Click here to [close]

Nail Trio - Roger Turner (dr), Alexander Frangenheim (b), Michel Doneda (ss)

September 2025, Badischer Kunstverein, Karlsruhe

Michael Greiner (d) & Jason Stein (bc)

September 25, Soweiso, Berlin, Germany

Exit (Knaar) - Amalie Dahl (as), Karl Hjalmar Nyberg (ts), Marta Warelis (p), Jonathan F. Horne (g), Olaf Moses Olsen (dr), Ingebrigt Håker Flaten (b)

September 25, Schorndorf, Germany

The Outskirts - Dave Rempis (ts, as), Ingebrigt Håker Flaten (b), Frank Rosaly (dr)

Schorndorf, Manufaktur, March 2025

Monday, November 24, 2025

Sophie Agnel - Learning (Otoroko, 2025)

By Stuart Broomer

Sophie Agnel has released a bevy of brilliant releases in recent years, including the solo CD Song (Relative Pitch, 2025); two duos with John Butcher, la pierre tachée (Ni Vu Ni Connu, 2022) and Rare (Victo, 2025); the exploratory quartet recording Quartet un peu Tendre with saxophonist Daunik Lazro and the electronic duo of “Kristoff K. Roll” (Fou Records, 2024); a luminous duet, Draw Bridge, with percussionist Michael Zerang (Relative Pitch, 2024); and the brilliant archival LP Gargorium, recorded in 2008/2009 by a trio with Lazro and guitarist Olivier Benoit (Fou, 2023).

Learning further extends that body of work. It is Agnel’s first solo recording to be released on LP, each side devoted to a single improvisation, but with a certain symmetry. Side A was recorded on June 6, 2023 and runs 18:42; Side B was recorded on June 4, 2024 and runs 18:47, each from an event at Café Oto. It’s stunning playing, each side a work of continuous evolution in which Agnel mines the piano’s every resource, whether adding materials to the strings, plucking the interior, or producing thunderous explosions at the keyboard. That title Learning might refer to the voyage of discovery undertaken at the piano’s multiple continents, its exterior, Interior and combinations thereof, its compound identity an embodiment of her deeply traditioned and yet infinitely extensible and divisible art.

There’s an insistence here on the significance of the piano’s whole and original name, pianoforte, the instrument as soft and loud, as sweet and harsh as it might ever be, evident throughout 'Learning A,' whether its factory-strength, brutalist machine sounds from prepared bass register, subtle glissandi whispering on upper register strings, or voice-like murmurings drawn on the middle register. One feels the whole of the piano’s varied (and potential) resources. In one extended quiet passage there’s a mix of keyboard articulations and violin-like sustained notes from the strings themselves, likely owing to an e-bow. Another quiet passage has consonant clusters oscillating in the upper register.

'Learning B' is more of the same and yet utterly different, another deep dive into the instrument’s resources, bass clusters roaring against insistently sweet middle-register tremolos, the quiet twittering of birds, saw-like carpentry noises and even sounds that can only be described as the flotsam and jetsam, lagan and derelict, that is, the varied categories of debris of the piano’s oceanic potential. There are instances of the piano’s mystery and sweetness, hitherto undreamt of, yet arising here, coming into audition. There’s a lovely drone passage that might be achieved with two e-bows, a middle register drone and a high one. The piece ends in a beautiful assortment of little sounds, whispering, tinkling, drawing out to silence.

This is special music, all of it profound, open, glowing, generous, empathetic, reaching.




Sunday, November 23, 2025

Sylvie Courvoisier - Chimaera

Last year, Sylvie Courvoisier's "Chimaera" was one of our favourite albums. 

The video below gives the full album, recorded live at the Bimhuis in Amsterdam in July 2024. The band are Nate Wooley on trumpet, Wadada Leo Smith on trumpet, Sylvie Courvoisier on piano, Christian Fennesz on guitar/electronics, Drew Gress on doublebass, Kenny Wollessen on drums/vibraphone, Nasheet Waits drums. 

