Showing posts with label Ulf Wakenius. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ulf Wakenius. Show all posts

Thursday, April 28, 2022

Ray Brown Trio - Some of My Best Friends Are...Guitarists

Styles: Contemporary Jazz, Guitar Jazz
Year: 2002
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 66:04
Size: 152,3 MB
Art: Front

(7:28) 1. Squeeze Me
(3:36) 2. I Want To Be Happy
(5:30) 3. Heartstrings
(3:13) 4. Blues for Ray
(5:12) 5. Fly Me To The Moon
(5:01) 6. The Song Is You
(7:47) 7. Little Darlin'
(6:01) 8. Blues For Junior
(4:27) 9. Tangerine
(6:04) 10. My Funny Valentine
(4:42) 11. Blues For Wes
(6:56) 12. Soulful Spirit

The fifth in Ray Brown's series of recordings pairing his working trio with several different musicians from the same family of instruments (although one volume was exclusively singers) features a half-dozen guitarists, ranging from fellow Oscar Peterson alumni Herb Ellis (who worked with Brown in the pianist's most famous trio) and Ulf Wakenius to veteran Kenny Burrell, as well as seasoned players like John Pizzarelli and Bruce Forman and the rising star Russell Malone. Each song sounds as if the group could be a working quartet, due to the great interaction between the trio and each guest. Pizzarelli shines in a bluesy, strutting take of Duke Ellington's "Just Squeeze Me" (erroneously labeled as Fats Waller's "Squeeze Me") which has a nice series of exchanges between the guitarist and the leader.

Ellis brings back memories of the Oscar Peterson Trio with a heated performance of "I Want to Be Happy" during which pianist Geoff Keezer is up to the task of carrying on where Ellis left off. Wakenius is the guest on a particularly moody take of "My Funny Valentine." Burrell, Forman, and Malone also fare nicely on each of their pair of tracks, so it's very easy to recommend this very enjoyable disc.~Ken Drydenhttps://www.allmusic.com/album/some-of-my-best-friends-are-guitarists-mw0000224992

Personnel: Ray Brown - Bass; Geoff Keezer - Piano; Karriem Riggins - Drums; Kenny Burrell, Herb Ellis, Bruce Forman, Russell Malone, John Pizzarelli, Ulf Wakenius - Guitar.

Some of My Best Friends Are...Guitarists

Wednesday, November 24, 2021

Youn Sun Nah - Voyage

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2008
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 55:13
Size: 126,4 MB
Art: Front

(4:44)  1. Dancing With You
(5:01)  2. The Linden
(4:06)  3. Calypso Blues
(4:25)  4. My Bye
(3:42)  5. Jockey Full Of Bourbon
(6:01)  6. Voyage
(3:46)  7. Please Don't Be Sad
(4:32)  8. Shenandoah
(3:31)  9. Come, Come
(5:18) 10. Frevo
(5:05) 11. Inner Prayer
(4:58) 12. India Song

Although her UK debut at London's Vortex was in May 2009, South Korean singer Youn Sun Nah has been a figure on the French jazz scene since the mid '90s when she moved there to study jazz and French chanson.Voyage, her sixth release sees her deftly accompanied by some of the top names in European jazz. One phrase into "Dancing With You" and it's clear that here is a remarkable voice. Sun Nah possesses the sensuousness of Melody Gardot, the quirky, theatrical air of Björk, and the blues of a Parisian chanteuse. On the opening "Dancing With You," Ulf Wakenius accompanies softly on acoustic guitar and Lars Danielsson's melodica brings a Parisian feel to a tender love song. Half the tracks are Sun Nah originals and reveal her to be a romantic at heart. Her songs are tinged with a sweet melancholy, like the lovely "My Bye," which features a plaintive solo from trumpeter Mathias Eick. The Norwegian also features on the beautiful title track, where all the nuances of Sun Nah's voice soothing yet fragile are heard. Eick's solo is sensitive and gently paced, providing perfect sympathetic background. Danilesson's "The Linden"with its melancholy air and brushes like a gentle breeze could have been written for Sun Nah. Sun Nah's cover songs are rhythmically more engaging and reveal the impressive range and operatic quality of her voice. Egberto Gismonti's classic "Frevo" sees Sun Nah scatting bebop style with tremendous facility and reaching a flamenco-like passion. Nat "King" Cole's "Calypso Blues" is a sheer delight, with Danielsson laying down a gorgeous groove over which Sun Nah's sultry voice plays with the lyrics, reaching a falsetto which might just crack glass.

