Showing posts with label Joachim Kuhn. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Joachim Kuhn. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 3, 2019

Slide Hampton - American Swinging In Paris

Styles: Trombone Jazz, Swing
Year: 2003
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 33:55
Size: 78,2 MB
Art: Front

(10:01)  1. In Case of Emergency
( 7:14)  2. Last Minute Blues
( 7:55)  3. Chop Suey
( 4:42)  4. Lament
( 4:02)  5. Impossible Waltz

Slide Hampton has been a fine trombonist and arranger since the mid-'50s, helping to keep the tradition of bop alive in both his playing and his writing. After working with Buddy Johnson (1955-1956) and Lionel Hampton, he became an important force in Maynard Ferguson's excellent big band of 1957-1959. He led octets in the 1960s with such sidemen as Freddie Hubbard and George Coleman. After traveling with Woody Herman to Europe in 1968, Hampton settled overseas where he stayed very active. Since returning to the U.S. in 1977, he led his World of Trombones (which features nine trombonists), played in a co-op quintet called Continuum, and been involved in several Dizzy Gillespie tribute projects, recording in the 1990s for Telarc. ~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/artist/slide-hampton-mn0000748827/biography

Personnel: Slide Hampton, trombone; Joachim Kuhn, piano; Niels-Henning Ørsted Pedersen, bass; Philly Joe Jones, drums

American Swinging In Paris

Friday, August 17, 2018

Rolf Kühn - Spotlights

Styles: Clarinet, Piano Jazz
Year: 2016
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:05
Size: 131,9 MB
Art: Front

(6:00)  1. Conversation One
(3:19)  2. Pinocchio's Dream
(3:18)  3. Pinocchio's Dance
(6:22)  4. Don't Forget
(4:05)  5. Choro Do Portina
(4:02)  6. Broken City
(5:00)  7. Laura
(8:01)  8. Fingerprints
(3:36)  9. A Strange Sunrise
(3:40) 10. X-Ray
(2:01) 11. Flip-Flop
(3:26) 12. Autumn Leaves
(3:11) 13. Dexter's Tune (Bonus track)

Spotlights features nine of Rolf Kühn's own compositions, plus two jazz standards from the 1940s, and "Dexter's Tune" by Randy Newman and "Choro do Portina" by Hamilton de Holanda. The theme running through and joining up the album is of course the unmistakable sound of Rolf Kühn's clarinet. Hamilton de Halonda, the distinguished Brazilian expert on the bandolim, a kind of mandolin, immerses Kühn's clarinet in Latinsounding melancholy. Albrecht Mayer, international classical star and solo oboist with the Berlin Philharmonic, provides a fascinating angle with his highly sensitive playing and the rich facets of his art. Asja Valcic, the outstanding Croatian cellist, contributes her impressive, classical virtuosity and daring improvisation, as she races frantically through the notes with Kühn. Christian Lillinger, the exceptional percussionist with the Rolf Kühn Unit, adds his wild groove to the mix and like Berlin bassist Oliver Potratz  accentuates the tense dynamic mood. 

Ed Motta, heavyweight Brazilian singer and megastar in his homeland, brings out his baritone to sound like a synthesizer suffering voltage fluctuations, breathing and scatting his resounding word scraps into Kühn's compositions. And as if that were not enough, Rolf's famous younger brother, pianist Joachim Kuhn, weighs in with his inimitable style of playing, his rhythmic soul. The special attraction of these 13 Spotlights emanates from the extraordinary combination of instruments and styles, and above all from the fact that a group of virtuoso artists from very different musical backgrounds have come together to participate in a project very close to their hearts. "I have known my little big brother Joachim for over 70 years, have been friends with Albrecht for so long; I only got to know Asja, Ed and Hamilton personally last year and despite the fact that we are all so different, I believe there is nothing more wonderful than making music with old and new soul mates," enthuses the jazz clarinettist.https://www.hbdirect.com/album/3224071-rolf-kuhn-spotlights-digipak.html

Personnel: Rolf Kühn (clarinet, piano);  Hamilton de Holanda (bandolim);  Christian Lillinger (drums);  Asja Valcic (cello);  Albrecht Mayer (oboe);  Ed Motta, Joachim Kühn (piano);  Volker Greve (percussion).

