Showing posts with label Michael Wollny. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Michael Wollny. 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 25, 2012

Michael Wollny’s [em] live at JazzFest Berlin 2011


Michael Wollny
piano
Eva Kruse bass
Eric Schaefer drums
recorded live at Haus der Berliner Festspiele, Main Stage, November 4, 2011

1. Wasted and wanted (Michael Wollny)
2. Blank (Eric Schäfer)
3. Metall (Eva Kruse-Liljeqvist)
4. Kulingtang (Eric Schaefer)
5. Cembalo Manifest (Eric Schaefer)
6. Dance of the Vampires (Krzysztof Komeda)
7. Nr. 10 (Eva Kruse-Liljeqvist)
8. Whiteout (Michael Wollny)
9. Gorilla Biscuits (Eric Schaefer)
10. Phlegma Phighter (Eric Schaefer )

“Young enough, not to have to lug around the ballast of the jazz tradition, and perceptive enough to discover something new every day” (K.Heidkamp/Die Zeit). Since quite a few years now Michael Wollny and [em] have been ranking among the internationally most successful jazz combos from Berlin. The trio is comprised of three personalities who correlate with each other like the corners of an isosceles triangle. Coming from totally different positions, they throw their individual styles and approaches in the mix and team up to consummate form. Their often narrative, abstract songs are inspired by such diverse sources as movies, books, paintings, cartoons, philosophical essays, everyday life or –sometimes– music.
For their new album, [em] have added harpsichord, music boxes and other sound paraphernalia to their so far rather conventional pool of instruments. Inspired by Krzysztof Komeda’s score for Polanski’s Dance of the Vampires the band will –in addition to genuine compositions– present pieces from Komeda soundtracks.

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.

November 01, 2011

Michael Wollny & Theo Bleckmann live at JazzBaltica 2011


Michael Wollny - Piano
Theo Bleckmann - Vocals, Electronics
Gastsolisten: Nils Landgren - Trombone; Christopher Dell - Vibraphone
JazzBaltica Salzau, July 3, 2011

You Go To My Head (Coots)
None Of The Above (Bleckmann
The Rip (Portishead)
Song Of Indifference (Wollny)
Take My Life (Bleckmann)
Marion & Sam (Herrmann)

"Singing is difficult. Singing with words is a challenge. To sing without words is an art. Theo Bleckmann is very daring. The Dortmund-born singer, who has been living in New York for a decade, makes collages and water colors, destroys and re-constructs sounds, until almost nothing is left of the well trot expressions of Jazz language. The few standards that he in-cluded into his program at the Unterfahrt, seemed like little reconcilliating life savers amidst the experimental sounds in front of s stunned audience. Bleckmann works with layering and Irritation, with harmonies and contrast. Effortlessly and with breath-taking intonation he changes registers, departs from the semantic connection of the words, to then create soundscapes through new combinations of syllables and utterances and their associations. Sparsely, sometimes dry and introverted or edgy and loudly accompanied by the guitarist Ben Monder, he plays with vocal expressions, gargles and presses, breathes and screams, beams and triumphs. Bleckmann, who has also worked with Philip Glass and Meredith Monk, combines compositional and interpretive elements of the contemporary classical music with influences from experimental jazz. With dodecaphonic joy he jumps into variations of melodies creating new, fresh and provocative colors, sometimes directly, sometimes in dialogue with a sequencer. That is not always easy to listen to. A jazz concert for advanced listeners, powerful and convincing."-Ralf Dombrowski, Süddeutsche Zeitung.
Theo´s latest CD "Hello Earth! – The Music of Kate Bush" was released on Winter & Winter this year.

January 31, 2011

Johannes Enders and JazzBaltica Ensemble live at Jazzclub Unterfahrt Munich 2010


Johannes Enders, Tenor Saxophone, Flute, Leader
Karin Hammar, Trombone
Niels Lyhne Løkkegaard, Alto Saxophone, Flute
Lutz Häfner, Tenor Saxophone, Bass Clarinet, Flute
Axel Schlosser, Trumpet, Flügelhorn
Michael Wollny, Piano
Eva Kruse, Bass
Bastian Jütte, Drums

recorded live at  Jazzclub Unterfahrt, Munich July 8, 2010

1. The Jones Suite Part 2: Hank (Johannes Enders)
2. Summer Night (Harry Warren)
3. Billy Rubin Part 2 & 1 (Johannes Enders)
4. Beginners Mind Part 2 (Johannes Enders)

"One for three - The Jones Suite", the recording of JazzBaltica Ensemble 2008 concert at Salzau, released on enja, was dedicated to the three great brothers of modern jazz history: Elvin, Thad and Hank Jones.
Enders, who has always emphasized that his overriding commitment was to the “overall” sound, had delivered his masterpiece. Returning to his influences, he translated his hommage to that great arranger of modern jazz, Thad Jones, into his own contemporary musical language and, while paying tribute to Elvin Jones, the musical companion of John Coltrane, he also honours the master of the modern tenor saxophone.
What really moved musicians and audience alike at this great Salzau concert was the second movement, dedicated to the living piano legend, Hank Jones. Before the start of that final part of the concert, Hank Jones came onstage in person and bowed to Enders and the Ensemble’s moving performance with a rendition of his own composition "We’re All Together”, as arranged by Enders for the Ensemble. The audience was treated to one of those magic moments in Jazz that remain legendary for generations to come.
Supporting the 2010 release on enja the Ensemble reunited for this concert to play the suite again.

