December 30, 2010

The Benny Green, Martin Wind, Matt Wilson Trio feat. Chris Potter & Marcus Strickland live at JazzBaltica 2010 -UPDATE!


Benny Green, p
Martin Wind, b
Matt Wilson, dr
Marcus Strickland, sax
Chris Potter, sax

recorded live at Konzertscheune Salzau, July 4, 2010

1. Early Morning Blues (Martin Wind)
2. The Last Waltz (Martin Wind)
3. Moment's Notice (John Coltrane)
4. We'll be Together Again (Carl Fisher)
5. Bubbles
6. The Soccerball (Martin Wind)
7. Bessie´s Blues (John Coltrane)

Born in New York in 1963, Benny Green grew up in Berkeley, California, and began classical piano studies at the age of seven. Influenced by his father, a tenor saxophonist, his attention soon turned into Jazz: "I began trying to improvise on the piano, imitating the records I'd been hearing from my father's collection, which included a lot of Monk and Bird… it was a gradual process of teaching myself". Benny played in school bands before hooking up with Jazz singer Fay Carroll: "That was good training for me in terms of accompaniment and learning about the blues, and she also gave me a chance to play trio, opening for her every night". As a teenager he worked with Eddie Henderson, and got some big band experience with a 12-piece group led by Chuck Israels. After his graduation, Benny freelanced around the bay area for a year, and then moved to New York in the spring of 1982. Back in the Big Apple,  he met veteran pianist Walter Bishop Jr.: "I began studying with him and he helped point me in the direction of developing my own sound, and he also encouraged me to check out and study the whole scope of Jazz piano history, so I could get a sense of how I was to fit in".
After a short stint with Bobby Watson, Green worked with Betty Carter between 1983 and 1987, the year he joined Art Blakey's band. He remained a Jazz Messenger through late 1989, at which point he began working with Freddie Hubbard's quintet.
In 1993 Oscar Peterson chose Benny as the first recipient of the City of Toronto's Glen Gould International Protégé Prize in Music. That year, Green replaced Gene Harris in Ray Brown's Trio, working with the veteran bass player until 1997. From 1997 on, Benny resumed his freelance career, led his own trios, and concentrated on his solo piano performances. His latest release is the 2004 duo album "Bluebird" featuring guitarist Russell Malone.


December 29, 2010

Led Bib live at Jazzfest Berlin 2010


Chris Williams (a-sax)
Pete Grogan (a-sax)
Toby McLaren (Fender Rhodes, p)
Liran Donin (b, e-b)
Mark Holub (dr)
recorded live at Quasimodo, Berlin, November 5, 2010

1. Moth dilemma (Marc Holub)
2. Walnuts (Marc Holub)
3. Hollow ponds (Marc Holub)
4. Shapes and sizes (Chris Williams)
5. Engine room (Marc Holub)
6. Power walking (Marc Holub)
7. Service stop saviour (Toby McLaren)
8. Is that a woodblock (Marc Holub)
9. Winter (Marc Holub)
10. Flashing indicators (Marc Holub)
11. Holub clatter (Marc Holub)

At present, England is habitat to one of Europe’s most adventuresome young jazz scenes. London-based groups such as the Portico Quartet or Acoustic Ladyland are currently setting the Thames on fire. A further part of this coterie of the so-called “Jazz Misfits” is the quintet Led Bib gathered around drummer Mark Holub.

In Led Bib different aspects of Western European everyday reality clash bluntly. The group’s structure is reminiscent of Knitting Factory-bands of the 90s whose songs often sounded like acoustical patchwork rugs. Harsh noise eruptions are abruptly terminated by contemplative or even romantic moments. But the vigour with which all this happens is an expression of a specific 21st century-sensibility. Thus, the Londoners do not declare their specific cross total of rock and jazz as “Jazzrock” but rather call it “Controlled Power” – understatement is just not their cup of tea. Their latest CD called "Sensible Shoes" was released in 2009, and their next album is about to be released in February

December 28, 2010

Marcus Strickland Trio live at JazzBaltica 2010


Marcus Strickland - Tenor and Soprano Saxophone
Ben Williams - Bass
E.J. Strickland - Drums
recorded live at Jazzbaltica Salzau, July 3, 2010