Spotlights

Monday, August 13, 2018

Helen Merrill - Just Friends

Styles: Vocal, Jazz
Year: 1989
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 44:51
Size: 106,1 MB
Art: Front

(5:51)  1. Cavatina
(6:16)  2. It Never Entered My Mind
(4:41)  3. Just Friends
(6:04)  4. It Don't Mean A Thing (If It Ain't Got That Swing)
(2:53)  5. Baby Ain't I Good To You
(2:57)  6. It's Not Easy Being Green
(4:05)  7. If You Go Away
(6:46)  8. Yesterdays
(5:17)  9. Music Maker

Veteran singer Helen Merrill is greatly assisted on this fine set by the warm tenor of Stan Getz, who was always a perfect choice for accompanying vocalists. With pianist Joachim Kuhn (replaced by Torrie Zito on three of the nine songs), bassist Jean-Francois Jenny-Clark and drummer Daniel Humair completing the group, Merrill sounds quite inspired on such selections as "Just Friends," "It Don't Mean a Thing," "Yesterdays" and even "It's Not Easy Being Green." Virtually all of Helen Merrill's recordings are special events because of the planning and intelligent ideas that go into them; this recommended set is no exception. ~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/album/just-friends-mw0000203447

Personnel:  Vocals – Helen Merrill;  Tenor Saxophone – Stan Getz;   Bass – Jean-François Jenny-Clark;  Drums – Daniel Humair;  Piano – Joachim Kühn, Torrie Zito 

Just Friends

Thursday, August 9, 2018

Joachim Kühn New Trio - Love & Peace

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2018
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 46:38
Size: 108,5 MB
Art: Front

(1:59)  1. Love And Peace
(4:12)  2. Le Vieux Chateau
(3:19)  3. The Crystal Ship
(5:14)  4. Mustang
(3:50)  5. Barcelona-Wien
(4:14)  6. But Strokes Of Folk
(3:43)  7. Lied Ohne Worte No. 2
(3:52)  8. Casbah Radio
(4:17)  9. Night Plans
(5:20) 10. New Pharoah
(6:31) 11. Phrasen

The German ACT label achieved global recognition when they issued the Esbjorn Svensson Trio album Viaticum (2005) and they warrant broader discovery by U.S. jazz fans. Though their country's best known label casts a global shadow over its competition, the ACT catalog has included , Lars Danielsson, Vijay Iyer, Manu Katche, Rudresh Mahanthappa, Bugge Wesseltoft, Tore Brunborg and a host of other well-known artists. Among those talents is one the finest but under-recognized jazz pianists of the past half-century. Joachim Kühn has had a presence on the label for more than twenty years and returns with his "New Trio" on Love & Peace. The trio no longer exactly "new" has been together since 2015 and had previously released Beauty & Truth (ACT, 2017). Bassist Chris Jennings and drummer Eric Schaefer, two musicians half Kühn's age, lend a vitality to the music that drives the pianist as well. The eleven tracks on Love & Peace are compact and crisp with straight-forward melodies, six of those written by Kühn. Jennings and Schaefer each contribute a composition and two others are from the very different worlds of The Doors and Modest Mussorgsky. The diversity of inspirations doesn't mar the overall theme. The very brief title track sets the tone leading into Mussorgsky's "La Vieux Chateau," putting Kühn at home with his early classical training. The Doors "The Crystal Ship" is not the first time Kühn has covered the Morrison catalog; "The End" had appeared on Beauty & Truth. "Barcelona Wien" is lighter fare, conceived in-flight between those two cities. Eric Schaeter's "Lied ohne Worte No. 2" is the most melancholy piece on the album while Jennings' piece is a pastoral and vacillating "Casbah Radio." Ornette Coleman has long been a jazz hero for Kühn, the two recording the duo album Colors: Live from Leipzig (Harmolodic/Verve, 1997). "Night Plans" which first appeared on that album gets an abbreviated treatment here and one that has a more concentrated focus on the basic melody. Yet, as he does with each of the pieces here, Kühn demonstrates his unique skill at maintaining a harmonious core within his unusual musical inventions. In an interview with the Steinway piano company, Kühn said "I like to improvise life, piano, and painting. Really improvise not knowing what you're going to do. Do it by doing." There's no question that the New Trio does just that on Love & Peace. ~ Karl Ackermann https://www.allaboutjazz.com/love-and-peace-joachim-kuhn-act-music-review-by-karl-ackermann.php

Personnel: Joachim Kühn: piano; Chris Jennings: bass; Eric Schaefer: drums.