Saturday, November 22, 2025

Wadada Leo Smith & Sylvie Courvoisier – Angel Falls (Intakt Records, 2025) *****

By Don Phipps

Dissonance. Abstraction. Tonal clusters. Flurries. Rolling ostinatos. Ornate and defiant piercings. These are some of the various musical elements of Angel Falls, a striking masterpiece of space and sound generated by two of the best – the legendary Mississippi-born Wadada Leo Smith on trumpet (now 83) and the always fascinating Swiss pianist Sylvie Courvoisier. The duo draws on a range of influences and idioms to construct their tone poems. From the formal classical side, one can hear degrees of impressionism, Messiaen abstractions, and Charles Ives. Then there are bouncy, jagged blues passages (the ending of “Naomi’s Peak”) and of course plenty of improvisatory and experimental jazz.

From this diverse palette, Smith and Courvoisier deliver striking and challenging explorations that boggle and intrigue. To illustrate, listen to the album’s longest piece, “Angel Falls” and its shortest piece, “Sonic Utterance.” On “Angel Falls,” Courvoisier creates a dissonant barely audible opening by stroking the inside of the piano. The duo proceeds to fashion a dark meditative impression that evolves into a rolling stormy motif. Smith always finds just the right note to craft his reflective mood while Courvoisier goes from pianissimo to forte on the keys in short order, creating sparkling color and deep textures. Both explore the highest and lowest notes on their respective instruments – creating a sense of awe, yearning, and other moods and expressions. There is a point where Courvoisier constructs a full-blooded harmonic maelstrom and Smith responds with hard blowing high notes to produce dramatic effect. The soul-searching continues, as Courvoisier’s passages build into a cliff like peak underneath Smith’s sostenuto responses.

On “Sonic Utterance,” Courvoisier generates precise jarring attacks with tonal clusters while Smith demonstrates his breathing technique, uttering low volume blues phrases above Courvoisier’s back and forth splashes. The music alternates between peaceful interludes and explosions until Courvoisier develops a wandering, repeating motif underneath Smith’s muted trumpet. A roller coaster ride ensues, and Courvoisier really brings it towards the end – with fierce abstractions that seem to explode off the keys like fireworks.

The high degree of formalism found on Angel Falls does not detract from the spontaneity and openness found within the music. It enhances it, giving the music the foundation necessary to develop and explore impulsively and creatively. Art can be representative and exist beneath conscious reality. And this album most certainly is a work of art. Enjoy!

Wadada Leo Smith & Sylvie Courvoisier – Angel Falls (Intakt Records, 2025)

By Ferruccio Martinotti

Last quarter of the year and the top seeded players enter the court: Sylvie Courvoisier and Wadada Leo Smith together on Angel Falls, out for Intakt Records. Should someone need to get acquainted with these two Aces, the simple, right move to be done is to check the Free Jazz Blogs’s past pages where both of them are hugely covered, especially Stef’s peerless reviews of Wadada, making him the Supreme Cantor of the trumpeter. For what is worth, our cups of tea are America along with the late Jack DeJohnette and Sacred Ceremonies with Milford Graves and Bill Laswell but get what you prefer, even by chance, and after a couple of notes it will be perfectly clear for you that the trumpet of our 84 years old hero is a prism refracting the sound, opening sonic worlds or better to say, sonic galaxies. Madame Courvoisier, Swiss born and New York based, for the sake of our sheer, infinite pleasure, delivered in the last years a body of astonishing music, showing to old and new listeners her palette of piano ammunitions, be alone (To be other-wise), with her trio (Free Hoops), with Mary Halvorson (Bone Bells) or in a larger ensemble such as Chimaera, an absolute 2024 masterpiece that sees Sylvie teaming up with Wadada, Nate Wooley, Christian Fennesz, Drew Gress and Kenny Wollesen.