Tom Waits could probably retire on the royalties received from covers of his songs, and here Sun Nah takes on "Jockey Full of Bourbon." With Wakenius sounding slightly Marc Ribot-ish, and a swinging groove courtesy of Daneilsson and percussionist Xavier Desandre-Navarre, it is a tad too faithful in spirit to the original to really stand out, but is enjoyable nevertheless. More interesting is the quirky original "Please, don't be sad," which features what sounds like facial percussion and Wakenius' darkly funky guitar punctuation. "Shenandoah" is a long way from Korea, but Sun Nah brings a haunting beauty to this classic of the American songbook. "Inner Prayer," another beautiful original, has a touch of Americana about it and Sun Nah's delivery is yearning and vulnerable, underpinned by washing cymbals and Eick's fragile, puffs-of-air trumpet solo. The final track, Carlos D'Alessio's seductive and moody "India song," sees Sun Nah caressing the lyrics in French, accompanied by bass and minimal acoustic guitar.  The French may well have been keeping Youn Sun Nah a secret all these years. A voice this special with songwriting skills to match may breed jealousy. Unfortunately for the French, Youn Sun Nah's talent is too great to confine and the rest of the world awaits a chance to hear this unique talent. ~ Ian Patterson https://www.allaboutjazz.com/voyage-youn-sun-nah-act-music-review-by-ian-patterson.php

Personnel: Youn Sun Nah: vocals; Ulf Wakenius: guitars; Lars Danielsson: acoustic bass, cello, melodica; Xavier Dessendre-Navarre: percussion; Mathias Eick: trumpet.

Voyage

Friday, March 13, 2020

Mette Juul - Change

Styles: Vocal And Guitar Jazz
Year: 2019
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 48:49
Size: 112,5 MB
Art: Front

(3:21)  1. Beautiful Love
(3:09)  2. At Home (There Is A Song)
(3:24)  3. Get Out Of Town
(3:27)  4. It Might Be Time To Say Goodbye
(4:49)  5. Double Rainbow
(2:48)  6. Just Friends
(2:35)  7. I'm Moving On
(3:03)  8. Dindi
(3:30)  9. Young Song
(4:18) 10. Without A Song
(3:27) 11. Northern Woods
(5:18) 12. The Peacocks (A Timeless Place)
(5:35) 13. Evening Song

Change is an inevitable part of life and music. The very essence of being a jazz musician involves catching a musical moment that never comes back again, but occasionally, a record shows up that is both a document of change and the sum of a lifetime. With Change, Danish jazz singer, guitarist and songwriter, Mette Juul, has released such an album. Since her debut, Coming in from the Dark (Cowbell Music, 2010), Juul has played with the very best musicians on the Danish jazz scene, including drummers Alex Riel and Morten Lund and pianists Nikolaj Hess and Heine Hansen, but she has also collaborated closely with trendsetting trumpeter Ambrose Akinmusire and the distinguished Swedish bassist Lars Danielsson. Danielsson also shows up on Change in the role of bassist and co-producer, but instrumentally, the bass plays a minor, if important part, as does the autumnal touch of pianist Heine Hansen. Instead, the album centres around the intimate sound of nylon and steel string guitar with Juul getting first class assistance from Ulf Wakenius, Per Møllehøj and Gilad Hekselman. Hekselman already showed his symbiotic understanding of the sparse pairing between vocal and acoustic guitar on Lilly's album Tenderly (Gateway Music, 2017) and once again his playing shimmers on Juul's own "Northern Woods" and Antonio Carlos Jobim's "Dindi." There is also another song on the album by Jobim, "Double Rainbow." The wonder is how Juul makes the familiar music fresh and fleshes out all the colors of the musical rainbow, bringing out the breathing poetry of Jobim's diction and the striking lyrical images of Gene Lees' lyrics.

Juul is not only a lucid interpreter of songs, she also knows how to put them together. Coming in from the Dark included one of Frank Sinatra's signature songs, "In the Wee Small Hours of the Morning," and like Sinatra, she masters the art of the concept album. Every song on the album reflects processes of change from day to night, loving to leaving and youth to adulthood. However, while the songs reflect change inherently, they also represent it in dialog with each other and previous albums. Thus, "Double Rainbow" has previously been covered on Juul's There Is a Song (Universal, 2015) and the title track is renamed "At Home," a song dedicated to Juul's childhood home and her mother where the physical room of the home and emotional space of a song melts together: "I remember the place / where I heard my mother sing and felt at home / this was her favorite place to be free / song to song, smile to smile / my mother's song lives with me." The connection between a place and an emotional state is also highlighted in Juul's "Northern Woods," where the forest provides a natural space of musical reflection that goes beyond the bustle of urban modernity: "Hear how a whisper of trees / sing melodies of a time long gone / music that will never change / voices that won't forget your name." The way Juul naturally moves from trees to melodies in the soft transition of a rhyme subtly underlines the point that words, nature and music can become one, just as a voice can become a horn. Chet Baker could play his trumpet like the whisper of a voice, but on the opening track, "Beautiful Love," Juul sings with a voice like a horn.

