Adresse: http://jazzspecial.dk/index.php?id=20
Nyheder
01.01.2023
Europe Jazz Media Chart
Januar 2023
Tony Dudley-Evans, LondonJazz News
Xhosa Cole: IBEJI (Stoney Lane)
IBEJI, Xhosa Cole’s second album for Birmingham label Stoney Lane, after K(NO)W THEM, K(NO)W US (2021) is innovative. The saxophonist plays duos with no fewer than seven different percussionists, all of African descent: Jason Brown, Adriano Adewala Itaúna, Azizi Africa Cole, Lekan Babalolá, Mark Sanders, Corey Mwamba and Ian Parmel. There are also conversations and interviews: the participants talk about the role of the drum in jazz and their identity as part of the African diaspora. Ibeji is the Yoruba orisha (West African spirits), representing twins, duality, joy, mischief, abundance and children.
Patrik Sandberg, Jazz
Anders Jormin: PASADO EN CLARO (ECM)
The creative partnership of Anders Jormin and singer and violinist Lena Willemark was first given exposure on ECM in 2004 with the album IN WINDS, IN LIGHT. In 2015 Jormin and Willemark introduced a new project with koto player Karin Nakagawa on TREES OF LIGHT. Now, with the addition of drummer Jon Fält, Jormins long time collaborator in the Bobo Stenson Trio, the group has expanded its improvisational range. Many creative ideas are explored on PASADO EN CLARO, emerging from its juxtaposition of poetry and music. Chinese ancient and Japanese sources are mixed with contemporary Scandinavian poetry, also setting words by Mexican writer Octavio Paz and by Petrarch, lyric poet of Renaissance Italy.
Cim Meyer, Jazz Special
Line Kruse: BÅND (Continuo Jazz)
Lars Mossefinn, Dag og tid
Carl Petter Opsahl: KYRKJA (Visions and Dreams)
Matthieu Jouan, citizenjazz.com
Daniel Casimir / Silke Eberhard / Gerhard Gschlössl: BOOTLEG (Self produced)
Sometimes, unexpectedly, and out of the blue, musicians get together and create a new and beautiful music. These moments of improvised concerts often disappear with the last note. But this trio, playing for the first time in this church with its particular reverberation, had in mind to record their first and fantastic meeting. The three musicians alternate solos and trios, switching from one instrument to another. Daniel Casimir, the trombonist with a successful career in France, also plays the tuba, Gerard Gschlössl also switches from trombone to tuba, and Silke Eberhard has fun playing the alto saxophone, the gayageum (a Korean zither) and the taepyeongso (a kind of Korean oboe). The three improvisers play with all these colors, the reverberation and the silences. It’s an art, well mastered here.
Axel Stinshoff, Jazz thing
Bill Frisell: FOUR (Blue Note)
Luca Vitali, Giornale della Musica
Mali Obomsawin: SWEET TOOTH (Out Of Your Head)
Yves Tassin, JazzMania
Various Artists: HERE IT IS: A TRIBUTE TO LEONARD COHEN (Blue Note)
This record was necessary for us. For us who tirelessly listen to the original songs, for us who will henceforth do some infidelity to L.C.
Jos Demol, jazzhalo.be
Geraud Portal 4tet: ZINNEKE (Out Note)
Leaving a lot of space to his partners – no need to try to find a strong moment, they are all at their best – Géraud Portal offers us a well-balanced, joyful album which we are looking forward to hearing on stage. (Jean-Pierre Goffin)
Christof Thurnherr, Jazz’n’More
Takuya Kuroda: MIDNIGHT CRISP (First Word)
Kaspars Zavileiskis, jazzin.lv
Funcoolio: FUNCOOLIO, VOL. 2 (Funcoolio)
Funcoolio is a jazz fusion quartet from Latvia that plays sonic games with the local jazz traditions of earlier times, but does not forget about these days as well. Released on cassette at the very end of 2021, now the album is also released on vinyl, which is the most authentic format for it. A light old-school feeling is intertwined with the modern musical coquetry and sometime jamming, as the Latvian quartet plays together with internationally known local Deniss Pashkevich (s), as well as colleagues from France – Fred Hormain (s), German Ilja Gussarov (fl) and from the United Kingdom Michael Kasper (el-p). The main author in the band is the experienced George Panfilov (g), Denis Gradalev (b) also joins in writing, and Vladimir Tuzov (org) and Yuri Osipovich (d) add pretty colorful accents. If you are also interested in Vol. 1, then look back to 2014. On the other hand, Vol. 3 could be expected in 2024.
