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Earscratcher: Elisabeth Harnik, Tim Daisy, Dave Rempis, Fred Lonberg-Holm (l-r)

Offene Ohren, Munich, MUG- Münchner Untergrund im Einstein Kultur. March 2026. Photo Klaus Kitzinger

JeJaWeDa Quartet: Weasel Walter (dr), Jeb Bishop (tb, elec.), Damon Smith (b), Jaap Blonk (v, elec.)

Washington, DC, Rhizome DC, February 2026

Dan Weiss Quartet: Patricia Brennan (v), Dan Weiss (d), Miles Okazaki (g), Peter Evans (t)

Zig Zag Club, Berlin, February 2026

Soundscapes 48: Harri Sjöström (s), Jan Roder (b), Joel Grip (b), Frank Gratkowski (f)

Wolf & Galentz, Berlin, January 2026

Gush: Mats Gustafsson (ts), Stan Sandell (p), Raymond Strid (dr)

Schorndorf, Manufaktur, Germany, November 2025

Tuesday, March 24, 2026

Street Fight - Stoic Hardcore (Profound Whatever, 2026)

By Richard Blute 

The band Street Fight consists of Itta Nakamura on drums, João Clemente on guitar and Nuno Jesus on bass, and this band absolutely cranks. I’m tempted to leave this review at that and just tell the reader to go hit PLAY. You’ll understand quickly.

Their music is somehow very familiar and yet new and exciting. It’s the standard configuration of a power trio, electric guitar, electric bass and drums. Part of me was hoping they’d launch into some Disraeli Gears, and while that didn’t happen exactly, the trio did a fine job of demonstrating just how flexible this combination of instruments can be and how much great music it can produce.

The short track Iron Resolve is pure noise, sounding a bit like one of Sonic Youth’s heavier tunes. Equanimity is a great track, the bass and drums find a deep groove and settle into it. Feet were tapping listening to this one and Clemente’s guitar work here is really sharp.

The track Paradox Of Calm is, paradoxically, not calm at all. Clemente starts by playing some funky guitar lines straight out of Fear Of Music-era Talking Heads but then the guitar suddenly goes fuzzy and the tempo slows to some sludgy metal. This band obviously wants to surprise their listeners and keep them on their toes. With musicians this talented, the surprise is always a good one.

The centrepiece of the album is a 5-part suite called The Storm. In the first part (The Eye), Nakamura has switched from a standard drum kit to percussion and Jesus is playing an almost drone-like line. In the second part (The Eyewall), the bass is especially thumping as the funky tempo of earlier tracks returns, but now Clemente is playing some classic rock guitar, and the combination works just as well. In part 3 (Rainbands), Nakamura is showing off his skills (and they are many) with the track at first being largely an interaction between guitar and drums. But with part 4 (Uplift) the tempo and style change again. It might be the best track on the album. Bass and drums are once again locked into a groove and the guitar becomes more and more intense. Then Nakamura’s drumming really takes off and the whole suite builds to a startling conclusion.

This album is a fine example of a band finding the sweet spot between guitar rock and improvised music and exploring it for all it’s worth. It was also an introduction for me to the very cool Portuguese label Profound Whatever. I’ve been exploring their other offerings, in particular further collaborations between Nakamura and Clemente, and I predict I’ll be reviewing more of their music in the future.

Monday, March 23, 2026

Amalie Dahl’s Dafnie EXTENDED - Live at Moldejazz (Sonic Transmissions, 2026)



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 StÃ¥r 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 HÃ¥ker 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
 

Sunday, March 22, 2026

Dr. Jazz Talks interview with Bill Frisell

Saturday, March 21, 2026

Anne Efternøler, Maria Laurette Friis, Johanna Borchert - We Are. Profoundly. Predisposed. To Drowning (Relative Pitch, 2026)

By Fotis Nikolakopoulos

There isn’t a better description for this Scandinavian trio of women (yes, women only, even free improvisation is male-dominated, let’s not forget about it), than the one that opens the liner notes on bandcamp’s page for this CD: an ongoing conversation between the three musicians about, I will add, the vulgarities, atrocities, sonorities and small wonderful gestures of everyday life.