Thematically, the songs also enlighten each other. If "Young Song" says that "true love is not for lazy lovers / who seek oblivion and ecstasy," the song "It Might Be Time to Say Goodbye" tells the story of someone who is seduced by the constant romantic craving of sensory oblivion and ecstasy: "There are things I long to try / life I must explore alone." As a consequence, a true love might be lost as the lyric realizes in the end: "This might be the dumbest thing I'll ever do / might never find someone / sweet as you." The song is a highlight among a string of uniformly great songs penned by Juul that don't need to blush in the company of Jobim and Cole Porter, whose many-sided emotional depth is uncovered in "Get Out of Town." In the end, the album suggests that change can come in many ways. Through it all, music remains the prism "Where you can listen to the things your heart is saying," as it says in the cover of Jimmy Rowles and Norma Winstone's "The Peacocks (A Timeless Place)." Indeed, this album is an affair of the heart, but it is also a musical space for contemplation and solace. Everything comes together here, even the art inside the cover by acclaimed Danish painter Michael Kvium underlines the ambiguous beauty of change and captures several shades of the seasons. 

It is a strong argument for getting the physical edition of the album that also includes lyrics in the booklet. It is an important point that music is never finished, and Mette Juul is certainly on the path to new discoveries and stories with an EP of other songs from the sessions already scheduled for release. Right now, Change is nothing short of a major musical accomplishment from Juul that hopefully will expand her circle of listeners. ~ Jakob Baekgaard https://www.allaboutjazz.com/change-mette-juul-universal-music-group-review-by-jakob-baekgaard.php

Personnel: Mette Juul: vocals, guitar; Ulf Wakenius: guitar; Lars Danielsson: bass, cello, cymbals, guitar; Heine Hansen: piano, Rhodes, celeste, harmonica; Gilad Hekselman: guitar; Per Møllehøj: guitar

Change

Saturday, September 21, 2019

Niels-Henning Ørsted Pedersen - This Is All I Ask

Niels-Henning Ørsted Pedersen - This Is All I Ask

Styles: Jazz, Post Bop 
Year: 1998
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 53:37
Size: 123,7 MB
Art: Front

(3:57)  1. O, Tysta Ensamhet
(5:25)  2. I Skovens Dybe Stille Ro
(4:44)  3. Traces Of The Past
(4:00)  4. Just In Time
(4:39)  5. Summer Song
(5:01)  6. The Song Is You
(9:12)  7. This Is All I Ask
(6:38)  8. As Is
(5:54)  9. Taking The Chance On Love
(4:04) 10. Fantasy In D Minor

It is surprising that first-call bassist Niels Pedersen has recorded relatively few dates as a leader during his decades-long career; This Is All I Ask proves to be one of his most eclectic and rewarding CDs, as he's accompanied by guitarist Ulf Wakenius and drummer Jonas Johansen, and several special guests. His singing, lyrical tone on his instrument comes across right away, especially on the two traditional melodies "Quiet Solitude" and "Tranquility in the Woods," the latter featuring pianist Oscar Peterson in a relatively rare appearance as a sideman during his later years. The European pop singer Monique is someone Pedersen discovered when he heard her on his daughter's radio; he showcases her on a funky original called "Summer Song" (not to be confused with Dave Brubeck's well-known piece of the same name). 


The Swedish singer Monica Zetterlund, who occasionally worked with pianist Bill Evans when he toured Europe, is joined by alto sax great Phil Woods and Pedersen's trio for a heartfelt, swinging take of "Taking a Chance on Love," while Woods is the sole guest heard on the slow, very emotional rendition of "This Is All I Ask." Pedersen's trio tracks are all first-rate as well. His virtuoso side comes across in another original work, "Traces of the Past," while his playful post-bop reading of the old show tune "Just in Time" is the cooker of the entire set. Not widely distributed outside of Europe, this is easily one of Niels Pedersen's finest recordings. ~ Ken Dryden https://www.allmusic.com/album/this-is-all-i-ask-mw0000040329

Personnel: Bass – Niels-Henning Ørsted Pedersen; Acoustic Guitar, Electric Guitar – Ulf Wakenius; Alto Saxophone – Phil Woods; Drums – Jonas Johansen; Piano – Oscar Peterson; Vocals – Monica Zetterlund 

This Is All I Ask

Sunday, January 20, 2019

Jon Larsen, Pascal De Loutchek - The Russian Guitars

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 2001
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 51:43
Size: 120,2 MB
Art: Front

(2:20)  1. Moltchanie
(3:25)  2. Pouro Rom
(2:16)  3. Chlepsydre
(4:11)  4. Le Fenêtre de Moscou
(3:53)  5. L'Accordeon
(2:47)  6. Yukon
(2:48)  7. Pascal
(4:10)  8. Olga
(4:03)  9. Jimmy The Kid
(3:32) 10. First Song
(1:59) 11. Dream A Lot
(3:36) 12. Guitaresque
(2:50) 13. Out Of The Blue
(3:32) 14. Quiet Evening
(3:05) 15. Parapluie A Moscou
(3:08) 16. Beltz