November 28, 2010

Michael Wollny live at JazzBaltica 2010

Michael Wollny´s Wunderkammer
Michael Wollny (p)
Tamar Halperin (cemb)
Hanno Busch (git)
recorded live at Große Konzertscheune Salzau, July 4, 2010

1. Kabinett 5
2. Sagée
3. Hexentanz

ELECTRONIC MOODS
Michael Wollny (p)
Guy Sternberg (electronics)
Barbara Buchholz (theremin)
recorded live at Große Konzertscheune Salzau, July 3, 2010

1. In the middle of the riddle
2. Dune

Michael Wollny is a musical adventurer, someone who always seeks out new sounds and sends his audience on exciting journeys of sonic discovery. Consequently, the critical response to his music has been appropriately enthusiastic. On his lastest CD, Wunderkammer, Wollny, together with harpsichordist Tamar Halperin, and producer Guy Sternberg, again searches for that which hasn’t been heard before. This CD is a sound trip into the wonderful worlds which are created when all the historic and modern keyboard instruments of an entire museum are combined.
Keyboard instruments which for a long time didn’t appear to go hand in hand: here you have it all on one CD. Harpsichord, celesta, harmonium, rhodes piano, concert grand: a kaleidoscope of palpable possibilities - the hard, “quill” sound of the harpsichord, the heavenly sound of the ringing celesta and the warm, sacral musical air of the harmonium sit beautifully next to the captivating, oscillating, metal reed sound of a Rhodes E piano and the dependable brilliance of a concert grand. The title Wunderkammer (“chamber of curiosities”) is therefore spot on. These Wunderkammer were the secret rooms in castles and monasteries in which rulers and bishops stored all their curious treasures in Late Renaissance and Baroque times. These may have included anything from a narwhal’s tusk to porcelain from Eastern Asia, obscure gaming machines, globes and surgical instruments – many bizarre and wonderful things that would amaze onlookers. It is these chambers of curiosities which fascinate Michael Wollny; “They should also always be a miniature portrayal of the world, a microcosm. Many moments come together to form the whole.”

November 26, 2010

Jazzbaltica-Ensemble 2010 directed by Martin Wind


Martin Wind - Bass, Composer, Arrangements
Johannes Enders, Niels Lyhne Løkkegaard - Saxophones
Axel Schlosser - Trumpet, Flügelhorn
Karin Hammar, Øyvind Brække - Trombone
Christopher Dell - Vibraphone
Michael Wollny - Piano
Andy Haberl -  Drums
Guests:
Donny McCaslin - Tenor Saxophone
Nils Wülker - Trumpet
Nils Landgren - Trombone
Don Friedman - Piano
Wolfgang Haffner - Drums
Lars Danielsson - Violoncello

recorded live at Große Konzertscheune, Salzau, July 2, 2010

1. Out in Pennsylvania
Soloists: Dell, vib, Schlosser, tp
2. Cruise Blues
Soloists: Wülker, tp; Enders, ts
3. Remember October 13th
Soloists: Enders, ts, Brakke, tb, Hammar, tb, Wollny, p, Haffner, dr
4. Get It
Soloists: Dell, vib, Landgren, tb, McCaslin, ts, Enders, ts
5. Memories Of Scotty (Don Friedman)
6. Theresia
Soloists: Lars Danielsson, cello; Nils Landgren, tb; Donny McCaslin, ts
7. Rainy River
Soloists: Michael Wollny, p; Martin Wind, b; Axel Schlosser, flh