Love & Peace

Thursday, June 7, 2018

Rolf Kuhn - Solarius

Styles: Clarinet Jazz
Year: 1964
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 40:10
Size: 92,1 MB
Art: Front

(7:55)  1. Minor Impressions
(6:16)  2. Solarius
(6:24)  3. Sie gleicht wohl einem Rosenstock
(6:33)  4. Mountain Jump
(6:21)  5. Lady Orsina
(6:39)  6. Soldat Tadeusz

Rolf Kuhn's style has evolved through the years. The clarinetist started out playing in German dance bands in the late '40s. He worked with radio orchestras starting in 1952 and moved to the U.S. in 1956. Kuhn subbed for Benny Goodman on a few occasions during 1957-1958, played in the Tommy Dorsey ghost band (1958), and worked in a big band led by Urbie Green (1958-1960). 

In 1962, Kuhn returned to Germany, where he has explored more adventurous styles of jazz (including dates with his younger brother, keyboardist Joachim Kuhn) but still occasionally shows off his ties to swing. Kuhn recorded with an all-star group called Winner's Circle (1957), Toshiko Akiyoshi (1958), and as a leader starting in 1953, including a 1956 New York quartet date for Vanguard. ~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/artist/rolf-k%C3%BChn-mn0000312444/biography               

Personnel:  Rolf Kühn - clarinet;  Michael Urbaniak - soprano saxophone, tenor saxophone;  Joachim Kühn - piano;   Klaus Koch - bass;  Czeslaw Bartkowski - drums

Solarius

Wednesday, November 22, 2017

Joachim Kühn - Piano

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1972
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 39:43
Size: 93,2 MB
Art: Front

(5:18)  1. Mixing One
(4:47)  2. Dandy Ponty
(5:14)  3. She's A Beauty
(1:40)  4. Part
(2:19)  5. Fast
(7:12)  6. Paris '71
(1:49)  7. Wiegenlied
(2:56)  8. Special
(3:45)  9. Chords
(4:39) 10. Mixing Two

Although not a free jazz musician, per se, Kuhn has been an avant-gardist; he began attempting a fusion of contemporary classical elements with jazz very early in his career. Kuhn's intense virtuosity is a reflection of his training. He studied classical composition and piano for 12 years, beginning when he was a small child. He performed as a classical pianist up until 1961, at which point he began playing in a Prague-based jazz quintet. He led a trio from 1962-1966, and in 1964 began playing with his much-older brother Rolf Kuhn, an accomplished clarinetist. In the '70s, Joachim Kuhn led his own groups, and played with the violinist Jean-Luc Ponty. Kuhn had a measure of commercial success in the '70s. His star faded a bit in the '80s, but Kuhn kept active, playing challenging forms of jazz and recording occasionally. A 1997 release, Colors: Live From Leipzig, a duo with Ornette Coleman, helped fuel new interest in Kuhn; both men were in top form and the album received excellent reviews. ~ Chris Kelsey https://www.allmusic.com/artist/joachim-k%C3%BChn-mn0000783907/biography          

Piano

Wednesday, November 1, 2017

Joachim Kühn - Free Ibiza

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2010
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 59:54
Size: 138,0 MB
Art: Front