Jon Larsen (born 7 January 1959) is a gypsy jazz guitarist, record producer, painter, and amateur scientific researcher. He is the founder of the group Hot Club de Norvège. In 2007 he received the Buddy Award for his lifelong contribution to jazz. When he was in his early teens, he learned rock and soul songs on an acoustic steel-string guitar. Through friends, he learned about blues, jazz, flamenco, and classical guitar. After he heard "Tears" by Django Reinhardt on the radio, he decided that this is how he wanted his guitar to sound. At seventeen he formed a string trio and had his first professional job.  In the 1970s, Larsen worked mainly as a painter. He started the Hot Club de Norvege in 1980 with guitarists Per Frydenlund and bassist Svein Aarbostad. They had a hit record when they performed with pop singer Lillebjørn Nilsen. Larsen started the label Zonic Entertainment to record musicians who have been influenced by Frank Zappa. He has worked with Chet Baker, Philip Catherine, Stéphane Grappelli, Warne Marsh, Biréli Lagrène, Babik Reinhardt and Jimmy Rosenberg. He has produced more than 450 jazz records for the label he founded, Hot Club Records. He has led a group of musicians who played with Zappa, including Arthur Barrow, Jimmy Carl Black, Bruce Fowler, Bunk Gardner, Tommy Mars, and Don Preston. They recorded the album Strange News from Mars. Symphonic Django was released in 2008 by Storm Films, which also produced a documentary about Larsen and guitar virtuoso Jimmy Rosenberg titled Jon & Jimmy. In 2012, the documentary won the Dutch Edison Award.  After eight years of research, his book on cosmic dust in urban environments  In Search of Stardust: Amazing Micro-Meteorites and Their Terrestrial Imposters  was published in 2017. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jon_Larsen

The Russian Guitars

Tuesday, September 4, 2018

Ulf Wakenius - Eternity: Solo Acoustic Guitar

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 2005
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 43:10
Size: 99,5 MB
Art: Front

(4:42)  1. Mash
(4:50)  2. Two For The Road
(3:26)  3. Once Upon A Time In America
(2:30)  4. When You Wish Upon A Star
(3:14)  5. Summertime
(4:37)  6. Alfie
(4:31)  7. Cheek To Cheek
(6:10)  8. Danny Boy
(5:28)  9. Ain't Misbehavin
(3:38) 10. There Is No Business Like Show Business

Born: April 16t, 1958 in Halmstad, Sweden. Ulf Wakenius. A jazz guitarist extraordinaire acclaimed and celebrated all over the world. Between 1997 and 2007 Ulf held what may have been the most prestigious spot in jazz for a guitarist: a chair in the Oscar Peterson Quartet.This was the coronation of a career which included many record-breaking moments.Wakenius guitar duo Guitars Unlimited rocked Scandinavia in the early 80s, culminating in the 1985 Melody Grand Prix, which was seen by 600 million viewers, probably the largest audience a jazz guitar duo ever had. Shortly after that Wakenius started a extremely successful and long-lasting collaboration with the legendary bass player Niels-Henning Örsted Pedersen.( NHOP), and both of his duo albums with bass icon Ray Brown, topped the US Jazz Charts.The last few years he's been touriing the world with the amazing Korean singer Youn Sun Nah. Oscar Peterson has publicly described Ulf as one of the greatest guitarists alive in the world today and many of today’s most acclaimed jazz guitarists are among Ulf’s fans, including Pat Metheny, John McLaughlin, John Scofield and Mike Stern. Great Rhythmic feel combines with a extraordinary lyrical touch- his emphasis is always on melodies and groove. He has been filmed by Clint Eastwood. His next release on ACT will be Ulf Wakenius-Solo "Momento Magico" http://www.ulfwakenius.net/

The guitar solo album of this time declared "I'm dedicating to Joe Pass", but there you can see what kind of mind can afford. That's because Wolf has thought that this time he painted his own music world, whereas the previous solo album showed the performance under the influence of the pass. This time I feel strongly about the same era sex. 

And you can listen to the highly artistic musical expressions that let him know about his Verschuzo. Based on jazz, musicality such as bossa nova and classic is also reflected, not music for music, jazz for jazz, thought for the scene of the heart of one musician named Wolf Waschenius and beautiful things It is a spelled work. https://translate.google.com.br/translate?hl=en&sl=ja&u=http://spiceoflife.shop-pro.jp/%3Fmode%3Dcate%26cbid%3D909895%26csid%3D3%26sort%3Dn%26page%3D2&prev=search

Eternity: Solo Acoustic Guitar

Tuesday, March 27, 2018

Ulf Wakenius - Notes From The Heart

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 2005
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 54:53
Size: 127,2 MB
Art: Front

(5:38)  1. Memories Of Tomorrow
(4:56)  2. Dancing
(4:36)  3. Innocence
(4:21)  4. The Windup
(4:17)  5. My Song
(3:47)  6. Mon Coer Est Rouge
(4:59)  7. Everything That Lives Laments
(5:04)  8. The Cure
(7:45)  9. So Tender
(5:19) 10. U-Dance
(4:06) 11. Prayer

One of the most significant artists of the past forty years, pianist Keith Jarrett continues to base his ever-evolving style on a remarkable stream of consciousness approach to improvisation. But with Jarrett focusing his energy almost exclusively on his longstanding Standards Trio and improvised solo piano performances for the past two decades, it's easy to forget that he's also written a wealth of memorable compositions. Still, Jarrett asserts that improvisation is nothing less than composition in real time, and he's absolutely right. But Jarrett's influence reaches beyond pianists. His ability to combine an almost fragile lyricism with richer complexities and imbue the jazz language with an appealing folksiness has influenced more than one generation of players on other instruments, including the equally influential guitarist Pat Metheny. Swedish guitarist Ulf Wakenius' style has clearly been filtered through Jarrett and Metheny, but that's not to imply he lacks his own voice. On Forever You (Stunt, 2004) he demonstrated their same deep respect for melody and the essence of song, but with an economical approach that belied his considerable virtuosity. 