Bassist and composer Martin Wind was born in Flensburg, Germany in 1968 and moved to New York in 1996 to study at New York University (NYU) with a scholarship by the German Academic Exchange Service.
In 1995 he earned himself a diploma as Orchestra Musician at the Music Conservatory in Cologne, Germany while studying with Prof. Wolfgang Guettler, former bassist with the Berlin Philharmonics.
In 1998 he earned his Master’s degree in Jazz Performance and Composition studying with Mike Richmond, Jim McNeely, Tom Boras, Mike Holober and Kenny Werner.
Since his move to New York Martin has become a regular at all major jazz clubs and is also in demand as a session player; his credits include movies such as "The Alamo", "Intolerable Cruelty", " Mona Lisa Smiles", "Fur", "The Bounty Hunter", and "True Grit".
In 1995 Martin came in third at the International Thelonious Monk Bass Competition in Washington, D.C.
In 1996 Martin Wind won the first Cognac Hennessy/Blue Note Jazz Search in Germany with his trio "Dreiklang" and got to record an album for Blue Note Records.
Since 2007 he’s been leading his own quartet featuring the talents of Sott Robinson (reeds), Bill Cunliffe (piano) and Tim Horner (drums). They’ve released the albums "Salt’n Pepper!" (2008), and "Get it?" (2010).
After their performance at JazzBaltica 2009 (released on DVD), Martin Wind was asked to compose and arrange the programme for the 2010 edition of the JazzBaltica Ensemble.

 

September 26, 2010

Nils Landgren & Michael Wollny live at JazzBaltica 2010

Nils Landgren, trombone, vocals
Michael Wollny, piano
recorded live at Kleine Scheune Salzau, July 3, 2010

1. Salzau Blues (Wollny/ Landgren)
2. Fragile (Sting)
3. Mr. Loso (Michael Wollny)
4. I Loves You Porgy (Gershwin)
5. In Love Again (Nils Landgren)
6. Spring Dance (Michael Wollny)

As Artists in Residence Nils Landgren and Michael Wollny have been in the centre of JazzBaltica 2010. They represent the old and the new festival – its eventful past and its promising future. Landgren experienced his German premiere in Salzau, played with Jazz-Stars like Maceo Parker and the Brecker-Brothers und has been an integral part of the JazzBaltica-family for almost two decades. In Europe and Germany Wollny has been titled the most important Jazz piano-talent of the last years. By now he has taken root in the German Jazz-scene. The Artists in Residence’s duo concert, Landgren’s »Funk Night« and Wollny’s »Wunderkammer« are just some of the highlights of this year’s festival.

January 17, 2010

Joachim Kühn & Michael Wollny live at JazzBaltica 2009

Photo © by: Eva Baales / ACT

Joachim Kühn, piano
Michael Wollny, piano

recorded live at Große Konzertscheune, Salzau, JazzBaltica July 4, 2009

1. Secret Service (Joachim Kühn) 9:43
2. More Tuna (Joachim Kühn) 18:18
3. Hexentanz (Michael Wollny) 19:14
4. Source Bleu De Meski (Joachim Kühn) 4:29

A meeting of generations on two grand pianos: Joachim Kühn and Michael Wollny live at JazzBaltica. Duo magic from two musicians who have no need for ostentation
Critics, music colleagues and the public raved about Joachim Kühn and Michael Wollny’s joint appearance at the “Jazz and Friendship” festival at Schloss Elmau on September 2008. This wonderful musical encounter had a particularly special depth to it and was released on CD on ACT. It was a concert that rocked with unbridled intensity, and showed the profound respect these two outstanding German jazz pianists, each with their own individual style, have for each other. In this case it’s no exaggeration to say that it was simply a moment of musical glory.

January 10, 2010

Joakim Milder & the Jazzbaltica-Ensemble 2009: Tribute to Esbjörn Svensson


Photo © by: Jörg Grosse-Geldermann / ACT

Joakim Milder, Johannes Enders, Niels Lyhne Løkkegaard - Saxophones
Axel Schlosser - Trumpet, Flügelhorn; Karin Hammar - Trombone
Michael Wollny - Piano; Christopher Dell - Vibraphone
Martin Wind - Bass; Andy Haberl - Drums
Special Guest: Nils Landgren - Trombone

Recorded live at Große Konzertscheune, Salzau during Jazzbaltica, July 3, 2009

1. Face Value (Milder)
2. Take Away (Milder)
3. Mysterious Ways (Milder/Svensson)
4. Spine (Milder)
5. Unmutual (Milder)

Swedish saxophonist Joakim Milder and Esbjörn Svensson planned to record a duo album together. They did some rehearsals of the material, Milder had written especially for this duo collaboration, but they didn´t get a chance to record it because of Esbjörn´s all to soon passing in June 2008. Joakim Milder arranged these tunes for the JazzBaltica Ensemble 2009 and they played this program as a tribute to Esbjörn Svensson.

February 03, 2009

Wollny/ Kruse/ Schaefer: [em] live in Munich 2005


Michael Wollny, piano
Eva Kruse, bass
Eric Schaefer, drums

recorded live at Studio II, Bavarian Broadcast, Munich, March 30, 2005

Tracklist:
1. Thursday Is The Last Day
2. Ictus
3. Bells
4. Takashi
5. The Mean Spider Of Tandorine
6. Felicia
7. Es sind Berge nicht länger Berge
8. Tale

This fantastic young geman trio did a great debut recording for the ACT label, called "call it [em]". Check it out!