1. Scatterheart/Set Free (Björk/ Marcus Strickland)
2. Portrait of Tracy (Jaco Pastorius)
3. She's Alive (Outcast)
4. Prime (Marcus Strickland)
5. Surreal (Marcus Strickland)

Here is a 4 star review of Idiosyncrasies, the latest album by the Marcus Strickland Trio:
"There have been countless saxophone trio recordings since Sonny Rollins essentially pioneered the form on Way Out West. But upon slipping Marcus Strickland's latest take into the deck, the listener can't help but leapfrog over half a century's worth of refinements back to the 1957 original.
The two sessions share not only instrumentation but a similar sense of purpose: the lack of a chordal instrument means that the saxophonist is more firmly a strange freedom in this seeming limitation. Like Newk before him, Strickland has assembled a set of tunes with strong, direct melodis that inspire boundless reveries.
And though he doesn't don spurs and a 10-gallon hat to explore the terrain of country music, Strickland wanders just as far afield to find his material. The songs by Stevie Wonder and Outkast may not be particularly surprising given Strickland's recent funk-leaning experiments, but he also culls pieces by Malian singer Oumou Sangare, Argentinean-Swedish singer-songwriter José González and a Björk song from her role in Lars von Trier's film Dancer In The Dark.
Strickland's versions are in a sense more pop-oriented than the originals - in the best sense, of making a direct emotional connection. On Björk's "Scatterheart," in particular, he strips away the dramatics and the Icelandic singer's penchant for labyrinthine melodic filigrees and uncovers the soulful desperation buried within.
Strikingly, the leader's own originals are just as memorable, and tailor-made for his tightly attuned trio. That communication is so empathic between Strickland and his drummer, identical twin E.J., is a hardly surprising, but bassist Ben Williams is consitently an equal partner without the benefit of genetics. Throughout the album, the trio maintains a sound both sparse and rich, with a relaxed ease that allows for experimentation but without airiness ever feeling empty.
The threesome's effortless teamwork is embodied on "Rebirth," the leader's plangent ballad. Marcus' tenor is both keening and steely, E.J.'s brushwork a hushed whisper, while Williams provides am insistent but unintrusive throb. The combined effect is one of tenderness charged with an undercurrent of urgent passion, the blood pulsing in one's temple at a moment of quiet intimacy." - by Shaun Brady, DownbeatMagazine.


December 27, 2010

Django Bates Beloved Bird live at Jazzfest Berlin 2010


Django Bates, piano
Petter Eldh, bass
Peter Bruun, drums

recorded live at Haus der Berliner Festspiele, Main Stage, November 7, 2010

1. Billies Bounce
2. Scrapple From The Apple/ Wedges
3. My Little Suede Shoes
4. Sadness (All The Way Down)/ Star Eyes
5. Hot House/ Ex Pat
6. Ah Leu Cha
7. Confirmation

Three months ago we were able to present another great concert by Django Bates´ Beloved Bird Trio recorded at the Vortex London.
"Having heard Charlie Parker’s music from my birth onwards, I knew it was good in the way that I knew that food was good. It was nutrition: a life force. At a time when my school friends started worshipping football players, my father seized his moment and lent me “Bird Lives”; a highly romanticized view of the life of Charlie Parker. I found my hero.
Living in a boring suburb of London, I was virtually alone in my special interest. I took to whistling Bebop tunes on train station platforms in the hope of meeting other Bird obsessive, and surprisingly this actually paid off. I met saxophonist Steve Buckley through a whistled song, (which is also the way that feathered birds meet), and we rehearsed every Sunday for a year. We ruined his father’s collection of Parker 78s by slowing them down to 16 rpm and lifting the needle up every 2 beats in order to unravel the fascinating horn lines.
In 2005 I was asked to contribute to a celebration of the life of Charlie Parker at Copenhagen Jazz House. I used the opportunity to arrange compositions that I most associated with Parker; tracks like Scrapple From the Apple, Hot House, Billie’s Bounce, Laura, My Little Suede Shoes, Now’s the Time...
The acoustic piano trio is a constellation beloved of jazz listeners and players throughout the world. Seeing the Bill Evans trio at Ronnie Scott’s club weeks before he died, and The Bad Plus in Cambridge, were two of my most memorable musical experiences. I decided to use the classic trio line-up for my exploration of Bird’s music.
I believe there is no point in recording unless one has something special to say. Now’s the time to say something special: Bird Lives!" - Django Bates