The pianist and the trumpeter first played together in 2017 at a concert organized by John Zorn and as Courvoisier recalls: “Right after he asked me for my number and a couple of months later we did a recording in New Haven, in trio with Marcus Gilmore”. The outcome of that session has yet to see the light of the day but there have been regular collaborations since, including further trios with drummers Kenny Wollesen and Nasheet Waits, a Smith ensemble with two pianos. Given the love of Wadada for duos with piano (see the works with Vijay Iyer, John Tilbury, Angelica Sanchez, Aruan Ortiz and Amina Claudine Myers), and his admiration for Sylvie (“Whenever I’ve played on stage with her, it’s always been a journey that has been mutual and creative. She’s got courage and you can see it when she’s at the piano, when she is inspired to go toward something, she doesn’t just go near it, she advances as if she’s going there to save creation”, from the liner notes) it wasn’t a matter of “If” but of “When” the two would have entered a studio together. This happened in October 2024 at Octaven Audio, Mount Vernon, NY for an output of 8 magnificent compositions that sound as the perfect epitome of such top notch musicians. Wadada spacious notes don’t hide their blues roots, while Sylvie combined upbringing of classical and jazz studies allows her to draw sonic textures that are a real, unmatched trademark; together they’re building a shadowplay of sounds, designing perfectly balanced geometries around and dissolving them into the fire soon after. 

As per the creation process of the album, let’s listen to what Courvoisier says in the liner notes: “We just played right through exactly the order of the CD and exactly the amount of music on the CD, with no edits. We probably did that in two hours and after we mixed it. The same day we recorded and mixed. We started at noon and at 5 pm it’s finished”. Are you thinking about a labour of genius? We are, too. It’s absolutely interesting to read Smith in the liner notes about the composition process: “In composing, you got the inspiration that comes to you as you construct the page. That inspiration comes throughout the process, even if it takes 5 years or 27 or 37 years to complete it. It comes off and on throughout that process. In a performance the same thing happens. The difference is that in performance you’re allowing those moments of inspiration to come directly through”. This record delivers all that and more and we let Sylvie conclude about the chemistry they’ve been able to create together: “With Wadada I feel we’re creating in the moment and I feel something very joyful. We’re like kids discovering things. I feel I can hear harmonically where he wants to go. Basically, I try to erase myself and try to make him sound great”. And there is still someone wondering why this music is floating in our bloodcells…

Sylvie Courvoisier & Wadada Leo Smith - Angel Falls (Intakt, 2025)

By Stef Gijssels

Wadada Leo Smith likes duets with pianists. He's performed and released albums with this format for many decades, and with great success, and with great musicians: Vijay Iyer, Matthew Goodheart, Angelica Sanchez, John Tilbury, Tania Chen, Amina Claudine Meyers. 

Swiss pianist Sylvie Courvoisier adds her own touch to Smith's music. Both musicians performed for the first time together in 2017, at a concert organised by John Zorn. Several unissued performances followed, in duos, trios or with two pianos. Of course, Smith is one of the two trumpeters on Courvoisier's brilliant "Chimaera". 

Courvoisier's natural feeling of creating mysterious yet gentle sounds match perfectly with Smith's jubilant spiritual tone. On "Whispering Images", she adds an unexpected rhythm with muted piano strings, and a bluesy theme that reminds of "Chimaera". It gives me goose bumps. 

Despite the incredible quality of the music and its beauty, it was recorded in one take: “We just played right through exactly the order of the CD, and exactly the amount of music on the CD, with no edits. We probably did that in two hours. And after, we mixed it. The same day we recorded and mixed. We started at noon and at five p.m. it’s finished.” says Courvoisier in the liner notes. It makes the whole process sound cheap and sloppy, yet the exact opposite is true. It says a lot about the skills of the artists, their natural symbiosis and the authenticity of their music: there is no need to change anything if it comes straight out of your very nature, if it flows organically and spontaneous, as it does here. 

