Showing posts with label Lars Danielsson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lars Danielsson. Show all posts

May 02, 2012

ACT Jubilee Night live at Muffathalle, München February 2012

Céline Bonacina (baritone sax)
Nils Landgren (tb, voc)
Lars Danielsson (b, vc)
Verneri Pohjola (tp)
Michael Wollny (p, el-p)
Leszek Możdżer (p, el-p)
Nguyên Lê (g)
Wolfgang Haffner (dr)
recorded live at Muffathalle, München, February 3, 2012

1. Dodge the Dodo (Esbjörn Svensson)
2. Pasodoble (Lars Danielsson) Lars Danielsson & Leszek Możdżer
3. Sleep safe and warm (Krzysztof Komeda) Leszek Możdżer
4. Svantetic (Krzysztof Komeda) Michael Wollny & Leszek Możdżer
5. Stars in your eyes (Herbie Hancock) Nils Landgren, Michael Wollny, Lars Danielsson, Wolfgang Haffner
6. Lonely Dancer (Michael Wollny) Céline Bonacina, Michael Wollny, Lars Danielsson
7. Zig Zag Blues (Céline Bonacina)
8. Silent Way (Wolfgang Haffner) 

Whoever thought jazz is a marginal branch of music meant for small cellar pubs was disabused at the ACT jubilee concerts during the first week of February 2012. In celebration of the 20th anniversary of the Munich label, jazz visited the impressive concert halls in Germany. Around 4.500 people followed its call and experienced during the four concert nights how the spotlight was turned on jazz. ACT all-star ensemble consisting of nine musicians thrilled the audience at the Philharmonie in Berlin (KMS), Muffathalle in Munich, Tonhalle in Düsseldorf and Laeiszhalle in Hamburg in a performance that according to the German magazine BUNTE was “a world class session with the very best of jazz”. The newspaper DIE WELT was greatly impressed after the final concert in Hamburg on the 5th February and spoke of “a magnificent programme and a storm of applause”. Fortunately, the NDR had decided beforehand to record the concert. Therefore, the ACT family celebration on stage will be available on a double CD which is released on the 27th April for a special price (2 CDs for the price of one).
Siggi Loch’s journey has followed a trajectory all of its own. After stumbling across the music of Sidney Bechet at the age of 15, he formed a band and began dreaming of running his own jazz label. Half a century ago he was among the R&B fans getting a first taste of The Beatles at the Star Club in Hamburg. Soon afterwards he produced some of the first tracks by the pop group The Searchers as he embarked on a career as a talent-spotter, producer and major label executive.
It is, of course, his own jazz company, ACT, which has become his primary passion – along with his ever-expanding collection of contemporary art, examples of which adorn many of the album sleeves. If much of the jazz world now resembles a sterile, hermetically sealed museum, Loch clings to the quixotic notion that the music has to surprise, to stir – and sometimes to shock.
Never shy of speaking his mind,
he worries that too many of today’s compositions sound “constructed not composed”. The past is important, but why be enslaved by it? “Musicians have to work their audience,” he told me. “Just like in rock and roll. They’re not living in an ivory tower.” Does that mean a pursuit of the lowest common denominator, Kenny G with a Bavarian accent? Not at all, as ACT’s 20th anniversary tour demonstrated. While there may have been Arctic conditions on the streets outside the venues on the Jubilee Concert tour, musical director Nils Landgren set about creating a piping-hot summation of the label’s history, performed by the members of the ACT Family Band.
Polish pianist Leszek Możdżer indulged in playful duels with his German counterpart Michael Wollny. Pensive French-Vietnamese guitarist Nguyên Lê channelled the spirit of Jimi Hendrix with a little help from Denmark’s Cæcilie Norby. Finnish trumpeter Verneri Pohjola added will o’ the wisp cameos elsewhere, while the diminutive French player Céline Bonacina – almost dwarfed by her baritone sax -- unleashed one fiery solo after another. The musician who remains the symbol of ACT’s act was, of course missing. But Esbjörn Svensson – who died in a scuba-diving accident four years ago – was remembered as the cast gathered for a moving finale. Here’s to the next twenty years.