On Notes from the Heart the first album ever to feature a single artist paying tribute to Jarrett the composer and the performer Wakenius turns his attention to interpreting his music. By approaching not only some of Jarrett's more well known songs, but also material from his solo piano improvisations, Wakenius proves Jarrett's statement that the real time compositional nature of improvisation is more than self-justification for abandoning conventional writing. Restricting himself to classical guitar, Wakenius mines a cross-section of material from many stages of Jarrett's career, from the delicately melancholic and Latin-informed "Everything That Lives Laments, from The Mourning of a Star (Atlantic, 1971) to the more ostinato-based, groove-centric title track from The Cure (ECM, 1991). Jarrett's European Quartet is represented by the gently balladic "Innocence from Nude Ants (ECM, 1980), the vulnerable beauty of the title track to My Song (ECM, 1977), and the more up-tempo folksy complexity of "The Windup, from Belonging (ECM, 1974). The American Quartet is represented here, as is the Standards Trio. Throughout, Wakenius often layering his linear lines over an overdubbed rhythm guitar track is sensitively accompanied by two long-time associates: bassist Lars Danielsson, who also adds occasional piano and cello, and drummer Morten Lund. But the most compelling pieces and the best evidence of Jarrett's compositional sensibility in any context are those fashioned from his solo piano works. "Memories of Tomorrow, better known as "Köln II C from The Köln Concert (ECM, 1975), is an elegant bossa, while "Mon Couer Est Rouge, from Concerts (ECM, 1981) is a profoundly touching duet with Danielsson on piano. Throughout, Wakenius' evocative playing at times exploring the meaning of a single note, elsewhere more elaborately fashioned phrases digs deep into Jarrett's material, dispensing with all artifice and getting right to the core. Notes from the Heart is aptly titled. Wakenius pays reverent homage to Jarrett in the best way possible by demonstrating Jarrett's unequivocal influence and fully subsuming it in his own pure and unaffected musical approach. Simply beautiful. ~ John Kelman https://www.allaboutjazz.com/notes-from-the-heart-ulf-wakenius-act-music-review-by-john-kelman.php

Personnel: Ulf Wakenius: acoustic guitars; Lars Danielsson: double-bass, cello, piano; Morten Lund: drums.

Notes From The Heart

Tuesday, September 19, 2017

Jesper Bodilsen - Short Stories For Dreamers

Styles: Contemporary Jazz 
Year: 2009
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 57:08
Size: 135,8 MB
Art: Front

(6:47)  1. Caetano
(6:56)  2. One Of A Kind
(6:50)  3. Song For Her Being Here
(5:36)  4. Barcelona
(4:20)  5. Moon River
(6:45)  6. Marie
(7:58)  7. Estate
(5:25)  8. Pigen Der Floj (The Girl That Used To Fly)
(6:26)  9. A New Day

One of the major musical events of 2009 was the international breakthrough of Italian pianist Stefano Bollani's Danish trio with bassist Jesper Bodilsen and drummer Morten Lund. The release of Stone in the Water (ECM, 2009) underlined Bodilsen's unlimited potential, who not only played meticulously, but also contributed two of the album's most beautiful compositions, "Orvieto" and "Edith." On Short Stories For Dreamers, released on the Danish Stunt label, Bodilsen is on the top of the bill, but the album is far from a shallow display of instrumental virtuosity. Instead, it carefully constructs melodic motives that evolve into aural stories that captivate the ear with their sense of poetry and space. Part of the success of the album is due to its unusual lineup, featuring guitarist Ulf Wakenius, trumpeter Peter Asplund and vibraphonist Severi Pyysalo. Without the rhythmic pulse of the drums, they weave a finely textured carpet of sound where each melodic detail comes out with clarity. "Caetano," named after Brazilian guitarist Caetano Veloso, immediately sets the mild melancholic tone for the album, with Bodilsen and Wakenius playing a duet, recalling both the open landscapes of the Nordic countries and an empty beach in Brazil. In fact, each composition is given its own pictorial interpretation through the inclusion of the stunning photographs of Tove Kurtzweil. While Bodilsen contributes five of the album's nine compositions, there is also room for compositions by Wakenius, Henry Mancini and Bruno Martino. Martino's epic "Estate" is especially a revelation, wrapped as it is in Asplund's hushed brass sounds and in the warm wood of Bodilsen's bass. Talking of the intention of record, Bodilsen writes in the liner notes: "The keywords were simplicity and space: An opportunity for each musician to create a musical story in his own personal voice." Short Stories For Dreamers brings the personal narratives of the participants into a greater whole, creating a unique work of art. It is to be hoped that the success of Bollani's Danish trio will create an effect of synergy and thus lead listeners to this gem of a record. ~ Jakob Baekgaard https://www.allaboutjazz.com/short-stories-for-dreamers-jesper-bodilsen-stunt-records-sundance-music-review-by-jakob-baekgaard.php

Personnel: Jesper Bodilsen: bass; Ulf Wakenius: guitars; Peter Asplund: trumpet, flugelhorn; Severi Pyysalo: vibraphone, melodica.