The title, "Angel Falls" refers to the world's highest waterfall in Venezuela, but it of course also has a double meaning of a falling angel. 

Smith has always refused to be boxed into any musical category or genre, and so is Courvoisier: it's classical, free music, expansive and intimate, deeply human but with a level of abstraction that holds the compositions together. Neither Smith nor Courvoisier are iconoclasts or real avant-gardists, preferring a welcoming sonic environment that has deep roots in many musical traditions, yet lifting to a level rarely heard before. 

What they present us here, is again among the best things I've heard this year. 

Listen and download from Bandcamp


Below is a video of another duo performance in early 2025 at The Stone. 

Friday, November 21, 2025

Extraordinary Popular Delusions - The Last Quintet (Corbett vs. Dempsey)

By Ferruccio Martinotti

Could it possibly be something better than good music? Yes it could: good music with a good story behind. Take this for instance. Around 20 years ago a patrol of free jazz aces, Jim Baker (piano, Arp synthesizer, viola), Mars Williams (saxophones, toys), Brian Sandstrom (double bass, electric guitar, trumpet), Steve Hunt (drums, percussion) kicked- off a new band, taking the name from an 1841 book, Extraordinary Popular Delusions. It was an early study of crowd psychology by Scottish journalist Charles MacKay, debunking subjects like alchemy, crusades, duels, economic bubbles, fortune-telling, haunted houses, the Drummer of Tedworth, the influence of politics and religion on the shapes of beards and hair, magnetisers, murder through poisoning, popular admiration of great thieves, popular follies of great cities and relics (!!!). After a couple of years spent in weekly gigs at a spot in Chicago called Hotti Biscotti, the quartet found a regular Monday night session at the small upstairs room of Beat Kitchen, a mandatory stop for devoted fans of Chicago's creative music scene, where they have maintained their residency for more than 15 years. 

It would be pretty ungenerous to overlook the role they played in the contribution to pave the road for the new generation of Chicagoan players that blossomed from the 90s on. Separately or together, they’ve played with Muhal Richard Abrams, Fred Anderson, Hal Russel, Nicol Mitchell, The Pharaohs, Shawn Colvin, Nicholas Tremulis and Tortoise. Mars was an interesting artist, with his musical soul pretty equally shared between jazz and post-punk. Son of a trumpeter, he played classical clarinet for ten years, then moved to saxophone under the influence of Eric Dolphy, John Coltrane and Charlie Parker, attending courses at the AACM with Roscoe Michell and Anthony Braxton. If on one hand this upbringing drove him to play with Peter Brotzmann Tentet, The Vandermark 5, Liquid Soul and NGR Ensemble, on the other hand he spent long time, along the 80s, as a permanent member of The Waitresses and Psychedelic Furs, as well as blowing the reeds for the likes of Billy Idol, Power Station, Billy Squier, Massacre and Ministry. 

Due to Mars’ absence while on tour with his other projects, the band invited Edward Wilkerson Jr. (AACM past president and teacher, founder and director of the famous octet 8 Bold Souls and member of the Ethnic Heritage Ensemble) to hold the reeds garrison. After the self-titled album, released in 2007 and the sophomore “Apocryphal fire in the warehouse, and other explanations” (2011), the Fates entered the game. Mars Williams was diagnosed with late-stage cancer when EPD booked a concert at Elastic Arts Foundation at the end of August 2023. He survived less than three months more but nevertheless was on the bill, and so was Edward Wilkerson Jr. to deploy a powerful unit of five members, The Last Quintet. To breathe the atmosphere of such a magical and, now, historical night, that's what the liner notes report: “Nobody expected Williams to play the way he did. More than an honorary appearance, this was Mars at the top of his game, playing, as it were, for his life. With Sandstrom switching between bass, trumpet and electric guitar, Wilkerson doubling on saxophone and clarinet as well as oud and didgeridoo, Baker on ARP synthesizer and piano as well as violin, and Hunt on all sorts of percussion, Williams’ table of toys and his blazing soprano, alto and tenor saxophone were in perfect company. A band that could freely improvise open structures and instantly compose unforeseen suites, while maintaining a level of intensity and intrigue on par with the saxophonists’ mastery. This Last Quintet bore the marks of a classic concert. Which it was”. Luckily for us, Dave Zuchowski was there to record the concert in all its two-sets, beautiful, moving glory and the usual, priceless wisdom of Corbett vs. Dempsey made the rest. A good story, I told you. 