With a very basic instrumentation, just voices, a prepared piano, a trumpet, a flute and some small objects, the three musicians collaborate in creating a sonic environment about the human condition. Collective improvisation could be the key word to describe what happens on this CD, but the listener will find strong fragments of chamber music and small vignettes of miniscule sounds that delve and mingle like a radio playing randomly while you perform boring everyday chores.

As a listener I have been exposed, like so many of us I believe, to great recordings and musics with grandeur and big intentions. It’s the small gestures, the mini scales that nowadays I seek. This cd is exactly that. But, there needs to be an explanation here, not because this is not important music or just because it is just music to relax. Quite the contrary. The music the three musicians produce is precise, intense and urgent. It is also, maybe the most important of them all, so personal that immediately sets my alarm for greatness.

It is becoming normality but Relative Pitch has nailed it again, producing an album of profound beauty that defies categorization.

Listen here:


@koultouranafigo

Friday, March 20, 2026

John Butcher: Seasons and Dreams

By Stuart Broomer

John Butcher has been among the most creative figures in improvised music for several decades, during that time both maintained long-established partnerships and sought new possibilities, whether it’s a fresh ensemble or a different sonic environment. These two recent recordings present longstanding associations that continue to grow creatively.

John Butcher & Angharad Davies - Two Seasons (Weight of Wax, 2025) 

John Butcher and Angharad Davies have been playing in duet and other situations for many years, and there’s an essential chemistry at work in their music. This recent duo combines two extended works recorded in live performance in Berlin and a series of short pieces,”Granwyns”, recorded in a studio in Nottingham.

The opening work, “Hydref i”, might be the whole package, an intense 25-minute duo improvisation in which two high-pitched instruments – soprano saxophone and violin – are individually explored and countered, creating a tenuous universe of intense depth and mystery in which solo and duo passages strangely merge. With sufficiently close listening, one enters a microcosm of sounds overlapping and interacting. It is a world in which the concept of A440 is largely suspended, in which most tones deviate from the norm, with Davies frequently mining intervals that differ sufficiently in timbre to suggest two different instruments. The music is always active, always sustained, whether one or both musicians are playing. String and reed have never been closer. There are times when the lines exchange identities, often at very low volume, the grit of string, the vibrating air of the saxophone, twinning and separating. The saxophone can function as strained obbligato, the violin its eerie double. A careening passage, consuming the last few minutes, is so complex, intense and interwoven that it could never be composed or imagined – the essence of great collective improvisation.

The second piece from the Berlin concert, “Hydref ii”, is a brief work in close resonance, long tones abounding, Butcher’s hyper-resonant soprano activating the air, Davies’ high-pitched, bowed tones moving towards the silence of sonic eclipse. When its four-minute playing time is up, it feels like it is continuing, whether lending character to the air or merely anointing its continued presence.

“Granwyn i”, remarkably bright sounding, has a relatively provisional feel, attention riveted on the combination of room ambience and the interaction of overtones. “Granwyn ii” has the feel of a hurdy-gurdy, that ancient, resonant wail suggesting the character of a trance. “Granwyn iii” is air-drenched squall; “Granwyn iv” is densely compacted, each instrument occasionally coming to the fore; “Granwyn v” is the soul of somber sound, an interaction of reed harmonics and violin glissandi; “Granwyn vi” has an uncanny suggestion of oblique calypso; “Gwanwyn vii”, the last and most developed of the Nottingham pieces, is as astonishing as anything else here, an improvisers’ mind-meld in which the two musicians are constantly modulating their sounds, adjusting their volumes, pitches, air column or bow, harmonic spectra – creating a six-minute piece that manages to suggest the scale of the opening “Hydref i”. 