Short Stories For Dreamers

Thursday, June 1, 2017

Niels-Henning Ørsted Pedersen - Those Who Were

Styles: Jazz, Post Bop
Year: 1997
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 54:54
Size: 128,8 MB
Art: Front

(7:08)  1. Our Love Is Here To Stay
(5:38)  2. Derfor Kan Vort Oje Glaedes
(4:56)  3. With Respect
(5:31)  4. Those Who Were
(6:53)  5. Friend Forever
(6:41)  6. The Puzzle
(5:42)  7. Wishing And Hoping
(6:41)  8. You And The Night And The Music
(5:40)  9. Guilty, Your Honour

Not only is Niels Pedersen a great bassist, but he puts a lot of care into his solo projects as well. Pedersen is joined by guitarist Ulf Wakenius for a slow, percolating version of "Our Love Is Here to Stay." Johnny Griffin's tenor sax joins in on the bassist's challenging blues "The Puzzle" and jousts with the string players for top solo honors on a vigorous workout of "You and the Night and the Music." Victor Lewis and Alex Riel share the drumming duties. A surprise guest is European pop vocalist Lisa Nilsson, who does a beautiful interpretation of Pedersen's "Those Who Were"; the leader discovered her by hearing one of her recordings on his daughter's radio. By far this is Niels Pedersen's most impressive release to date. ~ Ken Dryden http://www.allmusic.com/album/those-who-were-mw0000029967

Personnel: Niels-Henning Orsted Pedersen (acoustic bass); Lisa Nilsson (vocals); Johnny Griffin (tenor saxophone); Ulf Wakenius (acoustic & electric guitars); Alex Riel, Victor Lewis (drums).

Those Who Were

Wednesday, May 10, 2017

Ulf Wakenius - Enchanted Moments

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 1996
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 55:02
Size: 129,4 MB
Art: Front

(4:08)  1. Hymn
(8:10)  2. Little Girl Blue
(5:19)  3. Cry Me a River
(6:26)  4. When I Fall in Love
(5:41)  5. Old Folks
(5:58)  6. I Wish I Knew
(4:00)  7. A Nightingale Sang in Berkeley Square
(5:08)  8. Blues at Night
(3:38)  9. My One and Only Love
(6:30) 10. Ballad of the Sad Young Men


Those who've been exposed to Ulf Wakenius' more aggressive side will be pleasantly surprised by Enchanted Moments, a generally rewarding collection of ballads and standards that finds the Swedish fusion/hard bop/post-bop improvisor playing acoustic guitar exclusively. Wakenius' range of influences has included Pat Metheny and John McLaughlin as well as earlier guitarists like Wes Montgomery and Jim Hall -- and in this very lyrical and reflective setting, Metheny's influence is especially apparent. Well-respected in Swedish jazz circles but little known in the U.S., Wakenius is, for the most part, well-served by Scandinavian jazzmen Lars Jansson (acoustic piano, synthesizers) Lars Danielsson (acoustic bass, synthesizers) and Raymond Karlsson (drums, percussion). Overall, the synthesizers have a warm, strings-like sound that compliments Wakenius' vulnerable lyricism -- although on occasion, they take on a dull, new age-ish quality. But thankfully, this CD (available on the Stockholm-based Dragon label) has more strengths than weaknesses. ~ Alex Henderson http://www.allmusic.com/album/enchanted-moments-mw0000023923

Personnel: Lars Danielsson - Bass (Acoustic), Composer, Synthesize;  Lars Jansson - Piano, Synthesizer;  Raymond Karlsson - Drums, Percussion;  Ulf Wakenius - Guitar, Guitar (Acoustic)

Enchanted Moments

Saturday, April 8, 2017

Gerardo Nuñez, Ulf Wakenius - Jazzpaña Live

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 63:08
Size: 144.5 MB
Styles: Guitar jazz, Flamenco
Year: 2015
Art: Front

[11:45] 1. Calima
[ 8:48] 2. Alma De Mujer
[ 6:32] 3. Para Chick
[ 6:18] 4. Siboney
[ 3:17] 5. Blues For Pablo
[12:17] 6. El Vito
[14:08] 7. Calima (Encore)

Gerardo Núñez / flamenco guitar; Ulf Wakenius / jazz guitar; Chano Domínguez / piano; Ramón Valle / piano; Omar Rodriguez Calvo / bass; Liber Torriente / drums; Christof Lauer / saxophone; Cepillo / percussion.