Thursday, November 20, 2025

Ignaz Schick, Christian Kühn and Joe Hertenstein - Live at Terzo Mondo (Zarek Archives, 2025)


The opening moment of Live at Terzo Mondo is quick jab in the ribs. You jolt upright, take quick stock of who just jabbed you, and reckon with your fight or flight instinct. Simultaneously hitting, saxophonist Ignaz Schick plays a short riff while guitarist Christian Kühn strikes a bottom-heavy, dissonant chord and drummer Joe Hertenstein rolls confidently along. Fight or flight, the first option seems right as the group digs in, wave after wave of attack. The pace lets up after a little, sort of, and then they are back with a thrusting velocity. 
 
Schick is front and center, leading the assault with a sharp melodic sense and an inexhaustible supply of ideas. Kühn, an excellent guitarist who leads his own group "Kuhn Fu", provides fierce textured background as well as moments of gentle melody. Hertenstein is invaluable, adding ample energy and direction. 
 
There is a moment where it seems Schick quotes Ornette Coleman, as a familiar, uptempo riff jumps out of the general melee. It is seamless, passes quickly and proves to be just one of many ear-catching moments in the 29-minute piece. In another moment, at about 20 minutes, the entire approach changes. Schick plays almost alone, developing a questioning melody as Kuhn and Hertenstein provide at first incidental sounds and then begin adding more and more until they are back in fighting form.
 
The second half of the album, encapsulated as a track called 'Shameless' (the first was 'Shameful'), starts out a little differently than the flip-side, but the effect is delightfully similar. Full, furious, and rife with ideas, the trio engages playfully, challenging each other with bold improvisations that blur the line between turmoil and cohesion.
 

Wednesday, November 19, 2025

Festival Music Unlimited #39, Wels, Austria, Nov. 8-10

By Eyal Hareuveni

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.



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

Akira Sakata
The afternoon performances at the local Landesmusikchule began with a solo set of Japanese legendary reed master-vocalist Akira Sakata, who performed his version of the Tale of Heike (originally released by doubtmusic, 2013). This epic story is about the fight between two samurai clans for the control of medieval Japan, and was performed in a dramatic, vivid way, with Sakata acting like a sage telling the story, playing the heroic characters, and reflecting on the story with his openly emotional playing, mourning the loss of so many lives due to arrogance, hate, and sheer evil. The duo of Czech trumpeter and electronics player Petr Vrba and Cypriot vibes player Andria Nicodemou was formed after a chance meeting at the Irtijal Festival in Beirut. They presented a yin-yang dynamics. Vrba thoughtfully structured dense textures with a pocket trumpet and live electronics, while Nicodemou instantly abstracted his ideas into sensual, surprising sounds, often using objects like a long coil or ping pong balls, totally possessed by the sounds of the augmented vibes, and both fed by the stimulating tension. The last set was by the trio Flowers We Are, featuring Serbian harmonium player Marina Džukljev, Austrian cellist Arnold (Noid) Haberl, and electronics player Matija Schellander, who released a self-titled album (Klanggalerie, 2024). The minimalist, austere dynamics of this trio correspond with the pioneering work of Morton Feldman and the British AMM. This trio sketched a mysterious drone where Džukljev’s hrominium soft hums resonated the overtones of Schellander’s electronics, while Haberl reconstructed this abstract syntax into his cello playing, but slowly the collective drone gravitated into an irreverent, powerful spiritual meditation.