December 26, 2010

Moss live at Jazzfest Berlin 2010


Theo Bleckmann, vocals
Peter Eldridge, vocals, piano
Kate McGarry, vocals
Lauren Kinhan, vocals
Keith Ganz, guitar
Kermit Driscoll, bass
John Hollenbeck, drums

recorded live at Haus der Berliner Festspiele, Main Stage, November 6, 2010

1. Shadows and light (Joni Mitchell)/ Object devotion (Lauren Kinhan, Peter Eldrigde)
2. I carry your heart (Kate McGarry)
3. Trouble runs in the family (Lauren Kinhan)
4. Longing (Theo Bleckmann)
5. Busy being blue (Peter Eldrigde)
6. These things take time (Peter Eldrigde, Kate McGarry)
7. Old man (Neil Young)
8. Take It With Me (Tom Waits)
9. No Wonder (Luciana Souza)
10. There Alone Go I (Lauren Kinhan, Peter Eldrigde)
11. Come Home (Peter Eldrige)

All About Jazz celebrated him as “German-American Meistersinger” – Theo Bleckmann could hardly be tagged more aptly. The Dortmund-born vocal export and student of Sheila Jordan’s has, together with ‘half’ of the New York Voices, Peter Eldridge and Lauren Kinhan plus all-rounder Kate McGarry, founded a vocal quartet with the sophistication and refinement, which only seems to be exceeded by the relaxed manner of their performance.

It is the cabaret scene as independent as typical for New York, like at Café Carlyle, that seems to incite phenomena such as Moss. Artists like Eartha Kitt and Bobby Short, Elaine Stritch and John Pizzarelli come to mind who were and still are the force behind a culture of entertainment that for some by now might already be covered with “moss”. But what pleasure it is to rest one’s ears on this moss!

A next generation has now stepped up and it’s great that Theo is involved. The standard remains. The repertoire is becoming broader and more confident: Neil Young? Sure! Joni Mitchell? With pleasure! Tom Waits? More of it, pleeeze! For example on record: MOSS.


December 25, 2010

Orchestre National de Jazz / Daniel Yvinec: ‘Broadway In Satin’ - Billie Holiday Revisited live at Jazzfest Berlin 2010


Orchestre National de Jazz
Daniel Yvinec, conductor
Karen Lano, Ian Siegal vocals
Eve Risser piano, flutes, sound objects
Vincent Lafont keyboards, electronics
Antonin-Tri Huong alto sax, clarinets, piano
Matthieu Metzger alto, soprano and sopranino sax, electronic treatments
Joce Mieniel flutes, electronics
Rémi Dumoulin saxophones, clarinets
Guillaume Poncelet trumpet
Pierre Perchaud guitars, banjo
Sylvain Daniel e-bass, french horn, electronic effects
Yoann Serra drums

recorded live at Haus der Berliner Festspiele, Main Stage, November 7, 2010

1. In My Solitude
2. I'll Be Seeing You
3. God Bless The Child
4. Strange Fruit
5. You've Changed
6. Don't Explain
7. My Man

One might tend to assume that a programmatically oriented national orchestra's main aim was fostering its own national culture. Not so with the French Orchestre National de Jazz. After having taken up the cause of performing the songs of Robert Wyatt last year, its new programme circles around Manhattan and Broadway where –between 1920 and 1950 – the basis of our present-day jazz-canon originated.

Broadway In Satin is dedicated to the remembrance of Billie Holiday. The ensemble, directed and masterminded by Daniel Yvinec, lives up to its reputation not dwelling on the mere reproduction of the original interpretation but staging a dramatic musical experience with all available means of electronic and acoustical sound manipulation. The eponymous singer’s part is taken over by two vocalists whose vocal spectrum promises maximum contrast. Karen Lano is yet an intriguing rookie with a penchant for the Great American Songbook, Ian Siegal again, whose voice is reminiscent of Chris Farlowe, is among the troupers of British blues singing.

For more information on ONJ and their record "Shut up and Dance" visit their website.