Connecting the unexpected: Jazzpaña – Flamenco meets Jazz - a special multicultural statement. After Jazzpaña.(1992) and Jazzpaña.II (2000) now alailable as live version. And even a third world has been added: Flamenco - Jazz - Kuba. Recorded at the Berlin Philharmonic and at the WDR 3 Jazzfest Dortmund.

“Music for people with open ears and open minds. Far removed from a predefined style. Without any fear of mixing genres.” In 1992, this was the understanding of jazz that producer Siggi Loch based the launch of his ACT adventure on. The label’s very first recording, Jazzpaña, was to become a milestone and synonym for ACT’s philosophy, and became a double Grammy nominee in the process. Jazzpaña brought the stars of the “Nuevo Flamenco” from Spain together with US jazz greats such as Michael Brecker, Peter Erskine and Al Di Meola, backed by the sound of the WDR Big Band. The arrangements came from Vince Mendoza, though a little-known artist at the time, he is now one of the most versatile and prolific composer-arranger-conductors of the last two decades, a multi-Grammy Award winner.

Jazzpaña Live

Tuesday, October 25, 2016

Ray Brown Trio With Ulf Wakenius - Summertime

Styles: Jazz, Post-Bop
Year: 1998
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 65:58
Size: 152,7 MB
Art: Front

(4:45)  1. West Coast blues
(6:42)  2. Summertime
(5:24)  3. Topsy
(4:44)  4. Yours is my heart alone
(7:52)  5. It's only a papermoon
(7:22)  6. My one and only
(8:34)  7. Reunion blues
(3:31)  8. Watch what happens
(5:09)  9. The more I see you
(7:44) 10. Honeysuckle rose
(4:06) 11. Cakes blues

Ray Brown's latest release introduces Swedish guitarist Ulf Wakenius to a wider audience. Wakenius joins the bassist again for a set of familiar standards (he also appeared on Brown's 1995 Telarc release, Seven Steps To Heaven ). Showing a strong Wes Montgomery influence with embedded blues, Wakenius shares the spotlight with the trio, which now includes pianist Geoff Keezer as well as drummer Gregory Hutchinson. Brown takes the solo line on "It's Only a Paper Moon," swinging as usual, before turning the familiar melody over to guitar and piano. He continues to feature his bass playing through the remainder of that familiar gem and on several other tracks. Brown, who turned 71 late last year, just keeps getting better and better. To introduce George Gershwin's "My One and Only," the bassist picks up the bow and gently weaves the melody before turning it over to his piano and guitar coworkers. Drummer Hutchinson is in fine form, stretching out on "The More I See You," trading fours elsewhere, and supplying the proper texture throughout. He picks up the brushes on "Honeysuckle Rose" to introduce Keezer's lead on the familiar melody. The 27-year-old pianist plays it slow and relaxed, showing a maturity that has come through his decade of experience, starting out with Art Blakey and The Jazz Messengers, and continuing with his handful of releases as leader. The final track, Ray Brown's rhythmic and funky "Cakes' Blues," reveals the pianist's Monk-inspired playfulness and snappy experimentation."Yours Is My Heart Alone" is performed up-tempo with fire, showing the guitarist's blazing technique. With two releases as leader, Wakenius is yet another rising star among the many that Ray Brown has nurtured. "Watch What Happens" is done up-tempo with a swinging rhythm, comfortable melodic work from each member, and a cohesiveness that has always been there to mark Ray Brown's ensembles. Highly Recommended. ~ Jim Santella https://www.allaboutjazz.com/summertime-ray-brown-telarc-records-review-by-jim-santella.php

Personnel: Ray Brown (bass); Geoff Keezer (piano); Ulf Wakenius (guitar); Gregory Hutchinson (drums).

Summertime

Ulf Wakenius - Vagabond

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 2012
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 53:03
Size: 122,3 MB
Art: Front

(5:18)  1. Vagabond
(6:16)  2. Message in a Bottle
(5:01)  3. Bretagne
(4:36)  4. Psalmen
(6:35)  5. Breakfast in Baghdad
(3:21)  6. Song for Japan
(4:31)  7. Birds and Bees
(3:54)  8. Praying
(5:07)  9. Chorinho
(5:25) 10. Witchi-Tai-To
(2:54) 11. Encore

Swedish guitarist Ulf Wakenius is perhaps best known for his ten year stint in pianist Oscar Peterson's trio, following in the footsteps of guitarists Barney Kessel, Herb Ellis and Joe Pass. Wakenius clocked up enough road miles with Peterson to have traveled to the moon and back, and he also toured extensively and recorded with bassists Ray Brown and Niels-Henning Orsted Pedersen. These heavyweight associations have tended to overshadow his own projects as leader, which date back more than two decades to his group with drummer Jack DeJohnette, saxophonist Bill Evans (saxophone), trumpeter Randy Brecker, pianist Niels Lan Doky and bassist Lars Danielsson.  Since signing to ACT Music in the mid-2000s, Wakenius has paid singular tribute to two of the most influential pianists of the last forty years, Keith Jarrett on Notes from the Heart (ACT Music, 2005) and the late, sorely lamented Esbjorn Svensson on Love is Real (ACT Music, 2008). In the process, Wakenius has demonstrated his proclivity for interpreting a tune with originality and respect. The acoustic Vagabond is a halfway house between original material and covers, and explores a wide range of stylistic and emotional terrain. English guitarist John McLaughlin once wrote that Wakenius sounded as if he was born with a guitar in his hands, and in truth he has never sounded better.

