Showing posts with label Jan Garbarek. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jan Garbarek. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 28, 2021

Jan Garbarek - Legend of the Seven Dreams

Styles: Saxophone, Flute Jazz 
Year: 1988
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 54:49
Size: 125,6 MB
Art: Front

(13:37)  1. He Comes from the North
( 5:03)  2. Aichuri, The Song Man
( 8:12)  3. Tongue of Secrets
( 8:07)  4. Brother Wind
( 1:49)  5. It's Name Is Secret Road
( 7:19)  6. Send Word
( 6:55)  7. Voy Cantando
( 1:15)  8. Mirror Stone I
( 2:29)  9. Mirror Stone II

Though in step with its time, this release suffers from excessive reliance on ambient synthesizers, which litter much of the recording, rendering it only slightly more interesting than many of the Windham Hill new age recordings of the same era. Unfortunate, because the disc opens with strength and gradually peters out by the end. The disc opens with "He Came From the North," which features a melody based on a traditional Lapp joik from the artist's native Norway and progresses into a longer section with an interplay that is both sparse and rhythmic. The sax line here is astonishingly beautiful. The second piece, "Alchuri, the Song Man," a sax and percussion piece, is energetic and lively as well. And from here the energy gradually diminishes. Much can be attributed to popular styles of the time, but this release simply does not stand up to other music of its genre that came later. ~ Mark Allender https://www.allmusic.com/album/legend-of-the-seven-dreams-mw0000202347

Personnel: Jan Garbarek (soprano & tenor saxophones, flute, percussion); Nana Vasconcelos (vocals, percussion); Rainer Bruninghaus (keyboards); Eberhard Weber (bass)

Legend of the Seven Dreams

Monday, October 14, 2019

Jan Garbarek - Eventyr

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1980
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:19
Size: 129,5 MB
Art: Front

(11:36)  1. Soria Maria
( 5:01)  2. Lillekort
( 9:19)  3. Eventyr
( 2:21)  4. Weaving A Garland
( 9:05)  5. Once Upon A Time
( 5:51)  6. The Companion
( 4:32)  7. Snipp, Snapp, Snute
( 8:30)  8. East Of The Sun And West Of The Moon

Eventyr means “adventure.” Classical listeners may also recognize it as the name of Frederick Delius’s lovely 1917 tone poem, which is often translated as “Once Upon A Time” to underscore its origins in the folk tale collections of Norwegian scholar Peter Christen Asbjørnsen. Here, the name adorns one of Jan Garbarek’s most recondite efforts to date and, like its own “Once Upon A Time,” houses a world of lessons and signs for those willing enough to interpret them. Joined by John Abercrombie and Nana Vasconcelos, he spins a string of seven improvisations, rounded out by a standard, “East Of The Sun And West Of The Moon” (Brooks Bowman), that doesn’t so much end the album as open us to its nebulous center. In that center we encounter swirls of majesty as only he can draw. With almost liquid fire and ever-insightful phrasing, Garbarek brings his deepest considerations to the nearly 12-minute “Sora Maria” that is its primordial soup. His interplay with Abercrombie resolves into a vague continent, where only the playful refractions of “Lillekort” resolve themselves into separate entities. Vasconcelos’s pliancy is the animating skeleton of the title track, in which his gravelly voice and ritualism exudes from every gamelan hit. In “Weaving A Garland,” tenor sax and guitar paint a rolling horizon of vegetation. Such shorter tracks as this and “The Companion” comprise the more potent incantations amid the long-form spells that otherwise dictate the album’s vocabulary. Transcendence comes in the form of “Snipp, Snapp, Snute,” a sparkling menagerie of triangles and wooden flute that works its light into a crepuscular sky. Through it we see in fine detail the inner life of three musicians whose nets run far into the cosmic ocean, where only transformation awaits in the catch. https://ecmreviews.com/2011/10/22/eventyr/

Personnel: Jan Garbarek Tenor Saxophone, Soprano Saxophone, Flutes; Nana Vasconcelos Berimbau, Talking Drum, Percussion, Voice; John Abercrombie   Electric 6 And 12 String Guitars, Mandolin Guitar