March 30, 2012

Cæcilie Norby Group live at JazzFest Berlin 2011


Cæcilie Norby
vocals
Katrine Gislinge piano
Lars Danielsson bass
Per Gade guitar
Morten Lund drums
Nils Landgren trombone, vocals

recorded live at Haus der Berliner Festspiele, Main Stage, November 4, 2011

1. Both sides now (Joan R. Mitchell)
2. Dead Princess (Maurice Joseph Ravel)
3. Wholly Earth (Abbey Lincoln)
4. The Tears of Billie Blue (Claude Achille Debussy)
5. Scheherazade (Nikolai Rimski-Korsakow)
6. Bei mir bist du scheen (Sholom Sholem Sucunda)
7. Cuban Cigars (Lars Olof Danielsson)
8. No Air (Eric Satie)

Danish singer Cæcilie Norby was born into a musical home. Her mother, an opera singer, and her father, a composer, supported her musical education from an early age. Jazz was not her first love, though. After a classical education she turned to pop music in the early eighties and had some considerable success with the band OneTwo.
Ten years later the renowned Blue Note label released her self titled jazz debut, starring none other than Chick Corea. For later productions she cooperated with the likes of the Brecker Brothers, Terri Lyne Carrington, Nils Landgren or Palle Mikkelborg.
Her latest cd, Arabesque, shows yet another of her facets, reminiscent of composers like Satie, Debussy, Ravel and Fauré. Together with her recent ensemble, the IFPI (International Federation of the Phonographic Industry)-awardee will once again leave the boundaries of classical music, jazz or pop behind.

November 02, 2011

Tribute to Esbjörn Svensson live at JazzBaltica 2011


1. Ballad For E (Magnus Öström)
2. Bright Size Life (Pat Metheny)
Pat Metheny, gt
Dan Berglund, b
Magnus Öström, dr

3. From Gagarin's Point Of View (Esbjörn Svensson)
Pat Metheny, gt
Dan Berglund, b
Magnus Öström, dr
Nils Landgren, tb

4. Dodge The Dodo (Esbjörn Svensson)
Pat Metheny, gt
Dan Berglund, b
Magnus Öström, dr
Nils Landgren, tb
Leszek Mozdzer, p
Lars Danielsson, cello

5. Pavane. Thoughts Of A Septuagenarian (Esbjörn Svensson)
Yaron Herman, p
Lars Danielsson, cello

6. Chopin (Leszek Mozdzer)
Leszek Mozdzer, piano

7. Epistrophy (Thelonious Monk)
8. Remembrance (Vijay Iyer)
Vijay Iyer, piano

9. Don't Tell Me How The Story Goes (Kris Kristofferson)
Nils Landgren, tb
Michael Wollny, p

10. Believe, Beleft, Below (Esbjörn Svensson)
Viktoria Tolstoy, voc
Pat Metheny, gt
Dan Berglund, b
Magnus Öström, dr
Michael Wollny, p

11. Shining On You (Esbjörn Svensson)
Viktoria Tolstoy, voc
Pat Metheny, gt
Dan Berglund, b
Magnus Öström, dr
Nils Landgren, tb
Michael Wollny, p
Lars Danielsson, cello

12. The Goldhearted Miner (Esbjörn Svensson)
Yaron Herman, p
Lars Danielsson, cello

Since Esbjörn Svensson’s untimely death in 2008 his childhood friend the distinctive drum ’n’ bass-influenced drummer in EST Magnus Öström has taken time to adjust to his sense of loss following the devastating death of Svensson as a result of a scuba diving accident.
Last year Dan Berglund, EST’s bassist, debuted Tonbruket, a prog rock-tinged group that successfully toured its debut album in the UK. Like Berglund Öström has paid tribute to their great friend on the album which features a new grouping of Stockholm musicians, with Andreas Hourdakis coming in on guitar; Gustaf Karlöf, piano and Thobias Gabrielson (electric bass) to join Öström.
The album titled Thread of Life was recorded in Magnus’ favourite studio, Atlantis in Stockholm, with all of the 10 songs written by the drummer. Pat Metheny, who famously performed on a staggering version of ‘Dodge The Dodo’ with EST at the JazzBaltica festival in Germany in 2003, got close to the band over the years and was greatly affected by Esbjörn’s death. He and Berglund join on the poignant sixth track ‘Ballad For E’ recorded at Avatar in New York at the end of last year.