Wakenius' virtuosity is a given, though his lightening fast runs which pepper the set could slacken the jaws of the most jaded guitar aficionados. However, even his most fluid lines, on pianist Lyle Mays's lovely "Chorinho" or Attila Zoller's infectious "Birds and Bees, (a duet with son Eric), have tremendous melodic narrative. Wakenius demonstrates subtlety and lyricism on a beautiful interpretation of Jarrett's "Encore" and on the self-penned "Song for Japan," where damped strings create the sound of a Japanese lute, on this moving ode.  Wakenius conjures the troubled Middle East on the dramatic "Breakfast in Baghdad." Danielsson's bass brings powerful counterpoint to the guitarist's darting lines, while accordionist Vincent Peirani reprises the role singer Youn Sun Nah performed with Wakenius on her own Same Girl (ACT, 2010). Wakenius and Nah have formed a striking partnership in recent years and she lends her seductive vocals to a beautifully simple but affecting take on The Police classic "Message in a Bottle," with guitarist Nguyen Le adding wavy, singing lines. Peirani and Danielsson make significant contributions throughout; the accordionist weaves delightful French, Argentinean and Arab textures his playing on the dramatic title track is exceptional while the bassist lends two striking compositions in the form of the blues-tinged nostalgia of "Psalmen" and the gentle, Iberian-flavored "Praying."  Wakenius pays personal tribute to saxophonist Jim Pepper on "Witchi-Tai-To," complete with memorable Native American chants. Wakenius' star shines brightly on these 11 cuts, though it is the space he allows for all the voices on Vagabond which ultimately makes it such a resounding success. Uniformly strong compositions and wonderful, empathetic playing from all mark this recording out as one of the guitarist's finest efforts. One more time to the moon and back, please. ~ Ian Patterson https://www.allaboutjazz.com/vagabond-ulf-wakenius-act-music-review-by-ian-patterson.php
 
Personnel: Ulf Wakenius: acoustic guitars, oud, chant; Vincent Peirani: accordion, accordina, voice; Lars Danielsson: bass, cello; Eric Wakenius: acoustic steel string guitar; Michael Dahlvid: darbuka, cajon; Youn Sun Nah: vocals (2); Nguyen Le: electric guitar (2).

Vagabond

Monday, October 24, 2016

Ulf Wakenius - New York Meeting

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 1994
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 63:55
Size: 146,6 MB
Art: Front

(5:46)  1. Berni's Tune
(9:11)  2. The way you look tonight
(5:53)  3. Crazy he calls me
(7:43)  4. Nature of business
(5:11)  5. Spartacus
(7:38)  6. New York Meeting
(6:47)  7. Jet Lag
(6:19)  8. Angel Eyes
(9:22)  9. Georgia On My Mind

Even though he has had a spot with the Oscar Peterson Quartet since 1997 and has been on four Ray Brown CDs, including Some of My Best Friends Are...Guitarists, Ulf Wakenius has not yet gained the name recognition accorded to other European guitarists such as Philip Catherine. It's hard to figure out why, given his prodigious talent, which he displays in the company of fine New York jazz musicians, plus Danish pianist Niels Lans Doky. Wakenius favors the cleaner-cut to guitar. Individual notes can be heard and chords are not overly complex. He shows his harmonic creativity on such cuts as "The Way You Look Tonight." This cut has Wakenius making exceptional use of space, understanding that the guitar has to stop and breathe every now and then rather than demonstrating how fast and furious the axe can be played. Wakenius shows a kinder and gentler side on a sort of off-center offering of "Crazy He Calls Me" where he gets a more resonant electric sound on his acoustic guitar. The rhythm section of Ira Coleman and Billy Hart keeps the momentum going on a tough rendition of "Nature of Business," with Hart using cymbals, snares, and bass drums to control the motion of the music. The piece de resistance is a nine-minute excursion by solo guitar of "Georgia on My Mind" where the melody is more often than not hinted at rather than explicitly stated. It's quite amazing as the guitar player reveals aspects of Hoagy Carmichael's rather uncomplicated piece of music that one was never aware of. Wakenius has been active since 1975, so he's no new kid on the block. This album should get this fine Swedish guitarist the recognition he has earned. ~ Dave Nathan http://www.allmusic.com/album/new-york-meeting-mw0001273219

Personnel: Ulf Wakenius - electric/acoustic guitar;  Niels Lan Doky – piano;  Ira Coleman – bass;  Billy Hart - drums

New York Meeting