
the ether. But wait! The band again assembles itself into a kind of unison
that reveals preformed composition out of what had sounded like pure
improvisation until it climaxes at the 8:35 mark before simmering into its
closing wash of electronics.
This parallel of improvisation and composition is executed so seamlessly,
and with such organic precision, that this music rivals the best I have
ever heard. Part of me hates to shift into such hyperbolic phrasing, but I
feel I need to communicate just how good this album is, and, if I could
hear just one more experimental song in my life, it damn well might be
“drifting_turning.”
The album ends with a work titled “longing.” Here is where all of the
explosivesness I fallaciously find mirrored in the earlier works as
counterpart to the chaos and violence of our time manifests into an aching
form for hope. A bass solo evolves into one of the saddest snippets of
harmony and melody I can recall hearing, and when Dahl’s saxophone plays, I
know I am lying to myself, but I swear the solo here is the very image of
longing. It is the human internalization and expression of homesickness,
of a desire for better days. It is longing for peace, and it is a kind
peace itself, ultimately, that can be measured objectively in decibels. No
self-consuming despot could possibly carry out fascist power grabs if they
listened, really listened, to Oscar Andreas Haug’s trumpet solo or the
swinging and soaring band that plays alongside it.
The work, like all longing, remains unresolved, and stops at the 11:00
mark, leaving an appreciative crowd in silence before it too erupts into
its own dynamic shift of applause. So much intelligence is alive on this
album, but so much depth of feeling is present as well. The community of
musicians on Dafnie EXTENDED has lit a torch in the darkness
friends, and for me, this is the album of the year so far, and if there are
any other floating souls out there needing to give substance and form to
their ghosts, I urge you to listen to it.
Amalie Dahl’s Dafnie EXTENDED can be found at
https://amaliedahl.bandcamp.com/album/live-at-moldejazz







1 comments:
Excellent review for a really good album.
Post a Comment