December 23, 2010

Pablo Held Trio live at Jazzfest Berlin 2010


Pablo Held piano
Robert Landfermann bass
Jonas Burgwinkel drums
recorded live at Haus der Berliner Festspiele, Side Stage, November 6, 2010

1. Introduction
2. Medley: Klartraum 8/ Forest of oblivion/ Music/ Log lady/ With concern/ Desire/ Melody/ Phasen/ Phase II (Pablo Held)
3. Introduction
4. O sacrum convivium (Oliver Messiaen)

When it comes to counting the Pablo Held Trio’s qualities, critics do not cut down on superlatives. There is talk of “the shooting star among young jazz pianists”, of “an ideal combination of improvisational imagination and musical economy” and of “one of the most exciting young groups of German jazz”. With good reason, for pianist Pablo Held, bassist Robert Landfermann and drummer Jonas Burgwinkel are more than a just a trio. They form one of the few symbiotic units in the piano trio’s more recent history. The trinity's intentions flow together in one common stream, the course and density of which time and again is full of surprises.
Pablo Held combines the tranquillity of the routinier, at home at nearly every major European jazz festival, with the ravenous appetite of a man in his mid-twenties, wanting to experience jazz from every imaginable perspective. In each piece the romanticist as well as the rationalist mark out their terrain.
The latest recording of the Pablo Held Trio is simply called "Music", released on Pirouet Records.

December 22, 2010

Christine Tobin live at Jazzfest Berlin 2010


Christine Tobin, vocals
Phil Robson, guitar
Dave Whitford, bass
Gene Calderazzo, drums
recorded live at Quasimodo, Berlin, November 7, 2010

1. Just Your Friend
2. Sailing To Byzantium
3. Black And Blue
4. Everybody Knows (Leonard Cohen)
5. No Love, No Thrill
6. Embraceable You (George  Gershwin)

Irish-born singer/songwriter Christine Tobin has been living in London since 1987. Her work is firmly rooted in a tradition that emphasizes storytelling on a musical bedrock that creatively blends blues, folk and jazz; a territory that is occupied by such luminaries as Joni Mitchell, Cassandra Wilson and Nina Simone. Her innovative and expressive style has led the Guardian to call her the “Bjork of Euro jazz”. She has recorded six albums for Babel, one of the UK's most dynamic and creative indie labels. Her music has been described as authentic, streetwise, radical and romantic. John L. Walters of the Guardian says she possesses a “24-carat voice” and Jazzwise hail her as “probably the most adventurous jazz singer of her generation in this country, with the ideas and willingness to push back the boundaries and explore new territory with each new album.” Christine works regularly on the UK jazz scene, appearing at Ronnie Scott’s, The Pizza Express Soho Jazz Club, Jazz Café and many reputed international festivals. Her earlier work includes stints in Django Bates’ Delightful Precipice, Tim Garland’s Lammas, and she has worked in bands with Julian Argüelles, Kenny Wheeler, Joe Locke, Clark Tracey, Gary Husband and Billy Childs amongst many others.

“She should be on a global stage rubbing shoulders with fellow troubadours like Cave, Mitchell and Cohen...It's a tribute to the quality of Tobin’s writing that there are no weak spots in this excellent collection” - John L Walters, The Guardian ****

“Tobin’s voice is commanding and poised throughout and her husky scat singing is a delight. She’s occupying a niche that’s her own and the possibilities are enormous.” - Mike Barnes, The Wire

An earlier recording featuring a similar line up is the 2004 album "Romance and Revolution" released on Babel.

December 21, 2010

Kinsmen feat. Rudresh Mahanthappa & Kadri Gopalnath live at Jazzfest Berlin 2010


Rudresh Mahanthappa alto sax
Kadri Gopalnath alto sax
A. Kanyakumari violin
Rez Abassi guitar
Poovalur Sriji mridangam
Carlo de Rosa bass
Dan Weiss drums
recorded live at Haus der Berliner Festspiele, Main Stage, November 4, 2010