Eventyr

Tuesday, November 13, 2018

Niels-Henning Ørsted Pedersen - Uncharted Land

Styles: Jazz, Post Bop
Year: 1992
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 60:59
Size: 140,1 MB
Art: Front

( 5:14)  1. Moving Pictures
( 4:13)  2. Uncharted Land (vocal)
( 2:51)  3. Natten er Se Stille
(18:12)  4. Nordavind
( 6:55)  5. A Nightingale Sang in Berkeley Square
( 2:27)  6. Someday My Prince Will Come
( 6:24)  7. Joron
( 5:47)  8. Too Many Names
( 3:01)  9. Uncharted Land (instrumental)
( 5:50) 10. Blank Space

A virtuoso who mostly played in bop-oriented settings, Niels-Henning Ørsted Pedersen was in great demand since he was a teenager. One of many superb European bassists to emerge during the 1960s, Pedersen originally studied piano before starting to play bass with Danish groups when he was 14. He had to reluctantly turn down Count Basie's offer to join his orchestra when he was just 17, but worked steadily as the house bassist at the Club Montmartre and as a member of the Danish Radio Orchestra. Whenever American jazzmen passed through Scandinavia, they asked for Pedersen; during the 1960s he played with Sonny Rollins, Bill Evans, Roland Kirk, Dexter Gordon, Bud Powell, and even Albert Ayler (although the latter's session was not too successful). In the 1970s, Pedersen was featured in a duo with Kenny Drew. Starting in the mid-'70s, he was an occasional member of the Oscar Peterson Trio and he recorded several dates as a leader for SteepleChase. Pedersen also recorded in many different settings for Pablo Records during the era. He remained very active until his sudden death in April 2005. He was 58. ~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/artist/niels-henning-%C3rsted-pedersen-mn0000404907/biography

Personnel: Niels-Henning Ørsted Pedersen - acoustic bass, co-producer; Jan Garbarek - tenor saxophone, soprano saxophone, programming; Steve Swallow - electric bass, producer;   Michel Petrucciani - piano;  Mehmet Ozan - acoustic guitar;   Marilyn Mazur - percussion;  Søs Fenger - vocals;  Ole Kock Hansen - piano;  Ars Nova - ensemble;  Bo Holten - conductor;  Bente Vist - soprano vocals;  Helle Petersen - soprano vocals;  Hilde Ramnefjell - soprano vocals;  Ulla Munch - alto vocals;  Tine Jarl - alto vocals -  Mette Greiffenberg - alto vocals;   Ivan Hansen - tenor vocals;  Palle Jensen - tenor vocals;  Villy Nielsen - tenor vocals;  Johan Reuter - bass vocals;  Claus Hansen - bass vocals;   Hans Henrik Råholt - bass vocals

Uncharted Land

Monday, March 26, 2018

Jan Garbarek - Places

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1978
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 48:35
Size: 112,0 MB
Art: Front

(15:10)  1. Reflections
( 7:52)  2. Entering
(14:15)  3. Going Places
(11:17)  4. Passing

A fairly sleepy ECM date, this outing matches Jan Garbarek on tenor, soprano and alto with guitarist Bill Connors, John Taylor (doubling on organ and piano) and drummer Jack DeJohnette for lengthy explorations of four of his originals. With such titles as "Reflections," "Entering" and "Passing," it is not surprising that the music has plenty of space, is introspective, and often emphasizes long tones. ~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/album/places-mw0000193162

Personnel: Jan Garbarek (saxophone); John Taylor (piano, organ); Bill Connors (guitar); Jack DeJohnette (drums).