August 29, 2011

Jan Bang "...And Poppies From Kandahar" live at Punktfestival Kristiansand 2010


Jan Bang, Erik Honoré - Electronics, Samples
Jon Hassell, Arve Henriksen - Trumpets, Electronics
Lars Danielsson - Bass
Sidsel Endresen - Voclas
recorded live at Punktfestival Kristiansand/Norway, September 3, 2010

1. The Drug Mule/ Self Injury (Jan Bang/ Arve Henriksen)
2. ...and Poppies from Kandahar Suite (The Midwive´s Dilemma/ Who Grooms The Child?/ Passport Control) (Jan Bang)

…And Poppies From Kandahar, Jan Bang’s first album under his own name, evokes a powerful sense of place – but it’s not a place you would recognize, or ever expect to find.  A descendent of Jon Hassell’s “fourth world” concept, it sketches scenes of struggle and malice, in locales both primitive and urbane.   As a producer, Bang stitches it together like a patchwork atlas and then makes the seams disappear: live recordings and studio constructions, old samples and new solos come together to form an exquisite whole.
Bang recruits a cast of collaborators from Norway and beyond, who will be familiar to anyone who’s followed his recent productions: trumpeter and vocalist Arve Henriksen, whose albums Cartography and Chiaroscuro were co-produced by Bang; the stunning vocalist Sidsel Endresen, whose captivating turn on “The Midwife’s Dilemma” grows out of a moan and a half-croak; and samadhisound founder David Sylvian, who wrote the titles for each piece and the album as a whole, setting these abstract scenes in a disruptive context.
This is music of the world, but it’s rooted in Kristiansand, Norway, Bang’s home and workplace.  His musical career began in the late ‘80s, when he cut his first albums in a synth-and-vocals duo with Erik  Honoré.  By the ‘90s he was a producer of Norwegian pop acts, when pianist Bugge Wesseltoft invited him on stage with an improvising ensemble.  “I had the idea of using musicians as ‘input’ to my sampler instead of vinyl,” recalls Bang.  “We called it ‘live sampling.’ I found it appealing to work in a live situation with improvised music where things change at the blink of an eye …  .  I was able to work in past, present and future, according to what the other musicians were doing and how they reacted to what I was throwing back into the mix.”

November 27, 2010

Lars Danielsson Tarantella live at JazzBaltica 2010 - UPDATE!


Lars Danielsson (b/vcl)
Leszek Mozdzer (p)
Mathias Eick (tp)
John Parricelli (g)
Magnus Öström (dr)
Cæcile Norby (voc) (8-11)
recorded live at Große Konzertscheune Salzau, July 3, 2010

1. Both Sides Now
2. Pegasus
3. Tarantella (Lars Danielsson)
4. Fellow (Lars Danielsson)
5. Pasodoble (Lars Danielsson)
6. Fiojo (Leszek Mozdzer)
7. Suffering (Lars Danielsson)
8. Hallelujah (Leonard Cohen)
9. Dead Princess (Maurice Ravel)
10. Wholly Earth (Abbey Lincoln)
11. Asta