(5:17)  1. Figuertas
(4:06)  2. Mar Y Sal Nights
(2:11)  3. Casa Nuestro
(3:25)  4. Flamingos At Cap Des Falco
(3:58)  5. Can Masia
(2:46)  6. Free Ibiza Afternoon
(3:25)  7. Es Cavallet
(4:30)  8. August In Ibiza
(2:44)  9. Talamanca
(2:42) 10. Free Ibiza Night
(4:26) 11. Clean Vision
(6:30) 12. Benirras
(3:38) 13. Free Ibiza Early Morning
(3:58) 14. Salinas Waves
(2:33) 15. Eirissa
(3:37) 16. Moment Of Happiness

Like the spectacular bouffant hairstyle he s sported since the 1970s, pianist Joachim Kuhn s music is at home in two, generally discrete traditions: intellectually rigorous, harmonically complex, longhair conservatoire music and a less cerebral strand of world jazz driven by vamps and grooves. ~ All Music Guide  https://www.amazon.com/Free-Ibiza-Joachim-Kuhn/dp/B005IQXTRC

Personnel: Joachim Kühn (piano).            

Free Ibiza

Tuesday, October 3, 2017

Jerry Bergonzi - Peek a Boo

Styles: Saxophone Jazz 
Year: 1992
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 59:06
Size: 136,6 MB
Art: Front

( 5:30)  1. Peek a Boo
( 7:05)  2. Internal Affair
(11:01)  3. I'll Let You Know
( 8:32)  4. Idiosyncrasies
( 7:23)  5. Manipulations
( 7:53)  6. Zonian Mode
( 4:54)  7. Creature Feature
( 6:46)  8. Up for the Count

As a tenor saxophonist and composer, Bergonzi asserts himself further on this date with a quintet of established players. Trumpeter Tiger Okoshi forms a good partnership with 'Gonz up front, while the dazzling piano pyrotechnics of Joachim Kuhn, the solid bass playing of Dave Santoro, and the very able drumming of Daniel Humair give the leader quite a foundation from which to work. All eight cuts, save one, are neo-boppish, modern, mainstream vehicles written by Bergonzi, and they express a quick-witted, head-solo-tail written format which, for the most part, swings pretty hard. The CD is bookended with the title track and "Up for the Count," both upbeat numbers with a fervor that's chock full of notes, loaded with 16th's and 32nd's, especially from Kuhn. The latter tune has a staggered phrase, stop-start melody similar to that of Charles Mingus, and a tenor-drum workout for a bridge. Two bluesy swingers are placed back-to-back: The Kuhn-penned "Manipulations" features overloaded lines from piano and bass, and in "Zonian Mode," the tenor and trumpet get antsy ahead of the bar lines, with Kuhn showing moments of anxiety while the rest prove relatively settled into the groove. Scattered, chopped sounds crop up during the easy-paced but seismic melody of "Creature Feature." A Swiss-cheesed "Internal Affair" sounds like a sliced-and-diced, darker take on "Social Call." The hardest swinger is "Idiosyncracies," during which 'Gonz and Tiger live up to their aggressive nicknames. At a most intricate juncture, "I'll Let You Know" has a two-note chord piano ostinato, contrary swinging bass, and unison horns in a Blue Note/Riverside cum Randy Brecker mode. It is also within this piece that Kuhn's piano rattles cages with dizzying blizzards of notes on his solo. The more individualistic he becomes, the more challenging the music becomes, and Bergonzi has certainly upped the ante here with this exceptional combo. Were this an actual working, touring band the results might be different, especially down the road, but all in all this proves to be quite a credible, at times startling effort. ~ Michael G.Nastos http://www.allmusic.com/album/peek-a-boo-mw0000174312

Personnel: Jerry Bergonzi (tenor saxophone); Tiger Okoshi (trumpet, flugelhorn); Joachim Kühn (piano); Daniel Humair (drums).