Places

Tuesday, February 27, 2018

Jan Garbarek - In Praise of Dreams

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2003
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 52:31
Size: 120,5 MB
Art: Front

(4:44)  1. As Seen from Above
(5:25)  2. In Praise of Dreams
(5:09)  3. One Goes There Alone
(6:27)  4. Knot of Place and Time
(0:44)  5. If You Go Far Enough
(5:19)  6. Scene from Afar
(5:26)  7. Cloud of Unknowing
(5:04)  8. Without Visible Sign
(5:03)  9. Iceburn
(4:25) 10. Conversation with a Stone
(4:39) 11. A Tale Begun

Following a six-year break from recording, with only a guest appearance on bassist Miroslav Vitous' Universal Syncopations ('03) and a :Rarum compilation ('02), Norwegian saxophonist Jan Garbarek returns with his first album of new material since Rites ('98). In Praise of Dreams continues along the path established by such recordings as Legend of the Seven Dreams , I Took Up The Runes , and Visible World. But while Garbarek demonstrates the same penchant for deceptively simple pieces with almost anthem-like themes, his collaboration with violist Kim Kashkashian and drummer Manu Katche results in something richer, something deeper than what has come before. Garbarek, who has long since gone beyond the need for overt demonstrations of instrumental capabilities, has for many years been more interested in searching for a purity of sound, a truth in the essence of the song that has caused some to accuse him of taking the easy path. But the reality is much more significant. Garbarek has clearly lost none of his vitality, as evidenced by his soloing on pieces including "As Seen from Above" and the lilting pan-Celtic feel of the title track. But on a recording where he has, once again, created layers of sound over which Kashkashian and Katche have added key elements, Garbarek has aimed for an even broader cinematic landscape than ever before. And while there are some relatively straightforward compositions, Garbarek has managed to blend folk elements with a classical richness and an improvisational sensibility to create a work that not only fits comfortably as an evolution of his long-term oeuvre, but also goes to some new places as well.

Much of the success of In Praise of Dreams is attributable to Kashkashian, who, with a warm and haunting tone, is the perfect foil for Garbarek's more frigid timbre. Like Garbarek, she seems dedicated to finding the right phrase, the perfect inflection, to give the material substance. And like Garbarek, she places the intent of the material before her own ego and, consequently, aims instead for a simple purity that makes for an engaging listen while still managing to reveal many layers on subsequent plays. Garbarek's pieces have a compelling truth to them, from ensemble pieces like "Scene from Afar" to "A Tale Begun," which finds Garbarek using simple synthesizer textures and long saxophone tones to act as a fitting coda, retelling the title track without the percussion and lead voices. It demonstrates that Garbarek's quest for the spiritual essence of a song may be at its most compelling when stripped to its rawest elements. There has been much conjecture surrounding this release, and the reality is that this is no radical digression from the path that Garbarek has travelled for many years. Still, with an evolutionary approach that finds him moving into ever more vivid and moving audioscapes, Garbarek may be the closest to finding the meaning he has been searching for all along. ~ John Kelman https://www.allaboutjazz.com/in-praise-of-dreams-jan-garbarek-ecm-records-review-by-john-kelman.php

Personnel: Jan Garbarek (tenor and soprano saxophones, synthesizers, samplers, percussion, Kim Kashkashian (viola on all but "As Seen from Above," "If You Go Far Enough," "A Tale Begun"), Manu Katché (drums on "As Seen from Above," "One Goes There Alone," "Knot of Place and Time," "Scene from Afar," "Iceburn," "Conversation with a Stone")

In Praise of Dreams

Friday, February 23, 2018

Jan Garbarek Group - Twelve Moons

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1993
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 75:38
Size: 173,8 MB
Art: Front

( 7:37)  1. Twelve Moons
( 6:33)  2. Psalm
(10:20)  3. Brother Wind March
( 8:39)  4. There Were Swallows...
( 5:51)  5. The Tall Tear Trees
( 6:24)  6. Arietta
(11:58)  7. Gautes-Margjit
( 4:56)  8. Darvánan
( 7:32)  9. Huhai
( 5:43) 10. Witchi-Tai-To

Recorded in 1992, this album emphasizes production value and slick performances. Largely a feature for Jan Garbarek's soprano sax (he only plays tenor on three tracks), each song is dreamy and quite mystical. Compositionally, TWELVE MOONS is a curious blend of light jazz and Norwegian folk melodies. This is especially apparent on "Psalm" and "Darvanan," both of which feature female vocalists, while "Huhai" borrows from a traditional folk tune. 

