Every journey to the Festival Music Unlimited feels like a meeting with many known and unknown siblings from an ancestral mother, or taking part in what the editor of the Austrian FreiStil, Felix Fellinger, called “soziales Gesamtkunstwerk” (a term used by composer Richard Wagner and literally means total or ideal work of art, but adding to it the social aroma).
The sold-out 39th edition of the Unlimited Music Festival was the most international to date, featuring more than 60 musicians from 24 countries and all five continents, who performed 19 concerts. Many musicians and members of the audience were returning visitors, putting their trust in the festival's artistic choices and the new musicians who would play in the festival for the first time. And, as in every year, the festival offered many opportunities to meet and talk with the musicians during its three days, in the festival’s restaurant and the beautiful photo exhibition of Italian photographer Luciano Rossetti.
First Day, Nov. 8
The opening performance was by the Vienna Improvisers Orchestra (VIO), founded and led by saxophonist and artistic director Michael Fischer. The VIO, in its changing lineups, is dedicated to the art of conducted instant composition, a form of structured, real-time composition based on Fischer’s hand-signal system in which the distinction between the conducted cues and the improvised blurs. The 15-member VIO was divided into string, reed and brass, and vocal sections, and the most adventurous section, comprised of Bernhard Loibner on modular synths, Wolfgang Fuchs on turntables, and drummer Didi Kern. Fischer gave a lot a freedom to the musicians and maintained a fragile balance between the eccentric female vocalists - Nika Zach, Isabell Kargl, and Claudia Cervenca, the wild, driving force of Loibner, Fuchs, and Kern, and the more structured improvisations of the string, brass and reed sections, while injecting a sharp sense of irony.
American, Amsterdam-based drummer-percussionist Frank Rosaly followed with a solo set, Bimini, that traces his Puerto-Rican ancestral roots, with a unique drum-set of two bass drums, two gongs, two snare drums, two cowbells, and more percussive instruments. This powerful, spiritual set was informed by the traditions of the indigenous Caribbean Taíno and was performed in almost total darkness. This timeless trance-like ritual calibrated Rosaly and the audience into a collective, compassionate frequency, but also explored Rosaly’s own questions of identity and larger, more pressing issues of decolonization, in the Caribbean and elsewhere.
The pan-European, multi-generational quartet Turquoise Dream - Polish, Amsterdam-based pianist Marta Warelis, Swedish cellist Helena Espavall, Portuguese veteran violinist Carlos Zingaro, and guitarist Marcelo dos Reis - released only one album (JACC, 2021), and have not played together much since then. The performance provided a unique opportunity to experience the deep listening, spontaneous conversations of these distinct improvisers, sketching and deconstructing loose textures with an organic, poetic interplay, grace, and elegance, and, obviously, enjoy the wisdom and imagination in every touch of Zingaro.
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| Elisabeth Harnik & Camila Nebbia |
The night ended with New Quintet assembled in the last minute, after a cancellation - American trombonist Jeb Bishop, Argentinian tenor sax player Camila Nebbia, Austrian pianist Elisabeth Harnik, Brazilian double bass player Vinicius Cajado, and fellow Austrian drummer Didi Kern (who plays with Harnik in the DEK trio with Ken Vandermark). This first-ever, free improvised performance stressed a reserved, often too respectful interplay, and focused on patient, collective improvisations, with enough space for individual aolos, with Bishop steering the intense commotion with his quiet, commanding presence.
Second Day, Nov. 9
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| Akira Sakata |
JeJaWeDa
The evening performance began with the JeJaWeDa - the initials of American trombonist Jeb Bishop, Dutch vocal artist Jaap Blonk, and fellow Americans drummer Weasel Walter, and double bass player Damon Smith - a kind of super-group that collides eruptive free jazz explosions and dadaist, absurdist sonic experiments, and already released two albums (Pioneer Works Vol. 1 & 2, on Smith’s Balance Point Acoustics, 2019), and stopped at the festival during its European tour. It was a wild, intense set where Blonk provided theatrical, eccentric texts in expressive gibberish and toy electronics, Smith was all over the double bass with multiple bows and assorted objects, and Walter banged his head with the cymbals, drummed while lying on the ground, stood on the drum stool and shouted on all, and often ran across the stage. Throughout this manic mayhem, Bishop kept his commanding calm and charged it with some reason and direction. In one instance, he stood closely to Blonk, listened carefully to another absurdist complaint of Blonk, and instantly transformed it into an inspired theme.
The quartet Plüsch - Argentinian tenor sax players Ada Rave and Camila Nebbia, Polish pianist Marta Warelis, and German drummer Christian Lillinger - has not released an album yet, but it already sounds like a working band. This quartet’s dynamics contrasted Lillinger’s hyperactive drumming on an extended drumset with Rave, Nebbia, and Warelis’ more patient, multifaceted play of structuring and deconstructing of form, melody, and pulse, and adventurous timbral explorations, but suggested a challenging kind of complementary interplay.