Over the past few years Swedish bassist, cellist, composer, and arranger Lars Danielsson has matured into one of the most important voices in European jazz. On his duo album Pasodoble he and his Polish peer, pianist Leszek Możdżer, executed a beautiful and breathtaking manifesto of melody and harmony that mediated between classic and jazz.
These previous concepts form the basis of Danielsson’s new CD, Tarantella. For instance, some of the duo pieces and passages on Tarantella, such as “Melody on Wood” and “Fiojo”, are built directly upon passages from Pasodoble, and on listening, it’s no wonder that Danielsson calls Możdżer “the perfect pianist for me”. It is simply amazing how Danielsson consistently refines his work, how he continues to open up new areas of sound and place them in new contexts and combinations. “I have taken the character of my music as the starting point, and have looked for the people who will best fit to it.” He found Norwegian trumpeter Mathias Eick, British guitarist John Parricelli, and the American drummer Eric Harland.
This assembled international line-up is ideal for pieces that, with their controlled sense of arching suspense, seem so classically oriented on the one hand, and on the other hand are wide-open for improvisation and intimate musical dialogue. Those who know Mathias Eick can confirm that his lyrical trumpet playing, saturated with its bold sense of space, is a perfect accompaniment. More surprising is how John Parricelli, who is best known for his fusion-sound, and who has worked with the likes of Colin Towns and Django Bates, obtains such delicately shaded sounds on the guitar. And it’s even more amazing as to how the young drummer Eric Harland has traded in the hard-edged, energy-loaded US school of drumming in favour of a more laid-back, melodically innovative percussion style.
 

June 07, 2010

Julian & Roman Wasserfuhr live at Leverkusener Jazztage 2009


Julian Wasserfuhr – trumpet
Roman Wasserfuhr – piano
Lars Danielsson - bass, cello
Anders Kjellberg - drums
Nils Landgren - trombone, vocals

recorded live at Forum Leverkusen, November 2009

1. Traveller´s Defense (Danielsson)
2. Dusan (Wasserfuhr)
3. Blue Desert
4. Why Should I Care
5. Song For E. (Danielsson)
6. Geno The Shoeshine (Wasserfuhr)

When asked who the most talented young musicians in Germany are, the answer echoes back from the rural town of Hückeswagen near Cologne. Surrounded by hills and forest live two brothers who play “with a magical tone” (Süddeutsche Zeitung) that is “of the finest quality” (JazzPodium). Their 2006 homage to Chet Baker, Remember Chet, was celebrated as a “stunning debut” (Süddeutsche Zeitung). In faraway Sweden, Nils Landgren heard about these young musicians’ abilities through the jazz grapevine, and decided he wanted to produce the two shooting stars inviting the brothers to that famous sound kitchen in which Landgren has cooked up his own highly successful albums, the Nilento Studio in Gothenburg. Since the world famous trombonist doesn’t do things by half, he picked out Sweden’s most prominent musicians for the session: with one of the most important voices in European jazz, bassist and cellist Lars Danielsson was a fantastic addition to the brothers’ sound. Anders Kjellberg also works beautifully with the overall musical concept, fitting right in the groove with clockwork timing that is consistently focused and mindful. Understatement is given its real worth when the barely 21-year-old Julian launches into his breathy trumpet tone, astonishing in its substance and clarity. Roman is the other pole that makes the brothers’ playing so attractive - on piano, Julian’s two-year-older alter ego is the empathetic and resourceful initiator. With their innate talent for strong melodies, the art by which the Wasserfuhrs narrate their marvellous jazz tales is pure pleasure to the ears. Just as in a fairytale, Julian and Roman Wasserfuhr have been awakened by their Swedish fellow travellers with a musical kiss. With Upgraded in Gothenburg (released on ACT) the brothers have been enhanced and advanced; “We make authentic music that’s honest and sincere. It’s music that is close to our hearts, and we think that people appreciate that.”

April 18, 2010

Rebekka Bakken & Band live at MusicHall Worpswede 2010


Rebekka Bakken, vocals
Christer Karlsson, keys
Sebastian Nylund, guitar
Sven Lindvall, bass
Per Lindvall, drums

recorded live at MusicHall, Worpswede, January 21, 2010

1. Like Cologne (Rebekka Bakken)
2. Sometimes (Rebekka Bakken)
3. Ghost In This House (Hugh Prestwood)
4. Powder Room Collapse (Rebekka Bakken)
5. Nothing For You (Rebekka Bakken)
6. In The Early Morning Hours (Rebekka Bakken)
7. Is That You (Rebekka Bakken)
8. Hard To Be A Loser (Rebekka Bakken)
9. I Can Always Forget (Rebekka Bakken)
10. To Be Your Lover (Rebekka Bakken)
11. Not A Woman (Rebekka Bakken)
12. No Easy Way (Rebekka Bakken)
13. Say Goodbye To What Is Gone (Rebekka Bakken)
14. Why Do All The Good Guys Get The Dragons (Rebekka Bakken)
15. Forever Young (Marian Gold, Frank Merteen, Bernhard Lloyd)
16. Starlight Of My Heart (Rebekka Bakken)