Fans of Garbarek's penetrating, English horn-like soprano sax sound are treated to some inspired playing throughout, and drummer Manu Katche, best known for his work with Peter Gabriel and Sting, shines on every track. Additionally, there is nice interplay between Garbarek and the band on "Witchi-Tai-To," a remake of a tune first recorded by the saxophonist on a '74 album of the same name. https://www.allmusic.com/album/twelve-moons-mw0000107592   

Personnel: Jan Garbarek (soprano & tenor saxophones, synthesizer); Agnes Buen Garnas, Mari Boine (vocals); Rainer Bruninghaus (piano, synthesizer); Eberhard Weber (bass); Manu Katche (drums); Marilyn Mazur (percussion).

Twelve Moons

Thursday, November 2, 2017

Jan Garbarek, Bobo Stenson Quartet - Dansere

Styles: Saxophone And Piano Jazz
Year: 1976
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 38:10
Size: 88,5 MB
Art: Front

(15:02)  1. Dansere
( 4:55)  2. Svevende
( 6:13)  3. Bris
( 1:34)  4. Skrik & Hyl
( 5:38)  5. Lokk (Etter Thorvald Tronsgard)
( 4:46)  6. Til Vennene

Among the many stylistic twists and turns negotiated by Jan Garbarek early in his career, the subtle shift in direction from the previous, spectacular Witchi-Tai-To to Dansere was probably the most decisive. In fact, Dansere, recorded in 1975, was one of the first examples of what would come to be known as the "ECM sound," not so much for the usual crystalline recording quality but for a creeping, languidly pastoral sensibility that would become more and more prominent both in Garbarek's own work as well as in the label's releases in general. Still, that granola and Birkenstock aura is subdued enough in this album to grudgingly recommend it to fans of his earlier work. Bassist Palle Danielsson, while less angular and experimental than Arild Andersen, provides a solid and propulsive foundation for Garbarek and Stenson, the former tending to increasingly rein in his playing as the influence of Albert Ayler, so prominent in his first albums, continued to wane. Instead, one can hear traces of Keith Jarrett, with whom Garbarek had recently been working and, indeed, much of Dansere compares favorably with Jarrett's quartet work from around the same time. Fans of his subsequent work with the Hilliard Ensemble might find this relatively tough sledding while lovers of albums like Tryptikon could well hear excessive smoothness, but it stands up decently enough on its own merits. ~ Brian Olewnick https://www.allmusic.com/album/dansere-mw0000197829

Personnel:  Jan Garbarek – saxophones;  Bobo Stenson – piano;  Palle Danielsson – bass;  Jon Christensen – drums       

Dansere

Wednesday, October 4, 2017

Jan Garbarek - Works

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1984
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 51:10
Size: 117,3 MB
Art: Front

( 8:14)  1. Folk Song
( 1:33)  2. Skrik + Hyl
(11:21)  3. Passing
( 2:23)  4. Selje
( 5:40)  5. Viddene
( 4:31)  6. Snipp, Snapp, Snute
(12:26)  7. Beast of Komodo
( 4:59)  8. Svevende

Norwegian saxophonist Jan Garbarek's icy tone and liberal use of space and long tones has long been perfect for the ECM sound and, as a result, he is on many recordings for that label, both as a leader and as a sideman. He had won a competition for amateur jazz players back in 1962, leading to his first gigs. Garbarek worked steadily in Norway throughout the remainder of the '60s, usually as a leader but also for four years with George Russell (who was in Scandinavia for a long stretch). Garbarek began recording for ECM in the early '70s and, although he had opportunities to play with Chick Corea and Don Cherry, his association with Keith Jarrett's European quartet in the mid-'70s made him famous, resulting in the classic recordings My Song and Belonging. In the '80s, Garbarek's groups included bassist Eberhard Weber and at various times, guitarists Bill Frisell and David Torn. Garbarek, whose sound has remained virtually unchanged since the '70s, collaborated with the Hilliard Ensemble in 1993 (a vocal quartet singing Renaissance music) and the result was a surprisingly popular recording. Visible World followed in 1995, and four years later he resurfaced with Rites. In April of 1999, Garbarek and the Hilliard Ensemble returned with Mnemosyne. He issued In Praise of Dreams in 2004, and finally released his first live album as a leader, Dresden, in 2009. In 2012, ECM released the live archival recording Magico: Carta de Amor, by the Magico trio that also included guitarist Egberto Gismonti and bassist Charlie Haden. ~ Scott Yanow https://itunes.apple.com/us/album/jan-garbarek-works/id272061988