 

Last Dream of the Morning - Sharp Illusion (FSR, 2025) 

Last Dream of the Morning is a collective trio that includes two other essential figures in contemporary improvised music, bassist John Edwards and percussionist Mark Sanders. The group’s first CD appeared in 2017 with their current name as title; it became a band name with 2020’s Crucial Anatomy . Sharp Illusion continues a series that is required listening for anyone interested in the current state of free jazz or free music. I’d like to begin with a certain confession. I was struck a few times by the presence of extended clicking passages, certainly not the first I’d heard from Butcher but by Sanders as well. I knew I’d heard the techniques before, but here the affinity with certain South African click languages seemed particularly striking. I googled “John Butcher click languages” and was struck by the first result, a review of the trio’s first recording from 2017, then paired with another Butcher trio CD, The Open Secret with Gino Robair and Dieb 13, the latter including a track entitled “Last Morning of the Dream”. The review appeared in this journal on April 21, 2018, and, embarrassingly, was written by one Stuart Broomer. Why some respectable linguist/musicologist hasn’t pursued this line of inquiry is beyond me, but it’s both a busy and increasingly preoccupied world, however much all this might reflect on a positive and inter-penetrating – not to mention utopian – human future.

That instrumentation – “sax and rhythm” – will signal a certain tradition, a format employed by numerous musicians and one that has resulted in some of the masterpieces of jazz and/or improvised music (a problematical distinction in some quarters that doesn’t have to arise in the utopian space enjoyed here). This music will stand solidly on its own, but it might also stand comparison with a certain hierarchy. The foundational masterpieces for consideration include Sonny Rollins with Wilbur Ware and Elvin Jones (at the Village Vanguard), Lee Konitz with Sonny Dallas and Jones (Motion), Albert Ayler with Peacock and Murray ( Spiritual Unity or Prophecy ) or anything by Evan Parker with Barry Guy and Paul Lytton (say Imaginary Values ).

Like them, Sharp Illusion, a July 2024 performance recorded at the Cultural Centre in Lublin, Poland, is about the specific potential of its specific time, or perhaps already an anytime when anything might be possible. If Butcher can be celebrated for numerous innovative voices, more recently he frequently sounds declarative/authoritative in a traditional tenor saxophone voice. Meanwhile his partners here participate freely, often beyond traditional functions. The effect is a trio that occupies an exalted space, at once intimately entwined with free jazz and improvised music, at once alive to the tradition of the former and still expanding potential of the latter, a dialectic organized around both utopian form and a potential for a shared state of auditory grace.

The opening “Roof Rattle” is a continual, 13-minute, reshaping of auditory space, beginning in a trio passage of equal parts bending individual instrumental sounds into an eerie and supportive collective voice. Eventually distinctions come to the foreground, loosely linking arco bass and a miscellany of percussion that can suggest any number of non-musical implements. As it rolls along Butcher becomes more conventionally central to the collective narrative, sometimes assuming a “boss tenor” voice that might recall musicians like Yusef Lateef or Booker Ervin, all the time supported by arco bass grunts, swivels and high harmonics, and a percussive storm that willingly ventures well beyond the conventional, the whole giving way to an extended click dialogue that involves the entire trio to varying degrees..

Each of the other tracks represents comparatively subtle evolutions, reshapings and transformations, always redefining the roles and relationships of three musicians’ constantly evolving views of the individual potential of the collective music, whether it’s the 12-minute “Turning the Soil”, hive interior or rich earth; the rich play of the longest track, the 28-minute “Movable Bridge”, which shifts positions in the manner of the preceding pieces but with even further development; or the very brief “Afterglow”, which Butcher begins with a strange transformation to a convincing simulation of a trumpet voice before turning to an openly tenor saxophone voice as his partners join in, eventually ending with more forceful clicks.

Thursday, March 19, 2026

Evan Parker, Paul Rogers, Louis Moholo - Tebugo (Jazz In Britain, 2025)

By Stef Gijssels

This is truly a wonderful album, suddenly seeing the light of day, after having been in on an audio-cassette for some decades, and now available on CD and digital. It brings a trio improvisation of Evan Parker on tenor and soprano, Paul Rogers on bass and the late Louis Moholo on drums. Moholo passed away last year, so the release is also a timely tribute to the South African drummer, whose second name - Tebugo -has become the title of the album - and of one track. "Tebugo" means 'gratitude' or 'we are thankful' in Sesotho, one of South Africa's languages, which makes the title even more appropriate. 