1. Introspection/ Ganesha
2. Snake!
3. Carlo-Alap/ Kalyani
4. Kadi-Alap/ Kanya-Alap/ Convergence


Kinsmen is Rudresh Mahanthappa’s collaboration with Kadri Gopalnath, a living legend of Indian music known as “The Emperor of the Saxophone”, a true innovator in bringing the saxophone to Indian classical music. The music on the homonymously titled album Kinsmen, featuring their co-led Dakshina Ensemble, is exemplar of successful multicultural, transnational collaboration. Utilizing his extensive knowledge of both jazz and the traditional melodic and rhythmic concepts of Indian music, Mahanthappa has masterfully provided a framework that has brought out the best in all the musicians, resulting in spectacular interaction and virtuosic displays. The music burns with passionate interplay: Mahanthappa’s biting attack intertwined with Gopalnath’s staccato outbursts; Kanyakumari’s slippery portamento and Abbasi’s Mahavishnu-like single note runs. Rather than “Indo-jazz fusion”, the music harmoniously synthesizes the cultural and musical divide, creating a sound that truly transcends labels and genre.

Utilizing Indian ragas, songs, and rhythmic cycles as a starting point, Mahanthappa composes new melodies and harmonies that connect them with a jazz sensibility. About the collaboration, Rudresh says, “The piece is really about finding this middle ground where we’re both comfortable playing in this setting that is half-Western and half-South Indian, and maybe pushing to a point where it actually becomes neither (…) Eventually though, I would just ask Kadri to think of something contrapuntally to play with my parts, and he’d sit there and think for a minute and then come up with these beautiful melodies, these lines weaving in and out of each other. It was really amazing.”

December 20, 2010

Kinsmen feat. Kadri Gopalnath & Rudresh Mahanthappa live at 41st German Jazzfestival Frankfurt 2010


Rudresh Mahanthappa | as
Kadri Gopalnath | as
A. Kanyakumari | v
Rez Abassi | g
Poovalur Sriji | mridangam
Carlo de Rosa | b
Dan Weiss | dr

recorded live at HR Sendesaal Frankfurt, October 29, 2010

1. Introspection/ Ganesha
2. Rez-Alap/ Longing
3. Snake!
4. Carlo-Alap/ Kalyani
5. Kadi-Alap/ Kanya-Alap/ Convergence
6. Dan-Alap/ Covergence