Peek a Boo

Tuesday, April 4, 2017

Joe Henderson - Black Narcissus

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1974
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 40:12
Size: 92,3 MB
Art: Front

( 5:09)  1. Black Narcissus
( 2:41)  2. Hindsight And Forethought
(12:25)  3. Power To The People
( 5:39)  4. Amoeba
( 6:57)  5. Good Morning Heartache
( 7:18)  6. Other Side Of Right


A later album from Joe Henderson's ultra-hip 70s period for Milestone a sweetly electric session with the mighty Patrick Gleeson on keyboards! Gleeson is as strong of a force here as he is on other essential albums from the time  including some of Herbie Hancock's work and the keyboardist handles E Mu Polyphonic synth, which really fits the flowing style of the music! Henderson's great, as always, on tenor blowing the instrument with a searching quality that's a fair bit different than some of his contemporaries, a unique space that further pushed the instrument in the years after the passing of John Coltrane. The rhythm section holds its end up nicely too bringing in some key modal moments with players who include Joachim Kuhn on piano, JF Jenny-Clark on bass, and Bill Summers on drums. Tracks are a bit more open than some of Joe's early 70s work but still done with a hip Bay Area groove and titles include "Black Narcissus", "Hindsight & Forethought", "Amoeba", and a studio version of "Power to the People", which Henderson had done earlier on a live set. (Cover has a cut corner & light wear.)  © 1996-2017, Dusty Groove, Inc. https://www.dustygroove.com/item/25548

Personnel: Joe Henderson - tenor sax; Joachim Kühn - piano (1-3, 5-6); Patrick Gleeson - synthesizer (1-3, 5); David Friesen (5), Jean-François Jenny-Clark (1-3, 6) – bass; Daniel Humair (1-3, 6), Jack DeJohnette (4-5) – drums; Bill Summers - congas, percussion

Black Narcissus

Saturday, September 5, 2015

Joachim Kühn Trio - Voodoo Sense

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 59:00
Size: 135.1 MB
Styles: Piano jazz
Year: 2013
Art: Front

[19:50] 1. Kulu Se Mama
[ 8:40] 2. Gbalele
[ 7:55] 3. L'eternal Voyage
[ 5:16] 4. Voodoo Sense
[ 7:58] 5. Crossing The Mirror
[ 9:18] 6. Firehorse

The fourth outing from German pianist Joachim Kühn, Moroccan vocalist and guembri (bass lute) player Majid Bekkas, and Spanish drummer Ramon Lopez continues the trio's exploration into free-jazz and North African roots that began with Kalimba ( ACT Music, 2007). The percussion and rhythms of the Magreb were more prominent on Out of the Desert (ACT Music, 2009) which featured a cast of Berber musicians, while Chalaba (ACT Music, 2011) returned to the stripped down trio format. Here, Kühn again opts for a percussion-heavy approach, augmented on half the tracks by saxophonist Archie Shepp. The result is an intoxicating brew of Afro-centric jazz—rhythmically dynamic, free spirited and emotionally charged.

The standout track is the twenty-minute opener, "Kulu Sé Mama," originally written by percussionist Juno Lewis for saxophonist John Coltrane's album of the same name recorded in late 1965, though released two years later. Shepp, who was championed by Coltrane as part of the emerging free jazz scene, reprises the role played by Pharoah Sanders, improvising with joyous abandon. It's a fairly faithful interpretation, particularly in terms of emotional intensity —though in the potent momentum provided by talking drum, calabash, conga, kalimba, karkabou (metal hand-held clackers) and djembe—and Kühn and Shepp's exuberant improvisations—it's definitely more voodoo than gospel blues in spirit—a powerful evocation of roots and ancestory.

Kouassi Bessan Joseph and Gouria Danielle's celebratory vocal chants bring a strong African flavor on "Gbalele," with Kühn's scurrying improvisations underpinned by Lopez and Bekka's drive, Bessan's talking drums and Abdessadek Bounhar's clattering train-rhythm pulse on karkabou. The same insistent rhythms color "Voodoo Sense," with Bekka's balaphone (wooden marimba) adding additional texture, while Shepp's free improvisations stir up the brew. The saxophonist and Kühn are on lyrical form on the balladic gem "L'eternal Voyage"; Lopez's brushes and Bekka's slow bass pulse set the tone initially but there's a smoldering edge to the bluesy improvisations that unfold, accentuated by intermittent cymbal crashes.