Jacek Brun, www.jazz-fun.de
Béla Meinberg Trio: AKKOLO (Fattoria Musica)
Busy and involved in projects by many great musicians, Béla Meinberg (p) has found time to record another album with his own trio. The experience gained during various musical encounters and the resulting activities in the artistic field are evident in this latest recording. It is not necessary to convince anyone that this talented artist has the ability to captivate attention, to inspire and to make his music return to the player again and again after listening to AKKOLO. And although Béla Meinberg is the undisputed leader, he does not show dictatorial tendencies. His band is guided by democratic principles, which leads to a beautiful polyphony that resounds in the emerging musical space.
Madli-Liis Parts, Muusika
Sun-Mi Hong: THIRD PAGE: RESONANCE (Edition)
Paweł Brodowski, Jazz Forum
Miłość & Lester Bowie: LIVE IN GDYNIA (AC)
Miłość (Love) was a group that changed the course of Polish jazz, manifesting analternative approach to the mainstream, which dominated the scene in the 1990s. To strengthen their stance, they even changed the spelling of the name of the music they played to „yass”. Its core line-up comprised colorful, charismatic personalities: the founder Tymon Tymański (b), Mikołaj Trzaska (as), Maciej Sikała (ts / ss), Leszek Możdżer (p) and Jacek Olter (d). Miłość spread a musical ferment, stressing spontaneity, openness, and freedom.
Over the course of its ten-year existence, the group recorded several albums, including two with American Lester Bowie (tp) as extraordinary guest: NOT TWO (1994) and TALKIN’ ABOUT LIFE AND DEATH (1997). Now comes, released only on vinyl, “the missing link” with archival recordings from a concert at the Gdynia Summer Jazz Days in 1996. The music sizzled. It was a final night of a week-long tour with Lester Bowie, covering seven Polish cities, perhaps the highlight and most exciting time of the group’s career.
The album features five compositions spread over two sides of the LP – four originals and, winding it all up, John Coltrane’s Impressions. Just recently, twenty years since the group’s dissolution, the members of the original line-up reunited on one December day for a charity concert in a Gdynia club. The one-time-only get together (sans the drummer) coincided with the release of this sensational album.
Mike Flynn, Jazzwise
Jason Rebello And Tim Garland: LIFE TO LIFE (Whirlwind)
Jan Granlie, salt-peanuts.eu
Avram Fefer Quartet: JUBA LEE (Clean Feed)
Avram Fefer (as / ts / cl) meets the fantastic guitar player Marc Ribot, the perfect bass player Eric Revis and the great drummer Chad Taylor. Fefer composed all the pieces, eight of them are new ones. The quartet opens with the soulful and sensual groove of Showtime that cements Fefer and Ribot’s organic ability to breathe melodies as one and their almost telepathic interplay. This gift is even more clear when the quartet juggles with polyrhythmic patterns with its middle Eastern vibes on pieces like Bedouin Dream and Brother Ibrahim, the latter piece was originally recorded on Fefer’s SHADES OF THE MUSE (CIMP 2004) in the midst of the Iraq war, as a protest piece against the horrors of that futile war. Throughout JUBA LEE, Revis and Taylor demonstrate why they are such a perfect rhythm section, offering unshakeable, seductive, and rolling-cyclical grooves that keep propelling Fefer and Ribot’s free and funky flights, including on the Ornette Coleman-inspired Gemini Time, or coloring beautifully the touching ballad Love Is In The Air. This great album is concluded with a beautiful, moving ballad dedicated to Tate, Sweet 15 (for G.T.), with Fefer on the bass clarinet and Ribot on the acoustic guitar. A great start on the new year!
Viktor Bensusan, jazzdergisi.com
Keith Jarrett: BORDEAUX CONCERT (ECM)
No matter how you play it, life is one long song, actually ...
Dick Hovenga, Written in Music
Let Spin: THICK AS THIEVES (Efpi)
Because the compositions on THICK AS THIEVES flow smoothly into one another, you are completely sucked into the music the quartet unleashes on you. Let Spin constantly wanders from adventurous jazz to post-rock and everything in between to explore. Ever challenging, ever unpredictable, ever beautiful. The playing is also amazingly fantastic, with a fine proportionality in instrumental variety. Just like the compositions to which all four of them contributed. It is precisely the fact that the music is very experimental and cross-grained and then again comes together in beautiful sounds and melody lines that makes this album so intriguing.
© 2012 JAZZ Special