Rebekka Bakken, vocals
Jesper Nordenström, keys
Stefan Astner, guitar
Lars Danielsson, bass
Per Lindvall, drums

recorded live at Kulturzentrum Schlachthof, Bremen, April 15, 2005

17. Didn't I
18. Mitt Hjerte Alltid Vanker/ So Ro (Trad., Hans Adolph Brorson/ Rebekka Bakken)

The fact that the Norwegian artist lived quite a long time in New York City and Vienna adds some charming and contrasting colours to her works. The music of her native country is still associated with notorious clichés. Rebekka, however, does not consider herself a musical landscape painter. “I never had the impression that my surroundings - neither at home nor abroad - contributed much to my inspiration.” Still - listeners who are bound to do so will discover the long winters, the crystal clear mountain air, and the mystic fjord landscapes in her former records. “Such images are only created in the eye of the beholder,” reflects Rebekka. “As musicians we shouldn’t be afraid of these clichés, of images others associate with our music. Our listeners notice things that musicians are not aware of. When I listen to Brazilian music, certain images come to my mind which no Brazilian would ever think of because it is their everyday music. So I have no problem with it if somebody recognizes Norway in my songs. That’s fine with me.”
On her latest album called “Morning Hours” she leaves her songs a lot of room to enfold. “All this space is important for me,” says Rebekka Bakken,“it is like a long, deep breath, like the instinct of life per se. In this space you deal with the things that really matter in life.” Her fourth album sounds different from its predecessors, more mysteriously and yet closer to reality. And it is her most romantic work to date. “I actually did not realize that at first. I really love the album because the songs sound like I wrote them. There’s nothing that stands between me and them. I did not have to elaborate much because I immediately felt comfortable with them.”

March 14, 2010

Lars Danielsson & Leszek Mozdzer live at Swedish Jazz Celebration 2009

Photo © Nikodem Krajewski / ACT

Lars Danielsson, Bass, Violoncello
Leszek Mozdzer, Piano

recorded live at Swedish Jazz Celebration, Gothenburg/ Sweden, March 28, 2009

1. Pasodoble (Danielsson)
2. Eja Mitt Hjärta
3. Incognito (Mozdzer)
4. Easy Money (Mozdzer)
5. Prado (Danielsson)
6. Follow My Backlights (Mozdzer)
7. Suffering (Danielsson)

The really great album "Pasodoble" was introduced to you earlier on this blog. As a kind of extension of this duo, Lars Danielsson and Leszek Mozdzer recorded the album Tarantella as a follow-up. Some of the duo pieces and passages on Tarantella, such as “Melody on Wood” and “Fiojo”, are built directly upon passages from Pasodoble, and on listening, it’s no wonder that Danielsson calls Możdżer “the perfect pianist for me”. It is simply amazing how Danielsson consistently refines his work, how he continues to open up new areas of sound and place them in new contexts and combinations. “I have taken the character of my music as the starting point, and have looked for the people who will best fit to it.” He found Norwegian trumpeter Mathias Eick, British guitarist John Parricelli, and the American drummer Eric Harland. Of course, Trantella is released on ACT.