Kinsmen is a groundbreaking project by alto saxophonist Rudresh Mahanthappa that melds jazz with South Indian music into a single organic whole. Mahanthappa, recently named a Top 10 alto saxophonist in the 2008 DownBeat Critic’s Poll, is one of the most innovative young musicians in jazz today. Kinsmen is his collaboration with Kadri Gopalnath, a living legend of Indian music known as “The Emperor of the Saxophone,” a true innovator in bringing the saxophone to Indian classical music. The music on Kinsmen, featuring their co-led Dakshina Ensemble, is exemplar of successful multicultural, transnational collaboration. Utilizing his extensive knowledge of both jazz and the traditional melodic and rhythmic concepts of Indian music, Mahanthappa has masterfully provided a framework that has brought out the best in all the musicians, resulting in spectacular interaction and virtuosic displays from Gopalnath, A. Kanyakumari on violin and Rez Abassi on guitar. The band also features Poovalur Sriji on Mridangam (South Indian barrel drum), Carlo de Rosa on acoustic bass and royal hartigan on drums.
For Mahanthappa, who grew up in Boulder, Colorado to Indian immigrant parents, the pull of Indian classical music didn’t come until his college years, when he toured India with the Berklee College of Music All-Stars and was lucky to attend an all-night concert outside of Bangalore where he heard both Carnatic (South Indian) and Hindustani (North Indian) music performed by greats such as Parween Sultana and Chitti Babu. As a young jazz musician, Rudresh saw the parallels between Indian music and jazz with both being improvised art forms with inherently strong rhythmic propulsion. Though he grappled for a way to embrace his Indian-American identity through his music, Rudresh could not find a clear entry point as he had no awareness of any saxophone tradition in classical Indian music. Then one evening, moments after the conclusion of one of his recitals at Berklee, Rudresh’s older brother gave him a CD (as congratulatory gift and as a joke) called Saxophone Indian Style by Kadri Golpalnath. A complete eye-opener, the CD provided a doorway into the realm of musical possibilities for Rudresh through which he could finally engage the music of his ancestry.
A few years later, Mahanthappa managed to meet Kadri backstage at a Carnatic concert in Boston. Golpalnath was not only ecstatic to meet an Indian-American jazz saxophonist, but one of South Indian roots with a name that he deemed to have a powerful Hindu meaning – Rudresh, in Sanskrit, refers to a fierce incarnation of Shiva who saved the human race and Mahanthappa is derived from the same roots as “mahatma,” or “great soul.” Though not trained in jazz, Gopalnath too saw the similarities between the art forms and was enthusiastic about the possibility of joining forces at some point. This became a reality when, with a commission from the Asia Society, Rudresh traveled to Chennai (Madras) in 2005 to work with Kadri at what would eventually become the music on Kinsmen. The piece received a world premiere in New York City at the Asia Society.
Mahanthappa set out to create a body of music that draws on the strengths of both the American and Indian musicians – a music that embodies the rhythmic diversity and harmonic complexity of jazz and the melodic and metrical rigor of Indian classical music. Utilizing Indian ragas, songs, and rhythmic cycles as a starting point, he composed new melodies and harmonies that connect them with a jazz sensibility. About the collaboration, Rudresh says, “The piece is really about finding this middle ground where we’re both comfortable playing in this setting that is half-Western and half-South Indian, and maybe pushing to a point where it actually becomes neither.” Because there is no real tradition of composing new works in Indian classical music – the songs are typically ancient and derived from the Vedas – Mahanthappa initially encountered some hesitation from Golpalnath. Rudresh continues, “Eventually though, I would just ask Kadri to think of something contrapuntally to play with my parts, and he’d sit there and think for a minute and then come up with these beautiful melodies, these lines weaving in and out of each other. It was really amazing.”
After several months of working together, they collectively assembled the Dakshina Ensemble and premiered the piece in New York City in May 2005. In Kinsmen, Mahanthappa has effectively created something that both stretches the musicians while at the same time, enables the musicians on both sides to bring their best to the table. The music burns with passionate interplay: Mahanthappa’s biting attack intertwined with Golpalnath’s staccato outbursts; Kanyakumari’s slippery portamento and Abbasi’s Mahavishnu-like single note runs. Rather than “Indo-Jazz fusion,” the music harmoniously synthesizes the cultural and musical divide, creating a sound that truly transcends labels and genre.


December 19, 2010

Dave Brubeck Quartet live at 32nd International Jazzweek Burghausen 2001


Dave Brubeck (p)
Bobby Militello (as, fl)
Alec Dankworth (b)
Randy Jones (dr)

recorded live at Wackerhalle Burghausen, Spring 2001

1. Theme For June
2. Broadway Bossa Nova
3. The Crossing
4. All My Love
5. Why Not/ Porqué No
6. Oh You Can Run
7. In Your Own Sweet Way
8. Take Five
9. Unsquare Dance
10. Take The A-Train

"Recorded in autumn 2000 in Cincinnati and Cleveland, Dave Brubeck's The Crossing finds the octogenarian maestro in excellent shape both as pianist and writer. All nine compositions are his and such pieces as the lovely "Day By Day" and the pulsating "Randy Jones" named after the group's drummer show that he has lost none of his feel for an arresting line and polytonal invention. He has, however, lost Paul Desmond--a quarter of a century ago too: the altoist was frankly irreplaceable and for all Bobby Militello's energy and undoubted virtuosity, neither his solos nor his rapport with the leader are in the same league. That is nevertheless not as censorious as it might seem: he plays very well on the closing "Hold Fast To Dreams" and his flute work is a most fetching addition to Brubeck's orchestral palette. Alec Dankworth on bass is prodigious and the leader's pianism continues to compel and delight. Long gone are the days when sneering at him was PC, the hipster's dubious categorical imperative: Brubeck is now rightly revered as a player of driving enterprise and comprehensive skill. The Crossing may not scale the heights of the finest Brubeck-Desmond enterprises of the 1950s and 1960s but is a stimulating set that is eminently worth buying." --Richard Palmer

December 07, 2010

Tingvall Trio live at Leverkusener Jazztage 2009


Martin Tingvall · piano
Omar Rodriguez Calvo · bass
Jürgen Spiegel · drums

recorded live at Forum, Leverkusen, 30th Leverkusener Jazztage 2009

1. Våg In   
2. Vattensaga
3. Valsång
4. Mustasch
5. Tveklöst
6. Hajskraj
7. Movie
8. Nu Djävlar
9. Trolldans
10. God Natt
11. Monster