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.

Gabby Fluke-Mogul & Mariá Portugal

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

Sakina Abdou
The afternoon performances at the distant Schloss Puchberg began with a solo set of French tenor sax player Sakina Abdou, who played a series of call-and-response chants with a raw, and powerful sound, first on stage and then through the audience, stressing the communal, spiritual essence of her playing and herself as a sort of a high priest who channels the audience's energy into a prayer for a better, compassionate and peaceful future. Then the 150-year-old duo of Dutch violist Ig Henneman (80) and tenor sax player, clarinetist, and shakuhachi player Ab Baars (70) decided at the last minute to play a free improvised set (and not the program Autumn Songs, Wig, 2013). It was an inspired, deeply emotional conversation between soul mates who know and love each other and always find the innocent joy and inspiration in playing together. It sounded as if all notes landed in their perfect place and none were redundant, and articulated with captivating elegance, sheer beauty, and inspired grace. The last set featured a trio of Taiwanese, Vienna-based guzheng player Ming Wang, Italian, Vienna-based sound artist Isabella Forciniti, and Austrian trumpeter Thomas K. Berghammer, who weaved mysterious, layered textures made of the unconventional playing of Ming Wang, using objects and bow, the extended breathing techniques of Berghammer, and Forciniti’s otherworldly electronics.

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.

 
Oren Ambarchi
The following performance was by the Swedish power trio Fire! - Mats Gustafsson on baritone and tenor saxes, flute and harmonica (!), bassist Johan Berthling, and drummer Andreas Werliin, with Australian, Berlin-based Oren Ambarchi on guitar and electronics. Fire! collaborated before with Ambrachi (In The Mouth - A Hand and She Sleeps, She Sleeps, Rune Gramofon, 2012 and 2016), and Ambrachi plays with Berthling and Werliin in the trio Ghosted. The first extended piece sounded as if continuing the hypnotic vibe of Ghosted, with Berthling and Werliin dictating a stubborn, massive pulse, Ambrachi colors it with a psychedelic sounds, and Gustafsson adds reserved blows, but as this set progressed, it settled on the familiar, heavy, uplifting, and irresistible grind of Fire! with a few surprising moments when Gustafsson incorporates his small harmonica sound into Fire!’s syntax.

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.

Tuesday, November 18, 2025

Ebaugh Crane Presley - Detergent (scatterArchive, 2025)



By Martin Schray

The release of Detergent, the debut album from Ryan Ebaugh (tenor saxophone, detached mouthpiece), Matt Crane (borrowed drum kit, brought cymbals), and Cameron Presley (guitar, amps with stuff on the speakers, volume pedals), is a welcome opportunity to praise Liam Stefani’s scatterArchive label. Stefani launched it as Scatter in 1994, as a physical label, dedicated to musical improvisation in its many forms, with a particular focus on non-idiomatic free improv. Over the 30+ intervening years, this has remained the primary focus. Then there was a curated series of live “scatter“ events (late 1990s to mid 2000s). The majority of these live events were recorded (onto DAT and ADAT) and these became the source of several digital releases, and “scatter“ became “scatterArchive“, with an active bandcamp page for archival recordings and digital versions of the out-of-print “scatter“ physical releases. “As the name changed, so did the business model. It was no longer reliant on each physical release selling enough copies to finance the next physical release, no longer having to wait for payments for orders to come through from distributors and shop/mail order outlets. It was now possible to remove the commercial aspect from the label, becoming a non-profit organization“, says Stefani. Without the physical object, it also became possible to release high quality digital work quickly, more like an online periodical publishing a new weekly issue. The direction of the label has shifted subtly over recent years to include more archival releases. However, the intention of the label is to feature less-known musicians as well.