Personnel:  Saxophone [Soprano], Flute – Jan Garbarek;  Bass – Charlie Haden;  Guitar – Egberto Gismonti;  Drums – Jack DeJohnette;  Guitar – Bill Connors;  Organ – John Taylor;  Bass – Arild Andersen.

Works

Thursday, August 24, 2017

Jan Garbarek, Egberto Gismonti, Charlie Haden - Magico - Carta de Amor Disc 1 And Disc 2

Album: Magico - Carta de Amor  Disc 1

Styles: Saxophone, Guitar And Piano Jazz
Year: 2012
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 64:18 + 42:40
Size: 153,8 MB + 105,4 MB
Art: Front

( 7:25)  1. Carta de Amor
(16:26)  2. La Pasionaria
( 9:51)  3. Cego Aderaido
( 8:10)  4. Folk Song
( 8:25)  5. Don Quixote
(14:01)  6. Spor

Album: Magico - Carta de Amor  Disc 2

( 7:37)  1. Branquinho
(15:35)  2. All That Is Beautiful
( 9:12)  3. Palhaco
( 3:39)  4. Two Folk Songs
( 7:35)  5. Carta de Amor - var

It's sure been a banner year for fans of the ECM label, with a slew of fine new releases from artists including guitarist John Abercrombie (Within a Song), bassist Arild Andersen (Celebration), pianist Tord Gustavsen (The Well), and saxophonist Tim Berne (Snakeoil). Previously out-of- print or never-before-in-print studio recordings from saxophonist Jan Garbarek (Dansere) and pianist Jon Balke (Magnetic Works: 1993-2001 ) are now back in circulation. And, for the first time since bassist Charlie Haden's duet record with pianist/guitarist Egberto Gismonti (2001's In Montreal, from a 1989 concert), the label has dug back into the past, with Terje Rypdal's Odyssey: In Studio & In Concert coupling the guitarist's 1975 classic, Odyssey finally on CD in its full, two-disc glory  with a previously unreleased Swedish radio performance, Unfinished Highballs, and Sleeper: Tokyo, April 16, 1979 debuting a full concert from Keith Jarrett's influential European Quartet. The year's not over by a long shot, but Magico: Carta de Amor may ultimately emerge as ECM's most significant archival release to date, trumping the Jarrett if only because, as superb as it is, Sleeper is not the pianist's first live recording with this group to see the light of day. Culled from live performances by a relatively short-lived trio that, with Magico (1980) and Folk Songs (1981), already stood as one of label head Manfred Eicher's most inspired collaborative suggestions, Carta de Amor liberally expands on material from both studio dates, but also adds plenty of music that, if familiar to fans of Garbarek, Gismonti and Haden individually, has not been heard performed by this vibrant chamber trio before and, in the case of Haden's uplifting "All That is Beautiful," appears on record for the first time.