February 21, 2010

Lars Danielsson & Leszek Mozdzer: “Pasodoble“ live at Kronberg Academy Cello Festival 2009


Lars Danielsson, bass, cello
Leszek Mozdzer, piano

recorded live at Stadthalle Kronberg im Taunus, October 2, 2009

1. Praying (Danielsson)
2. Fellow (Danielsson)
3. Pasodoble (Danielsson)
4. Eja Mitt Hjärta (Swedish traditional)
5. Incognito (Mozdzer)
6. Easy Money (Mozdzer)
7. Prado (Danielsson)
8. Suffering (Danielsson)

Lars Danielsson is a musician of astonishing versatility. While he was studying classical cello at Gothenburg Conservatory he was listening mostly to rock: Jimi Hendrix, Cream and Santana. Then he happened to see an Oscar Peterson concert on TV with Danish bassist Nils-Henning Ørsted Pedersen This was the beginning of his conversion, from now on the bass was to take first place in his life. Pasodoble is an exciting duo album, with Leszek Mozdzer, an artist who is widely regarded as the most successful and versatile pianist of his home country Poland.
The two musicians share a lot of common ground. Their mutual admiration becomes very evident on this, their first duo album. Those who were expecting to hear the occasional standard on the album are in for a surprise. Bass and piano have generated so many ideas that all but one of the tracks – the traditional folksong “Eja Mitt Hjärta”, that Danielsson arranged especially for this album – are original compositions by Lars or Leszek. This proves to be a musical liaison that promises a long and fruitful future.

October 05, 2009

Nils Landgren Project live at JazzBaltica 2002



Nils Landgren – tb, voc
Jonas Lindgren – vl
Örjan Högberg – vl
Matthias Helldén – cello
Sebastian Öberg – cello
Christian Olsson – dr, samples
Anders Widmark – p
Lars Danielsson – b
Wolfgang Haffner – dr

recorded live at JazzBaltica 2002, Große Konzertscheune, Salzau, July 6, 2002

1. Speak Low
2. Ghost In This House
3. This Masquerade
4. Nature Boy
5. The Ballad Of The Sad Young Men
6. Be There For You
7. Fragile
8. Everything Must Change
9. My Foolish Heart

The music of this concert was originally arranged for the album "Sentimental Journey",released on ACT. "Mr. Redhorn" once again gives way to his sensitive side and undertakes a trip to the land of emotions. "Sentimental Journey" - could there be a more appropriate title for an album from someone who is almost always speeding from one gig to the next, but who would like to shift down a gear? Nils declared that, "After all the hectic tours in this last period, it was simply the right time to do this album. I’ve always liked quiet songs that tell a story. It doesn’t make much difference to me whether I tell that story with words or with my instrument."

A lot of heart went into the making of "Sentimental Journey"; it is a project that is worked down to the smallest detail. What is more boring than a record on which every piece sounds pretty much the same? That’s not the case here. Every song has its own individual arrangement and stands alone in its beauty. Landgren is no friend of simple solutions - he’s not content with getting his ideas ready-made. Instead of using the usual string ensemble for an adequate background, he opted for the original FleshQuartet out of his Swedish homeland. Landgren intoned, "It’s damned hard to translate the ideas you have perpetually running around in your head into sounds, but I never thought it was possible that they could sound better in reality than the way I had painted them in my fantasy. I’ll always be indebted to the Fleshquartet for their contribution to this recording."

July 17, 2009

JazzBaltica Ensemble 2007 dir. by Steven Bernstein

Steven Bernstein - cond., slide tp
Axel Schlosser - tp
Nils Landgren - tb
Karl-Martin Almqvist - ts
Jukka Perko - as
Marcin Wasilewski - p
Lars Danielsson - b
Christopher Dell - vib
Wolfgang Haffner - dr

recorded live at JazzBaltica Salzau, Germany, June 28, 2007

Tracklist:
1. Happy Hour Blues
2. Cod 21
3. Interview
4. New Viper Dance
5. HSJ
6. We Are MTO/ Harlem


The ‘core cell’ of JazzBaltica, the JazzBaltica Ensemble, has been getting together every year. This small ‘big band’, which is always made up of different artists, includes top-flight musicians from Scandinavia, Germany and the Baltic regions, with names such as Lars Danielsson, Nils Landgren, Marcin Wasilewski, Axel Schlosser, Wolfgang Haffner and Jukka Perko. Their mission is to develop special programmes for the ‘Festival of Baltic Jazz’. In 2007 the Enesemble was directed by the ubiquitious trumpeter, slide trumpeter, arranger/composer, and bandleader Steven Bernstein, best known for his work with John Lurie´s Lounge Lizards and his own band Sex Mob.