The new trio Endless Breakfast - American violinist Gabby Fluke-Mogul, Brazilian, Berlin-based drummer Mariá Portugal (who will curate the next edition of the Unlimited festival), and Argentinian-Swiss cellist Paula Sanchez - was formed backstage at the Unlimited festival, and its performance there was part of a European tour. This trio has not released an album yet, but already shaped its idiosyncratic, imaginative form of collective and vibrant free improvisation, comprised of vulnerable, poetic soundscapes, often furious ones (and fluke-mogul reminded the audience of the importance of resistance), but most of the time, introspective, fragile ones, fully possessed at the art of the moment, and offering a highly immersive, illuminating listening experience.
Akira Sakata returned to the stage with his working trio Chikamorachi - double bass player Darin Gray and drummer Chris Corsano - that has been working since 2005, as the core trio or as an extended ensemble with such improvisers as Jim O’Rourke, Masami Akita (aka Merzbow), Keiji Haino, Michiyo Yagi, and Yōsuke Yamashita. Gray and Corsano offered a propulsive, attentive support to the mostly lyrical, commanding performance of Sakata, which was highlighted with a highly emotional delivery of an anti-war song mourning the ones who are lost.
The evening ended with Chicagoan sax hero Dave Rempis’ new quartet Archer - Rempis on alto sax, Dutch guitarist Terrie Hessels (of The Ex), and the rhythm section of Norwegian double bass player Jon Rune Strøm and drummer Tollef Østvang (who are also the rhythm section of the Friend and Neighbors quintet and the Universal Indians trio). The quartet released its debut album Sudden Dusk (on Rempis’ Aerophonic label), and was in the middle of a European tour. Its set was intense and powerful, with Rempis and Strøm kept pushing forward, most of the time in muscular free jazz power, speed, and intensity, while Østvang intervened with sharp, explosive but concise contributions, and Hessels challenged any attempt to form a linear narrative with imaginative, disruptive rhythmic guitar augmented with assorted abjects (including the box of famous Austrian chocolate-coated marshmallow treat called Schwedenbomben).
Third (and last) Day, Nov. 10
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| Sakina Abdou |
The evening performances began with the quartet Trapeze - tenor sax player Sakina Abdou, German trombonist Matthias Müller, drummer Peter Orins, and Swiss turntables wizard Joke Lanz. The quartet has released only one album (Level Crossing, Circum Disc, 2023), but already refined its chaotic, dadaistic dynamics, propelled by the hyperactive, inventive drumming and the constant supply of inventive cinematic, cartoonist quotes by Joke Lanz, both charging the music with a stimulating, subversive aroma, while Abdou and Müller keep this volatile commotion on solid but intense ground. At one point, when Joke Lanz sensed that Abdou and Müller refer to a jazz phrase, he immediately played and muataed a spoken-word quote from an album on the masters of jazz, mocking such reverent, respectful homages, and making his point by tossing this vinyl in the air.
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| Oren Ambarchi |
Next, Austrian pianist Ingrid Schmoliner (on prepared piano) and trumpeter and electronics player Alex Kranabetter presented their Drank project, which released its debut album earlier this year(Breath in Definition, Trost, 2025), with guests - drummer Lukas König and vocalist and electronics player Anja Plaschg (aka Soap&Skin). The stage was dark, and the music was based on repetitive, short motifs, woven into a layered, rich drone, enriched by hazy electronics, the processed sound of Kranabetter’s trumpeter, Plaschg’s suggestive voice, and König’s drums, and hypnotic grooves. It suggested an endless, Steve Reich-like swirling effect, but with a strong psychedelic effect.
The festival ended with a wild performance of the French trio Nout - Delphine Joussein on amplified flute, electric harp player Rafaëlle Rinaudo, and drummer Blanche Lafuente, who describe themselves as “the missing link between Nirvana and Sun Ra”, augmented by Gustafsson. The trio released its debut album last year (Live Album, Trost/Gigantonium, 2024), but until experiencing this trio live, it is hard to believe how much infectious, primal, and raw power this trio can produce, with Lafuente drumming as if she plays in a thrash metal band, Rinaudo uses her electric harp as an electric guitar and bass, and Joussein mutates her amplified flute sound with countless effects. Gustafsson integrated immediately and organically into these punkish tsunamis, and it sounded even better and happier when Akira Sakata and Johan Berthling joined for the encore.
The next, the 40th edition of the Unlimited festival, with Mariá Portugal as the curator, will be in Nov. 6-8, 2026. Keep it in your diaries.





















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