The two other tracks play with the same letters to form different words. One track lasts a little less than half an hour, the next fifteen minutes and the third more than half an hour. The performance was recorded in 1992 at the Vortex in London. 

It is as good as it gets. The music feels expansive and crystalline—intense yet airy, razor-sharp and vividly defined. It crackles with energy, sparkles and whirls with motion, splashing and clattering in bright, tactile detail. Lively and bustling, it pulses with dynamic vitality, animated spirit, and a finely tuned sensitivity that keeps it fresh and sprightly throughout. 

This is free improvisation at its finest, with all three musicians performing at peak form. Rogers occasionally slips into boppish runs on the bass, but more often the music feels entirely present—unconcerned with direction or destination, existing simply for the shared act of creation. It lingers in the moment, shaped by collective intuition. The unfiltered joy of acoustic instruments resonates throughout, making it a genuine pleasure to experience.

Enjoy!

Listen and download from Bandcamp


Wednesday, March 18, 2026

Nicolas Leirtrø’s Action Now! - Entrance (Sauajazz, 2026)

By Eyal Hareuveni

Action Now!, the name of Norwegian double bass player (and guitarist) Nicolas Leirtrø's new power quartet, relates to The Thing’s Action Jazz album (Smalltown Supersound, 2006), which defined this form of Nordic high-energy free jazz. The debut, double album of Action Now!, Entrance, is another homage to Leirtrø’s hero, Mats Gustafsson, who has played in The Thing, and to the title of the second album of Gustafsson’s Fire! Orchestra, Enter (Rune Grammofon, 2014). Leirtrø himself has played in Gustafsson’s Hidros 9 Mirrors (Trost, 2023).

So it was only natural that Gustafsson would be part of the new Action Now! alongside British organist Kit Downes, and young, rising Norwegian drummer Veslemøy Narvesen, who plays with Leirtrø in Danish sax player Amalie Dahl’s Dafnie quintet and collaborated with him on her debut album, We Don’t Imagine Anymore. Leirtrø also plays in the local power trio I Like to Sleep (who toured with Gustafsson’s Fire! trio) and the Noize R Us quartet (with Dahl).

This cross-generational quartet does not attempt to resurrect the explosive, cathartic sonic storms of The Thing or the visionary, orchestral, and genre-binding journeys of the Fire! Orchestra, but to offer its own uncompromising take on 21st-century free jazz. It embraces slow processes in all aspects of creation and sets aside the constant, urgent search for cathartic climaxes. Leirtrø expressed this approach in his commanding, exploratory double bass solo, aptly titled “Basssolo”, which clearly owes much to the physical, totally possessed playing of Ingebrigt HÃ¥ker Flaten, co-founder of The Thing, and Downes does so in his “Organ Cycle” solo piece.

Action Now! sounds like a working band. Obviously, there are clear references to the hypnotic grooves and the infectious and transcendental riffs of Gustafsson’s Fire! Trio, when Gustafsson picks his baritone sax, as well as to the Afro-American late 1960’s and early 1970s spiritual free jazz with its repetitive motifs, intensified by Gustafsson’s flute playing (including the Swedish folk flute, spilÃ¥pipa) and with Downes’ spectral organ sounds. Only the last piece, “End Dance”, gravitates toward an uplifting, cathartic climax. But Action Now! relies on Leirtrø's visual concepts and graphic scores, setting the foundation for the eight improvisations (one of these graphic scores is seen on the album’s cover). The album was recorded in a two-day session at Øra Studio in Trondheim in May 2025 after a short tour.




Tuesday, March 17, 2026

@xcrswx – MOODBOARD (Feedback Moves, 2026)

By Fotis Nikolakopoulos

Almost three years ago, when reviewing the duo’s (@xcrswx is Crystabel Efemena Riley on human and drum skin with Seymour Wright on saxophone) 10’’ side, a spit 10’’ with Inga Copeland aka Lolina at the time, I was finding it very hard – even impossible as I commented - to rightfully describe the music. But that wasn’t an issue back then, it isn’t an issue now and, certainly, it mustn’t be an issue. Never.