The record demonstrates just how far this trio had come by the time of its April, 1981 performances at Munich's Amerika Haus no surprise, given the established reputations of all three members, and that it had been almost 18 months since Folk Songs was recorded, just a scant five months after the Magico sessions. Gismonti's characteristically lyrical yet emotionally ambiguous "Palhaço" was a tremendous closer to Magico and a highlight of the Brazilian's more heavily produced Circense (Carmo, 1980), but here Garbarek soars even higher in a version nearly double both studio counterparts' length and, taken at a brighter tempo, indicative of this trio's profound interconnectivity, as all three players transcend mere soloing to interact at a near-mitochondrial level. If, as a pianist, Gismonti has always felt a little more schooled without suggesting either predictability or an inability to stretch boundaries his more rough- hewn guitar work is the fulcrum on which both Garbarek and Haden balance on the bassist's Spanish-tinged "La Pasionaria," which he had yet to record at this point, and which would ultimately swing far harder and brighter on his Liberation Music Orchestra's Ballad of the Fallen (ECM, 1983). But if Gismonti provides the initial context, it's Haden who ultimately assumes role of both anchor and animator/instigator, in a free middle section that, despite form reasserting itself nearly ten minutes in to reiterate the theme, opens up once again for a closing bass solo that, in its muscular avoidance of grandstanding, is an early standout of Carta de Amor's 108-minute set. Beyond Garbarek's arrangement of traditional folk songs ("Folk Songs," "Two Folk Songs"), the saxophonist's "Spor" first heard on Magico, but reinterpreted, three years later, in more electrified form on Wayfarer (ECM, 1983) is another example of this trio's remarkable connection, another piece that breaks down into the kind of collective free play that's only hinted at on the studio recordings. As ever, Garbarek's attention to purity of tone is a marker, here matched by Haden, who has always favored tone, texture and the right note over pyrotechnic displays and whose rare use of a bow here is another distinguishing point in a set filled with highlights. Carta de Amor is a reminder of how a particular point in time, when the pan-cultural and cross-genre interests of three artists from vastly different backgrounds and musical upbringings, could come together in rare synchronicity. 

That such confluence couldn't have occurred before nor could it likely have happened again is only bolstered by Haden and Gismonti's subsequent In Montreal. A fine disc, to be sure, but without Garbarek, lacking that certain spark that clearly ignites throughout Magico: Carta de Amor, a set defined by selfless interplay, unrestrained yet ever-purposeful exploration, and the kind of power made all the more dramatic for Garbarek, Gismonti and Haden's ability to instantly change directions, as one, with the subtlest of gestures. In Galacian, "magico" means "magical" and "Carta de Amor" means "love letter," and in its decision to unveil Magico: Carta de Amor thirty years after the fact, ECM has delivered just that. The press sheet refers to the many recordings apparently made at Amerika Haus as "an artistic treasure trove awaiting further investigation." It sounds like the magic has just begun. ~ John Kelman https://www.allaboutjazz.com/jan-garbarek-egberto-gismonti-charlie-haden-magico-carta-de-amor-by-john-kelman.php

Personnel: Jan Garbarek: tenor and soprano saxophones; Egberto Gismonti: guitars, piano; Charlie Haden: double bass.

Magico - Carta de Amor  Disc 1

Magico - Carta de Amor  Disc 2

Friday, November 4, 2016

Jan Garbarek - Star

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1991
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 42:24
Size: 97,2 MB
Art: Front

(6:15)  1. Star
(4:21)  2. Jumper
(6:08)  3. Lamenting
(6:16)  4. Anthem
(5:39)  5. Roses For You
(4:38)  6. Clouds In The Mountain
(5:21)  7. Snowman
(3:42)  8. The Music Of My People

Saxophonist Jan Garbarek, bassist Miroslav Vitous and drummer Peter Erskine have been making records for ECM for a long time, both as leaders and as sidemen. They know each other's styles well, they're familiar with ECM label head Manfred Eicher's echo-drenched production tendencies, and they know how to turn jazz formulas into hip, lyrical romanticism. On this leaderless trio album, as with most ECM releases, you get the feeling of music emerging from a vast and echoey space; Erskine's Morse-code drum accents, Vitous' thrumming basslines and the plaintive cry of Garbarek's soprano and alto saxophones are far removed from what some would consider "jazz," but that's not the point. The tunes may be somewhat interchangeable, but the music is virtuosic, thoughtful and thoroughly lovely, at times heart-tugging. Makes you wish these three would get together more often. ~ Rick Anderson http://www.allmusic.com/album/star-mw0000677682