European classicism characterizes Kühn s playing on "Crossing the Mirror," an edgy, slow-paced trio number without an obvious rhythmic compass. The three musicians' meandering paths are closely bound up in this abstract yet hypnotic improvisation. "Firehorse" lives up to its colorful name, charging and rearing up with an unrelenting intensity. Kühn's untethered soloing is punctuated by Lopez' lashing cymbal and spurred by the general rhythmic propulsion. Bekka in turn solos, supported by Lopez' bustle before the trio reunites in a heady maelstrom of dissonant piano, rumbling bass and cracking drums. The sudden conclusion provides a dramatic exclamation mark to a stirring nine minutes of unrelenting tension and passion.

One wonders if' Kühn's European/North African/Iberian trio has reached a kind of creative peak with Voodoo Sense, because for emotional energy alone it will be difficult to top. On the other hand, they could continue in the same vein indefinitely—like Keith Jarrett's trio, though plying original material—recreating more of the same haunting magic. ~Ian Patterson

Joachim Kühn: piano; Majid Bekkas: guembri, vocals & kalimba (1), balafon (4); Ramon Lopez: drums &percussion; Archie Shepp: tenor saxophone (1, 3-4); Kouassi Bessan Joseph: talking drum, zinu congas (1, 2, 4), vocals (2); Gouria Danielle: percussion (1,4), vocals (2); Daily Jean Eric (calabash); Gilles Ahadji: djembe (1, 4); Abdessadek Bounhar: karkabou (1-2, 4).

Voodoo Sense

Monday, August 24, 2015

Jerry Bergonzi & Joachim Kuhn - Signed By:

Styles: Piano And Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1991
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 66:45
Size: 153,1 MB
Art: Front

( 6:09)  1. Manipulations
( 7:51)  2. A Different Look
( 4:19)  3. Signed by:
( 2:53)  4. Two steps back
( 3:15)  5. Easy to read
( 7:42)  6. I ching reading
(11:06)  7. Come back to the island
( 7:33)  8. Yesterdays
( 9:56)  9. Heavy hanging
( 5:57) 10. Our love is here to stay

A fine, high-powered tenor saxophonist with a tone influenced by John Coltrane, a mastery of chord changes, and a strong musical imagination, Jerry Bergonzi has long had an underground following in the Boston area. He started on clarinet when he was eight, switching to alto at 12, and finally to tenor two years later. Bergonzi was inspired early on by Sonny Rollins, Coltrane, and Hank Mobley. He attended Lowell University and then after graduation played electric bass in local bands behind singers and strippers, saving up enough money to move to New York in 1972. After struggling in the Big Apple for seven years and gaining some recognition as a member of Two Generations of Brubeck and of the Dave Brubeck Quartet (with whom he appeared on several Concord albums during 1979-1981), Bergonzi moved back to Boston in 1981, where he developed a strong career both as a tenorman and as an educator. He has since led several groups (including two called Con Brio and Gonz) and recorded for the Plug, Not Fat, Red, and Blue Note labels. Bio ~Scott Yanow http://www.allmusic.com/artist/jerry-bergonzi-mn0000329114/biography

Although not a free jazz musician, per se, Kuhn has been an avant-gardist; he began attempting a fusion of contemporary classical elements with jazz very early in his career. Kuhn's intense virtuosity is a reflection of his training. He studied classical composition and piano for 12 years, beginning when he was a small child. He performed as a classical pianist up until 1961, at which point he began playing in a Prague-based jazz quintet. He led a trio from 1962-1966, and in 1964 began playing with his much-older brother Rolf Kuhn, an accomplished clarinetist. In the '70s, Joachim Kuhn led his own groups, and played with the violinist Jean-Luc Ponty. Kuhn had a measure of commercial success in the '70s. His star faded a bit in the '80s, but Kuhn kept active, playing challenging forms of jazz and recording occasionally. A 1997 release, Colors: Live From Leipzig, a duo with Ornette Coleman, helped fuel new interest in Kuhn; both men were in top form and the album received excellent reviews. Bio ~ Chris Kelsey http://www.allmusic.com/artist/joachim-k%C3%BChn-mn0000783907/biography

Personnel:  Piano – Joachim Kühn; Tenor Saxophone – Jerry Bergonzi

Signed By