Cameron Presley - although he has been on the scene for quite some time - and Ryan Ebaugh belong to these lesser known artists. Matt Crane is possibly the best-known name in this trio. From his punk rock days in the early 1980s to his discovery of jazz and his collaboration with Ornette Coleman to freely improvised noise music with his duo Carpet Floor he has been involved in all kinds of avant-garde music. Nevertheless, it took a long time for this trio to come together. “Sometime in the late 1990s, my old band Upsilon Acrux played a show with Carpet Floor“, says Presley. “That show stuck with me.“ About 25 years later he started playing music again after a longer pause and met Ryan Ebaugh. In a way, Ebaugh’s sax reminded him of the Carpet Floor show and this is how Matt Crane came into play.

And let’s be frank: The result of their collaboration is nothing short of sensational, because musical worlds collide here. In the opener “Tongue” sounds swirl around in confusion, while a saxophone gone wild rages against this cacophony in the style of Mats Gustafsson. The guitar roars or lets fragmented tones hiss into nowhere, reminiscent of Masayuki Takayanagi’s noise attacks. For three quarters of an hour, the music roars, booms, howls, moans and groans at every turn. Every now and then, for a few seconds, it seems as if the three want to redeem us when you think you can hear a little melody. But no! Detergent is a monster. No, not figuratively speaking, I mean it literally. It grabs you by the throat with the first note, chokes you, and then whirls you around. It’s like sitting in the engine room of an ocean liner in heavy seas while hearing the death cries of someone being keelhauled by the captain. You don’t believe me? Then just listen to “Shell,” the second track. After four and a half minutes, the guitar and drums mercilessly beat everything into the ground. It’s speed metal, industrial, death disco, free jazz - all in one. It’s music that’s always at the maximum level of intensity. Not for wimps, but for fans of Painkiller, Throbbing Gristle, Napalm Death, and Test Dept. I’m sure John Zorn loves it. What a motherfucker of an album!

Detergent will be released in November, 24th. It’s available as a download and on cassette. You can buy it and listen to it on the scatterArchive bandcamp site:

https://scatterarchive.bandcamp.com/

The cassette is available here: https://sndhls.bigcartel.com/

Monday, November 17, 2025

C6Fe2RN6 - C6Fe2RN6 (Astral Spirits, 2024)

By Stef Gijssels

If you do not want to sell any music, the easiest way is to produce an album cover without text, and to invent a name that is "C6Fe2RN6". I am not sure where this name comes from, but it's sufficiently unpronounceable not to be shouted at the beginning of a concert. (AI tells me that "The elements C (carbon), Fe (iron), and N (nitrogen) would not typically bond with Rn (radon - a noble gas) to form a stable molecule in this configuration" - but since Mazurek has already released "The Unstable Molecule" in 1997 with Isotope 217, you never know ... )

The artists behind this name are Rob Mazurek on trumpet, piano, mbira, flutes, bells, synth and electronics, and Nick Terry on electric guitar, kalimba and music box. Terry is a visual artist, and the cover art is from his hand. Mazurek is also a visual artist and Terry also happens to play the guitar and a few other instruments. Both friends met at Mazurek's recording studio in Texas and recorded material that they afterwards refined and produced. The music is layered like Terry's art, with multiple techniques and materials used to produce unexpected and mysterious sceneries, that are at the same time mystifying and inviting for reflection. 

Mazurek writes in the liner notes: "I make music with the intention of placing sound in a certain way that can be exciting, invigorating, calming, destructive, cathartic, surprising, contemplative and many things in between." Or in other words: "What you hear is What you hear. Enter the room and enjoy."

I would echo that recommendation. The music is surprisingly approachable — a big change from some of Mazurek’s recent material — and has an inviting, almost “new-age” feel, with long, tranquil sounds and a reverb so deep it feels like you’re hearing it from far away, and a crystal-clear trumpet to sing and rejoice.

The album also comes in an LP version of 300 copies, and I apologise for reviewing it so late. It may be that the stock is gone. At least I hope so for the musicians. 

Listen and download from Bandcamp.