On their first 12’’ album, again on the small, eclectic Feedback Moves, the duo goes on to continue exploring new, or maybe abandoned?, sonic territories. The sax and drums duo is the core, the basis one could comment but, or and, a point of departure as well. On MOODBOARD they use technology (be it analogue or digital) so that they can expand their sound towards any direction possible.

There is no way to differentiate when their sound is absolutely live, played at the moment (as easy this task can be with recorded audio) and when they have manipulated what you are listening. What @xcrswx seems to be achieving right now is a combination, a unification of the actual improvisational ethos of impromptu music, with the control over the finalized result that technology can achieve.

MOODBOARD has indeed a lot of ideas coming out from a 2023 residency in Brussels but those are just a part of the process. A process that incorporates the struggle of redefining the material, changing or shaping it, while playing live and adding the playing live ethos of improvisation –maybe of playing music in general.

I must be frank and honest that MOODBOARD is and certainly will be one of the most interesting and intriguing albums for 2026. I must listen to it so many more times in order to decide, if there’s such a need…, what exactly goes on there, how “good” it is and which of my mind’s small boxes are ticking when listening to it.

Listen for yourself:

@koultouranafigo

Sunday, March 15, 2026

Angles 11 Young Blood Transfusions

Watching a video of a band that should be listened to in a live situation is not always a good idea, yet the quality of the recording, the camera and the editing are truly superb. The band is Angles 11, the ensemble created by Martin Küchen and that has various line-ups from three members up to eleven, as on this recording. 

The band are Johan Berthling on double bass, Alex Zethson on Fender Rhodes, Juno 106, Mattias StÃ¥hl on vibraphone, soprano saxophone, Konrad Agnas on drums, Michaela Antalova on drums, Kjell Nordeson on drums, Susana Santos Silva on trumpet, Magnus Broo on trumpet, Josefin Runsteen on amplified violin, Eirik Hegdal on baritone- and alto saxophones, Martin Küchen on tenor- and soprano saxophones. 

The music was recorded in 2022 but released in July of 2025. The review of this album can be found here: "Tell Them It's The Sound of Freedom".


Saturday, March 14, 2026

Paula Sanchez - Pressure Sensitive (Relative Pitch, 2025)

By Hrayr Attarian

Cellist Paula Sanchez paints delightfully eerie and abstract soundscapes using unique tonalities that she spontaneously creates on the cello, enhanced electronics, and cellophane wrap.

Her solo release, Pressure Sensitive, is a six-part suite of improvised music that, at times, is solid and static, like a sculpture, while at others, it is dynamic and fluid, like a dance.

The first movement begins with an expectant drone, punctuated by the cellophane's cracks and susurrations. As the track progresses, the cello’s mournful lines grow anguished, becoming an otherworldly transmission with a mystical meaning. The ebb and flow of the music from cries to whispers is haunting and dramatic.

Meanwhile, “II” is a crystalline, rising sonic structure that bends and curves like a fantastical tree. The sheet rustles like leaves, and its pops are akin to raindrops. Cello’s bent notes hover over the background din like branches in the wind.

The fourth segment has the most cinematic mood. The cello’s melancholic calls rise into the silent pauses with a primal spirituality. Sanchez wraps her cello with cellophane, and her bow glides over the taut material, stimulating the strings underneath. At times, she uncovers her instrument, and the phrases she plays are melodic fragments influenced by the Western classical tradition. Modulating the tones of her instrument, she creates haunting echoes that further enhance the tune’s ambience.

The final segment “VI” is simultaneously meditative and dynamic. Moving from angular and agile con-arco refrains to restless creaking vamps, Sanchez constructs a darkly shimmering piece. It is stimulating and mesmerizing with a dash of angst to keep it interesting.

Pressure Sensitive is a provocative and moving album that is more than just a musical performance; it is also an immersive experience that rewards open-minded listeners. With it, Sanchez has fused her interdisciplinary interests into a single, one-of-a-kind work that finds harmony in noise and dissonance in melody.