February 05, 2009

Tim Hagans and the JazzBaltica Ensemble 2000

JazzBaltica Ensemble dir. by Tim Hagans
Tim Hagans – cond, tp, flh
Jukka Perko – ss, as
Vytautas Labutis – ss, as
Peter Weniger – ss, ts, fl
Per Goldschmidt – bs
Lars Lindgren – tp
Tomasz Stanko – tp
Robert Majewski – tp
Nils Landgren – tb
Sebastian Hoffmann – tb
Vladislav Sendecki – p
Lars Danielsson – b
Lisbeth Diers – perc
Anders Kjellberg – dr

recorded live at JazzBaltica Salzau, Germany, June 10, 2000

Tracklist:
1. No Words
2. Garage Band
3. Shorts
4. Lost In My Suitcase
5. Drum Row
6. From The Neck Down

Tim Hagans did some realy great Big Band recordings with the Swedish Norbotten Big Band, e.g. my favourite Big Band record "FUTURE MILES" on ACT Music:

Peter Weniger Project at JazzBaltica 2000

Peter Weniger – reeds
Lars Danielsson – b
Jukkis Uotila – dr
Tim Hagans – tp
Conrad Herwig – tb

recorded live at JazzBaltica Salzau, Germany, June 10, 2000

Tracklist:
1. People´s Case
2. Love Song
3. Scrootch
4. Space Dozen
5. Antonin


Peter Weniger released about ten records, the latest called "Sing Yourself A Dream":

November 28, 2008

JazzBaltica-Ensemble directed by Wolfgang Haffner JazzBaltica 2006


JazzBaltica-Ensemble directed by Wolfgang Haffner
JazzBaltica 2006

Wolfgang Haffner - Drums, Leader
Axel Schlosser - Trumpet
Nils Landgren - Trombone
Karl-Martin Almqvist - Tenor Saxophone
Jukka Perko - Alto Saxophone
Marcin Wasilewski - Piano
Sebastian Studnitzky - E-Piano, Trumpet
Lars Danielsson - Bass
Christopher Dell - Vibraphone
Biboul Darouiche - Percussion

Tracklist:
1. Faithless
2. Crusin
3. Shapes
4. Silent Way
5. 24 Hours
6. Some Other Time
7. Space Calzone

all tunes composed by Wolfgang Haffner
This is another live concert of the tunes known from Wolfgang´s great CD´s "Shapes" an "Acoustic Shapes" on the ACT Music Label:
Click Here

November 21, 2008

Pat Metheny meets Jazz Baltica 2003


Pat Metheny, guitar
Michael Brecker, tenor saxophone
Nils Landgren, vocals, trombone
Esbjörn Svensson, piano
Lars Danielsson, bass
Wolfgang Haffner, drums

recorded live at Jazz Baltica, Salzau, July 2003

Tracklist:
1. This Masquerade
2. The Nearness of You
3. Don´t Let Me Be Lonely Tonight
4. Fragile
5. The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress
6. Impressions

November 12, 2008

Wolfgang Haffner: Nordic Shapes at Jazz Baltica 2007



"Nordic Shapes" - Wolfgang Haffner & NDR Big Band (Cond.: Magnus Lindgren)
Soloists:
Wolfgang Haffner - drums
Lars Danielsson - bass
Nils Landgren - trombone
Nils Petter Molvaer - trumpet
Wolfgang Muthspiel - guitar
Jan Bang - electronics, samples

recorded live at Jazz Baltica 2007

tracklist:
1. Shapes
2. Faithless
3. Silent Way
4. 24 hours
5. Vallekilde
6. Yello
7. Space Calzone


If you enjoy this, buy Wolfgang´s great CD´s "Shapes" an "Acoustic Shapes" on the ACT Music Label:
Click Here