Personnel:  Jan Garbarek - soprano saxophone, tenor saxophone;  Miroslav Vitous – bass;  Peter Erskine - drums

Star

Wednesday, March 9, 2016

Jan Garbarek - Paths, Prints

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1982
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 51:06
Size: 117,4 MB
Art: Front

( 7:16)  1. The path
(10:08)  2. Footprints
( 5:41)  3. Kite dance
( 3:15)  4. To B.E.
( 6:43)  5. The move
( 5:06)  6. Arc
( 6:35)  7. Considering the snail
( 6:18)  8. Still

December of 1981 was a magical month for ECM, producing such treasures as Psalm and Opening Night. On Paths, Prints, however, Manfred Eicher raised the bar yet again in bringing together another of his unique dream teams. Jan Garbarek, Bill Frisell, Eberhard Weber, and Jon Christensen in the same studio? Engineering complexities aside, one need only have hit Record, taken a nap, and awoken to masterful results. Throughout this session, Garbarek’s sharply defined reveries prove the perfect fulcrum for Frisell’s broadly sweeping clock hands. Garbarek also exposes a softer side, as in the whispered edges of “The Path” and “Arc,” and in the seesawing contours of “Still.” The painterly movements of “Kite Dance,” on the other hand, foreground Weber’s globules of sound against the blush and heartwarming soloing of Frisell’s omnipresent guitar. 

Not too far behind are “Footprints,” which shows Christensen in an especially colorful mood, and “The Move,” which pours on Garbarek’s signature lilt like heavy cream. Certainly his most effective passages are also the most intimate: “Considering The Snail” and “To B.E.,” the latter a duet with Frisell, are concave, while their surroundings are convex. One can easily fall into the trap of painting ECM jazz as forlorn, breezy, and overwhelmingly lonesome. Yet one journey through Paths, Prints is all it takes to realize that the music is always our companion. http://ecmreviews.com/2011/11/10/paths-prints/

Personnel:  Jan Garbarek - tenor and soprano saxophones, wood flutes, percussion;  Bill Frisell – guitar;  Eberhard Weber – bass;  Jon Christensen - drums, percussion

Paths, Prints   

Tuesday, March 8, 2016

Jan Garbarek Quartet - Afric Pepperbird

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1970
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 41:19
Size: 96,0 MB
Art: Front

( 6:19)  1. Skarabee
( 1:56)  2. Mah-Jong
(12:27)  3. Beast of Kommodo
( 8:41)  4. Blow Away Zone
( 1:53)  5. MYB
( 0:53)  6. Concentus
( 7:58)  7. Afric Pepperbird
( 1:08)  8. Blupp

Long ago, before he achieved relative stardom with his Nordic, somewhat new-agey recreations of medieval music, Jan Garbarek produced a handful of spectacular, robust albums for ECM where the influence of free jazz, particularly Albert Ayler, was paramount. Afric Pepperbird was his first recording for the then fledgling label and it features his quartet at the height of their powers, embellishing his muscular and imaginative compositions with outstanding, individualistic playing. From the eerie keening of the opening "Scarabee," framed by Jon Christensen's pinpoint delicate drums, to the hard-driving "Beast of Kommodo" with the leaders wailing bass sax to Rypdal's manic explorations on Blow Away Zone, this is one stellar effort. 

Add to that three drop-dead gorgeous miniatures by the great and undersung bassist Arild Andersen and the title track, one of the most deliriously infectious melodies you'll ever hear. Together with Sart, Tryptikon, and Witchi-Tai-To (as well as a prior recording on Flying Dutchman), this album represents the strongest, most aggressive portion of Garbarek's career, before he succumbed to what became known as the ECM aesthetic. Very highly recommended. ~ Brian Olewnick  http://www.allmusic.com/album/afric-pepperbird-mw0000315243

Personnel: Jan Garbarek (flute, clarinet, tenor saxophone, bass saxophone, percussion); Terje Rypdal (guitar, bugle); Arild Andersen (xylophone); Jon Christensen (percussion).

Afric Pepperbird