The music of the TINGVALL TRIOs is unmistakable not only because of the Nordic influences. The play with contrasts is just as characteristic, strong alternates with weak, good encounters evil. Typical for many of the compositions is their construction where the pieces frequently seem to be put together from several independent parts. Without words small stories are told which then merge to a single tale. Nevertheless, the arrangements leave the musicians with a fair amount of room for improvisations, so that each performance is unique. 
Tingvall Trio recorded three absolutely great albums for Skip records, called "Skagerrak", "Norr" and the latest "Vattensaga".

December 06, 2010

WDR Big Band feat. Gabriel Pérez: Milonga


Gabriel Pérez, soprano saxophone
WDR Big Band
WDR Studioproduction, December 2009

1. Alta Paz (Quique Sinesi)
2. El patio del tiempo (Marcio Doctor)
3. Sara (Sergio Aranda)
4. La muerte del angel (Astor Piazolla)
5. Sutuy (Gabriel Pérez)
6. Turquesa (Gabriel Pérez)
7. Milonga del angel (Astor Piazolla)
8. Pan Con Pan (Gabriel Pérez)
 
Gabriel Pérez, born in 1964 in Córdoba, is a musician who creates new elements of Argentinean music by combining them with more traditional styles of his homeland to develop a unique sound.
Raised in Argentine, Gabriel received a broad musical education with rural roots. He was under contract with the Córdoba Symphonic Wind Orchestra, was a member of the saxophone quartet Scaramouche, recorded with nationally well-known musicians and planned early on to focus on composition. Subsequently, he moved to Germany and took private classes with Dietmar Mensinger and studied jazz saxophone under Frank Gratkowski, as well as composition / arrangement under Frank Reinshagen at the prestigious Cologne University of Music.
In 2008 saxophonist, composer and arranger Gabriel Pérez received the prestigious WDR Jazz Award  for composition. One year later he was comissioned by the WDR Big Band to arrange and write some music for a studio recording entitled "Milonga".  Milonga is the name for both the archetypical  Tango music and a  kind of subtype of Tango music. Once again Pérez shows his ability to combine the expressive power of Jazz, the elegance of the dance music of his South American home and the expressive language of European classical music of the late 19th century.
He has recorded a series of albums entitled "Música Argentina Vol. 1-3".

December 02, 2010

Bill Frisell & Arve Henriksen live at moers festival 2010


Bill Frisell, g
Arve Henriksen, tp, laptop, voc

recorded live at moers festival, Moers/ Germany, May 23, 2010

1. Fields of Moers # 1
2. Fields of Moers # 2
3. Fields of Moers # 3
4. Both Sides Now (Joni Mitchell)

The idea of forming a duo with Bill Frisell stems from the time when Arve Henriksen was Artist in Residence here in 2006. Now, four years later, the encounter between one of Europe's greatest improvisers and one of North America's greatest improvisers has finally been made possible. Henriksen claims that Frisell is the musician who has had the greatest influence on him. What the two have in common is the fact that neither of them are jazz musicians in the strict sense, but folk musicians in the best sense.
Frisell´s latest CD is a trio recording called "Beautiful Dreamer".


November 30, 2010

Nils Landgren Funk Unit & NDR Big Band "Big Funk" live at JazzBaltica 2010



Nils Landgren Funk Unit
Nils Landgren, tb, voc
Magnum Coltrane Price, el-b, voc
Magnus Lindgren, reeds, voc
Jonas Wall Schlosser, reeds, voc
Sebastian Studnitzky, keys, tp, voc
Andy Pfeiler, g, voc
Robert Mehmet Ikiz, dr
special guest Wolfgang Haffner, dr
NDR Big Band
Jörg Achim Keller, cond

live at Große Konzertscheune, Salzau, July 2, 2010

1. Funk For Life
2. Dry
3. Kenya Kane
4. Kibera
5. Matutu
6. Finish What You Started
7. House Party (Fred Wesley)
8. Ain't Nobody
Earlier this year I introduced the Funk for Life project to you.
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